Just the Facts:
On September 15th, North Korea launched another missile, for the first time crossing over Japanese landmass. This one flew for 19 minutes, flew 2300 miles, and was likely a variant of the Hwasong-12 missile.
With the extended range, it puts more airspace at risk from debris fields. Once can reasonably exclude quite a bit of this airspace, as all launches are easterly.
This launch passed over the airways below off the coast of Japan:
Continued caution should be taken in oceanic airspace west of North Korea.
For more reading, read our post on the missiles specific to the Sea of Japan:
https://ops.group/blog/heres-why-north-korean-missiles-are-now-a-real-threat-to-civil-aviation/
More on the topic:
- More: Hurricane Beryl
- More: Don’t Climb! A Big NAT No-No
- More: SAFA Ramp Checks: The Top 5 Offenders (+Alcohol test)
- More: Making a Ramp Check painless (with checklist)
- More: Oceanic Clearance Removal mess – Version 4!
More reading:
- Latest: Hurricane Beryl
- Latest: Don’t Climb! A Big NAT No-No
- Latest: SAFA Ramp Checks: The Top 5 Offenders (+Alcohol test)
- Safe Airspace: Risk Database
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