Updated September 10th, 2019 at 14:39 IST

North Korea fires two projectiles after offering talks with US

North Korea fired projectiles towards the sea, South Korea's military said, hours after Pyongyang said it is willing to hold working-level talks with the US

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North Korea on Tuesday has fired projectiles towards the sea, South Korea's military has said. This comes hours after Pyongyang said it is willing to hold working-level talks with the United States in late September.

North Korea fires projectiles

Negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington have been gridlocked since a second summit between the North's leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump in February ended without a deal. North Korea twice launched "unidentified projectiles" Tuesday morning in an easterly direction from South Pyongan province, South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said. No further details were immediately available but these were the latest to be fired since July. Previous launches have been identified as short-range missiles.

"We are aware of reports of projectiles launched from North Korea. We are continuing to monitor the situation and consulting closely with our allies in the region," a senior US official has said.

READ: Concert In Korea's DMZ On 1st Anniversary Of Pyongyang Declaration

Trump and Kim had agreed to restart working-level dialogue during an impromptu meeting at the Demilitarized Zone dividing the nuclear-armed North and South Korea in June. However, those talks have yet to begin. "We are willing to sit face-to-face with the US around late September at a time and place that we can agree on," Choe Son Hui, North Korea’s Foreign Minister, said in a statement carried on Monday by the official Korean Central News Agency.

Choe's comment followed her warning in late August that North Korea's "expectations of dialogue with the US are gradually disappearing" after Pyongyang conducted weapons tests to protest joint US-South Korean military exercises.

Asked about the proposal for lower-level talks in September, Trump told reporters, "I have a very good relationship with Chairman Kim. I always say, having meetings is a good thing. We'll see what happens."

READ: US 'prepared To Engage' With North Korea In Nuclear Talks: Envoy

On Monday, Choe recalled Kim's comments that the North would wait until the end of the year for Washington to "quit its current calculation method". She repeated Pyongyang's call for the US to come up with an "acceptable calculation" or risk jeopardizing the entire diplomatic process.

When asked by global media about the latest North Korean offer, a State Department official replied: "We don't have any meetings to announce at this time."

Kim and Trump adopted a vaguely-worded statement on the "complete denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula" at their first summit in Singapore in June last year, but little progress has since been made on dismantling Pyongyang's nuclear programme. A report published by a United Nations panel of experts last week said North Korea's development of nuclear warheads had not stopped, despite the moratorium it declared on nuclear blasts and long-range missile launches.

READ: US President Donald Trump Says Received 'positive Letter' From North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un

The current state of US-North Korea relations

US officials have called North Korea's recent short-range missile launches "provocations", although Trump himself has avoided criticizing them. Pyongyang is barred from ballistic missile tests under UN resolutions, and its previous short-range missile tests have been condemned by European members of the UN Security Council. North Korea is under heavy US and UN sanctions over its weapons programmes, and has criticized Washington's position that sanctions against the isolated regime will not be lifted until the country gives up its nuclear weapons.

Pyongyang's latest comments on talks come after the US special envoy to North Korea, Stephen Biegun, said the North must stop blocking nuclear talks.

"If we are to succeed, North Korea must set aside its search for obstacles to negotiations and instead seek the opportunities for engagement while that opportunity lasts," he said on Friday.

"We have made clear to North Korea that we are prepared to engage as soon as we hear from them," he said on Friday. "We are ready, but we cannot do this by ourselves."

READ: Snubbed By North Korea, Mike Pompeo Hits Other Asian Turbulence

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Published September 10th, 2019 at 08:41 IST