North Korea fires 3 ballistic missiles, South Korea claims
South Korea claims missiles travelled at least 500 km
North Korea fired three ballistic missiles early on Tuesday into the sea off its east coast that had a range of between 500 and 600 kilometres, South Korea's military said.
The missiles were launched towards east from an area in the North's western region called Hwangju from 5:45 a.m. local time to 6:40 a.m., the South's military said.
"The ballistic missiles flight went from 500 kilometres to 600 kilometres, which is a distance far enough to strike all of South Korea including Busan," the South's military said in a statement.
Busan is a South Korean port city in the south.
North Korea has test-fired a series of ballistic missiles in recent months, in defiance of United Nations Security Council resolutions, including intermediate-range missiles in June and a submarine-launched missile this month. North Korea's military had threatened to retaliate against the deployment of the THAAD system with a "physical response" once its location and time of installation were decided.
China has also sharply criticized the decision to base a THAAD battery in South Korea, saying the move will destabilize the security balance in the region.
North Korea conducted its fourth test of a nuclear device in January, and activity at its nuclear test site has increased recently, according to media reports in South Korea and Japan citing government officials, as well as a report by Washington-based North Korea monitoring project 38 North.
Following Pyongyang's January nuclear test and a February space rocket launch that was widely viewed as a missile test in disguise, the U.N. Security Council imposed tough new resolutions that further isolate North Korea.
In addition to the decision to base a THAAD system in South Korea, the United States recently angered North Korea by blacklisting its leader Kim Jong-un for human rights abuses.