North Korea fires possible missile towards sea during US-South Korea drills


SEOUL/TOKYO, March 14 (Reuters) - ⁠North Korea fired a projectile towards the ⁠sea on Saturday, South Korea and Japan ‌said, with Tokyo saying it may have been a ballistic missile, while the U.S. and South Korea conducted military ​drills.

The projectile was fired toward ⁠the sea off North ⁠Korea's east coast, the South Korean military said in ⁠a ‌brief message to reporters. It gave no further details. Japan's coast guard ⁠said the projectile appeared to have fallen ​into the ‌sea.

It appeared to have fallen outside Japan's exclusive ⁠economic ​zone, Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported, citing defence ministry sources.

Seoul and Washington five days earlier launched the ⁠major drills, which they say ​are purely defensive, aimed at testing readiness against military threats from North Korea.

Nuclear-armed North Korea frequently displays ⁠its anger and objections to such exercises, saying they are "dress rehearsals" for armed aggression against it by the allies.

On Thursday, South Korea's prime minister ​met U.S. President Donald ⁠Trump in Washington to discuss ways to reopen dialogue ​with the North, which has ‌been suspended since 2019.

(Reporting ​by Jack Kim in Seoul and Anton Bridge in Tokyo; Editing by William Mallard)

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