Analysis Why Japan’s ability to detect North Korean missiles may be better than it seemsErrant warning about ICBM overflight and conflicting assessments have raised concerns that are likely misplaced Earlier this month, residents of several Japanese prefectures received a surprise early-morning message: “A missile has been launched. Please evacuate inside buildings or underground,” read the emergency J-Alert warning sent at 7:50 a.m. Some 10 minutes later, a second alert declared that the missile had sailed over the island nation. Yet within the hour, defense minister Yasukazu Hamada tracked back from the initial assessment about the North Korean ballistic missile launch at a brief press conference. “It was confirmed that the missile did not cross the Japanese archipelago and disappeared over the Sea of Japan,” he said.[/p © Korea Risk Group. All rights reserved. |