Japan, South Korea and the US will hold joint military drills on December 11-12 in the waters near Japan to practice the detection of airborne missiles, Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera has announced.
The three countries will be "practicing tracking an object and sharing information on it," a defense official who refused to be named told AFP, adding that the drills "will translate into a measure against ballistic missiles."
At the same time, the US State Department's special representative for North Korean policy is set to travel next week to Thailand and South Korea to seek more pressure on the DPRK.
The drills come less than two weeks after North Korea launched its Hwasong-15 intercontinental ballistic missile reportedly capable of traveling some 8,000 miles and reaching Washington DC.
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Following the launch, the US and South Korea held joint military drills in early December, featuring 230 aircraft from both nations, a move described by the DPRK foreign minister as "an extremely dangerous nuclear gamble on the Korean Peninsula."