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North Korea removes missiles from launch site, U.S. official says
By   Jethro Mullen  and   Barbara Starr , CNN
May 7, 2013 -- Updated 1414 GMT (2214 HKT) CNN.com 
(CNN) -- North Korea has withdrawn two mobile ballistic 
missiles from a launch site in the eastern part of the country, 
according to a U.S. official, the latest hint of an easing in tensions 
on the Korean Peninsula.
The disclosure came 
Monday, the day before President Barack Obama is due to meet with his 
South Korean counterpart, Park Geun-hye, in Washington.
During a fraught period 
last month that included near daily North Korean threats of war, U.S. 
and South Korean officials said they believed Kim Jong Un's regime could carry 
out a test launch of at least one of the missiles at any time. 
The United States and Japan responded by stepping up missile defenses in the 
region.
But the anniversary of the birth of North Korea's founder on April 15, seen as 
the likely date around which a launch could take place, came and went without 
either of the missiles being fired. And now they have been sent to a storage 
facility, the 
U.S. official said. 
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The missiles the North has moved 
from the launch site are believed to be Musudans, an untested weapon 
that the South Korean government says has a maximum range of 3,500 
kilometers (2,175 miles). That would mean the missiles could reach as 
far as Japan and Guam, a Western Pacific territory that is home to U.S. 
naval and air bases.
More tests will take North Korea closer to nuclear missile, Pentagon says 
Recent tensions 
The recent period of 
tensions flared up after the North's long-range rocket launch in 
December and underground nuclear test in February, both of which were 
widely condemned.
Pyongyang's fiery rhetoric intensified in March as the U.N. Security Council 
voted to tighten 
sanctions on the regime following the nuclear test. Annual U.S.-South 
Korean military drills in South Korea also fueled the North's anger, 
especially when the United States carried out displays of strength that 
included nuclear-capable B2 stealth bombers.
But a key part of the large-scale 
training exercises, known as Foal Eagle, concluded last week, and the 
intensity of Pyongyang's threats appears to have subsided. Its 
rhetorical exchanges with Washington and Seoul have shifted to include 
conditions for possible negotiations, although both sides appear to 
remain far apart.
North Korea is demanding 
recognition as a nuclear power, something the United States refuses to 
countenance. And the recent crisis resulted in the closure of the 
Kaesong Industrial Complex, the last major symbol of inter-Korean 
cooperation.
Analysts and U.S. officials have 
cautioned that Kim Jong Un's regime remains unpredictable and that 
tensions could escalate again in the event of new provocations.
It would be "premature" to make a 
judgment about whether the North Korean "provocation cycle is going up, 
down or zig-zagging," Daniel Russel, White House special assistant and 
senior director for Asian affairs, said Monday.
"No one should be prepared to declare a victory yet," he said, referring to the 
reports of the 
missiles being moved off the launch site.
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A fresh warning from the North 
A reminder of the fragile 
situation came in a North Korean statement Tuesday that accused U.S. and South 
Korean forces of carrying out naval shelling drills near the two 
Koreas' disputed western maritime border.
The statement, from the North 
Korean military's command in the sector near that part of the border, 
warned of "immediate counteractions" if "even a single shell" from the 
drills fell within its territorial waters.
But the statement was 
notably free of the talk of "nuclear war" that peppered North Korean 
propaganda directed at the United States and South Korea during the 
height of the tensions in March and April.
At a news briefing in 
Seoul, Kim Min-seok, a spokesman for the South Korean defense ministry, 
denied the North's accusation that shelling drills had been taking place in the 
sea near the border since Sunday.
He confirmed, though, that planned annual naval drills to practice the defense 
of islands near the border were under way.
In November 2010, North 
Korea shelled the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong, killing two South 
Korean marines and two civilians. Pyongyang accused Seoul of provoking 
the attack by holding a military drill in the area.
The current situation regarding North Korea is chief among the subjects on the 
agenda for Obama and Park's meeting on Tuesday.
Obama will use Park's visit to "reaffirm the strong commitment" of the U.S. to 
the defense of South Korea, Russel said Monday.
CNN's Brian Walker and Lesa Jansen, and journalist Soo Bin Park contributed to 
this report.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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