Tag Archives: Resolve

Hunter Biden’s lawyers argue deal to resolve felony gun charge is still ‘valid and binding’ despite collapse of plea talks – CNN

  1. Hunter Biden’s lawyers argue deal to resolve felony gun charge is still ‘valid and binding’ despite collapse of plea talks CNN
  2. What could be the impact of naming special counsel in Hunter Biden investigation? Face the Nation
  3. Hunter Biden’s attorney says DOJ prosecutors ‘changed their decision on the fly’ on plea deal The Hill
  4. Biden special counsel pick reveals AG Garland joining media in circling wagons to defend president, his family Fox News
  5. Editorial: Act swiftly in Trump trials, Hunter Biden probe Detroit News

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Bob Iger Vows to Help ‘Find Solutions’ to Resolve WGA and SAG-AFTRA Strikes – Variety

  1. Bob Iger Vows to Help ‘Find Solutions’ to Resolve WGA and SAG-AFTRA Strikes Variety
  2. Bob Iger Wants Strikes To End “Quickly”; Soft-Talking Disney CEO “Personally Committed” To A Deal As WGA Strike Hit 100 Days Deadline
  3. Disney’s Bob Iger Seeks to Mend Fences on Strike, Is ‘Personally Committed’ to Resolving Labor Dispute Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Bob Iger Tries Diplomacy This Time On Strike: “I Am Personally Committed” to Finding a Solution Hollywood Reporter
  5. A Kinder, Gentler Bob Iger Says He Has ‘Deep Respect and Appreciation’ for Creatives Amid Dual Strike IndieWire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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300-Plus Actors Sign Letter Urging SAG-AFTRA Leaders To “Make Clear Our Resolve” In Contract Talks: “We Are Prepared To Strike” – Deadline

  1. 300-Plus Actors Sign Letter Urging SAG-AFTRA Leaders To “Make Clear Our Resolve” In Contract Talks: “We Are Prepared To Strike” Deadline
  2. Meryl Streep, Jennifer Lawrence, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Other Top Actors Sign Letter to SAG-AFTRA: We’re “Prepared to Strike” Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Possible SAG strike explained: Will actors walk off set? USA TODAY
  4. Jennifer Lawrence, Meryl Streep, Rami Malek Among Actors Urging SAG-AFTRA Leaders to Take a Hard Line: ‘This Is Not a Moment to Meet in the Middle’ AOL
  5. Meryl Streep, Jennifer Lawrence, Quinta Brunson Among 300+ Actors Threatening Strike Over ‘Fundamental’ Issues Like AI TheWrap
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Gilead, Arcus’ updated TIGIT data unlikely to resolve debates around space: #ASCO23 – Endpoints News

  1. Gilead, Arcus’ updated TIGIT data unlikely to resolve debates around space: #ASCO23 Endpoints News
  2. Asco 2023 – Roche sees Morpheus and takes the red pill Evaluate Pharma
  3. ASCO: Gilead and Arcus’s Cancer Immunotherapy Combo Faces Scrutiny Over Lower Survival Rates BioSpace
  4. Gilead and Arcus’ TIGIT combo continues to show signs of life FierceBiotech
  5. Gilead and Arcus Announce Anti-TIGIT Domvanalimab Continues to Demonstrate Consistent Improvement in Progression-Free Survival in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Study Business Wire
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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As Alabama heads to the NCAA Tournament, questions aren’t going away, but neither is the Tide’s resolve – CBS Sports

  1. As Alabama heads to the NCAA Tournament, questions aren’t going away, but neither is the Tide’s resolve CBS Sports
  2. Nate Oats after semifinal win over Missouri in the SEC Men’s Basketball Tournament | #rolltide Alabama Crimson Tide football on BamaInsider
  3. Alabama basketball painted as new, ugly face of win-at-all-costs Tuscaloosa Magazine
  4. SEC Tournament: Preview, predictions for Semifinal Saturday Saturday Down South
  5. Alabama vs Mississippi State Full Game Highlights | SEC Tournament Quarterfinals | March Madness Alabama Crimson Tide football on BamaInsider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Most ‘long COVID’ symptoms after mild case of virus resolve in about a year: new study

Most people with “long COVID” following a mild case of the COVID-19 virus have their symptoms resolve after a year, according to a new study out of Israel. 

“Long COVID” is defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as the long-term effects of a COVID infection, according to the agency’s website.

The study, published on Jan. 11, 2023, in The BMJ, a peer-reviewed medical trade journal, examined 1,913,234 patient records from the Israeli HMO Maccabi Healthcare Services. 

COVID OMICRON SUBVARIANT XBB: WHY THE NUMBER OF CASES IS LIKELY FAR GREATER THAN REPORTED

The nearly 2 million patients were all tested for COVID-19 during the period between March 2020 and October 2021. 

About 300,000 of those patients tested positive for the coronavirus. The researchers then compared those patients to similar patients who did not test positive for the virus. 

A member of the Salt Lake County Health Department COVID-19 testing staff performs a nasal swab test on a patient outside the Salt Lake County Health Department on Jan. 4, 2022, in Salt Lake City. 
(Associated Press/Rick Bowmer)

The study’s authors created a list of 70 “long COVID” symptoms and looked into patient records to see if those symptoms persisted after a coronavirus diagnosis.

Anyone who was hospitalized for COVID-19 was excluded from the study, as it was deemed they did not have a “mild” case of the virus.

NEW COVID OMICRON SUBVARIANT XBB.1.5 IS ‘SPREADING LIKE WILDFIRE’ IN US: HEALTH EXPERTS REVEAL WHY

“We wanted to truly understand what are the long-term effects of this infection on the majority of the population and whether we should expect a significant burden on health care providers,” senior author Maytal Bivas-Benita and lead author Barak Mizrahi said in a joint email to the health news site STAT.

The study’s results were unexpected, said Bivas-Benita and Mizrahi.

“My real concern is that long COVID may go up with recurrent infection.” 

“As we analyzed the data, we were surprised to find only a small number of symptoms that were related to COVID and remained for a year post-infection, and the low number of people affected by them,” the authors told STAT.

Most people who experienced post-COVID symptoms saw those symptoms clear up within a year, said the newly published study. 
(iStock)

Those who had mild cases of COVID-19, the study found, had an increased risk of a variety of health problems.

Those problems included the loss of smell and taste, difficulties with memory and concentration, breathing difficulties, weakness, strep throat and heart palpitations. 

Women in particular had a higher risk of hair loss, said the study. 

HEALTHY AGING AND DRINKING WATER: FASCINATING FINDINGS FROM A NEW STUDY

For most of these people, however, these symptoms were gone within a year of their having COVID-19, said the study.

Dr. Mark Siegel, a Fox News medical contributor, clinical professor of medicine and practicing internist at NYU Langone Medical Center, told Fox News Digital that he was not overly surprised by the findings of the study. 

“I see a lot of ‘post-COVID’ and I watch it — and hope it goes away.”

“There’s a distinction between ‘post-COVID’ and ‘long-COVID,’” said Dr. Siegel. “So this study just reinforces that [difference] — that most of the time, the symptoms go away.”

“I see a lot of ‘post-COVID’ and I watch it — and hope it goes away. We don’t really have a good treatment for it,” he added.

The Israeli study examined nearly two million people in Israel who were tested for COVID-19. 
(Getty Images)

The findings of the Israeli study run counter to another study stating that mild symptoms of COVID correlated with long COVID, said Siegel. 

He “didn’t buy” the results of that study, said Dr. Siegel — and it was not what he experienced. 

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“The orthodoxy on this is that severe COVID leads to long COVID,” he said. 

Another issue, he explained, is that the coronavirus pandemic “is still evolving” and that more research needs to be done — and that the term “long COVID” is still in need of a universal definition.

For Siegel, “long COVID” is “any symptom I can pin to COVID that lasts beyond six months.” 

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What is most worrying, said Siegel, “is that repetitive infection increases the risk of long COVID. We’re now in the phase where that’s occurring.” 

He also said, “My real concern is that long COVID may go up with recurrent infection.” 

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Long-term symptoms from mild Covid resolve within year, study says



CNN
 — 

The majority of long Covid symptoms resolve within the first year after infection for people with mild cases of Covid-19, according to a large study conducted in Israel.

“Mild disease does not lead to serious or chronic long term morbidity in the vast majority of patients,” said study coauthor Barak Mizrahi, a senior researcher at KI Research Institute in Kfar Malal, via email.

The study, published Wednesday in the journal The BMJ, compared thousands of vaccinated and unvaccinated people with mild Covid symptoms who were not hospitalized with people who tested negative for the virus. Long Covid was defined as symptoms that continue or appear more than four weeks after an initial Covid-19 infection.

“I think this study is reassuring in that most ongoing symptoms following COVID do improve over the first several months following the acute infection,” said Dr. Benjamin Abramoff, director of the Penn Medicine Post-COVID Assessment and Recovery Clinic, via email. He was not involved in the study.

But not for everyone. Abramoff said his clinic continues to see many patients with severe long Covid symptoms lasting longer than one year following their infection.

“This is particularly true in those individuals who had severe persistent symptoms early after their acute infection,” said Abramoff, who leads the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation’s long Covid collaborative.

Dr. Jonathan Whiteson, an associate professor of rehabilitation medicine at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine, sees the same in his clinic.

“I continue to see many patients from the ‘first wave’ of COVID who had mild to moderate acute COVID (and were) never hospitalized who have significant persistent and functionally limiting symptoms nearly 3 years later,” said Whiteson via email. He was not involved with the study.

Israeli researchers analyzed the medical records of nearly 300,000 people diagnosed with mild cases of Covid-19 and compared their health over the next year with approximately 300,000 people who didn’t have Covid. The average age of those who tested positive for Covid was 25 years, and 51% were female.

Researchers looked for 65 conditions that have been associated with long Covid and divided those into two time frames: early, or the first 30 to 180 days after catching Covid; and late, or 180 to 360 days post infection.

After controlling for age, sex, alcohol and tobacco use, preexisting conditions, and the different variants of Covid-19, researchers found a significant risk of brain fog, loss of smell and taste, breathing problems, dizziness and weakness, heart palpitations, and strep throat in both the early and late time periods.

Chest pain, cough, hair loss, muscle and joint pain, and respiratory disorders were significantly increased only during the early phase, according to the researchers.

Difficulty with breathing was the most common complaint, the study found. Being vaccinated reduced the risk of respiratory issues, but researchers found vaccinated individuals had a “similar risk for other outcomes compared with unvaccinated infected patients,” according to the study.

“Because of the study’s size, it was possible to look at the change in symptom prevalence over time and the effects of other factors on persistent symptoms,” said Dr. Peter Openshaw, a professor of experimental medicine at Imperial College London, in a statement.

“Smell disorder typically resolved at about 9 months, but when they were present concentration and memory changes tended to be more persistent,” said Openshaw, who was not involved in the study.

Only slight differences appeared between men and women in the study, but children had fewer early symptoms than adults, which were mostly gone by year’s end. No real differences were found between the original wild-type of SARS-CoV-2 (March 2020 to November 2020), the Alpha variant (January 2021 to April 2021) and the Delta variant (July 2021 to October 2021).

“Patients with mild Covid-19 had an increased risk for a small number of health outcomes, with only a few symptoms persisting a year from SARS-CoV-2 infection and their risk decreased with time from infection,” Mizrahi said via email.

However, “we are not claiming there are no patients who suffer from long COVID symptoms like dyspnea (difficulty breathing), weakness, cognitive impairment etc.,” he added. “(Our study) does not contradict evidence that a small number of patients do suffer from long lasting symptoms as seen in this analysis.”

Researchers pointed to certain limitations in the study, such as the possibility of diagnostic errors or failure to record some milder symptoms over time. Abramoff agreed.

“This design of this study is not able to detect the severity of these symptoms, and there are potentially other missed patients due to using medical coding to detect persistent Long COVID symptoms,” Abramoff said.

It could also be difficult to apply the findings of the study to other countries, such as the United States, due to differences in how doctors code symptoms. For example, the study did not identify several conditions frequently found in long Covid clinics in the US, said Dr. Monica Verduzco-Gutierrez, professor and chair of the department of rehabilitation medicine at the Long School of Medicine at UT Health, San Antonio.

“The most common symptom of Long COVID is fatigue, and that was not on this list. Also missing was post-exertional malaise, dysautonomia/POTS, or ME/CFS. These are some of the major presentations I am seeing in my clinic population, so it is a major limitation of this study to not have those outcomes,” said Verduzco-Gutierrez, who was not involved in the new study.

Post-exertional malaise is an overwhelming exhaustion after even a minimal amount of effort. Unlike regular exhaustion, it can take days to weeks for a person to recover, and the malaise can be reactivated if activity is resumed too quickly.

Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, or POTS, is a bump in heart rate after sitting up or standing that can lead to dizziness or fainting. It’s a form of dysautonomia, a disorder of the autonomic nervous system. “There is usually no cure for dysautonomia,” according to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, or ME/CFS, is a serious long-term illness, in which people have overwhelming fatigue that is not improved by rest. The condition can impact sleep and thinking processes, cause pain in many parts of the body, and keep people from doing most daily activities.

Responding to this concern, Mizrahi told CNN that “post exertional malaise was not included in this study as it is not a diagnosis that commonly prescribed in Israel.” In addition, he said, dysautonomia/POTS was only assigned an International Classification of Diseases, or ICD medical code, as of October 2022, so it too was not included in the study.

However, symptoms of POTS and other conditions may have been included under more general categories such as cardiac arrhythmias or palpitations, he said.

In addition, Mizrahi said fatigue was coded under “weakness” in the study. In fact, researchers found weakness to be the second most common symptom reported in the study, and it continued to plague people ages 19 to 60, for months.

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Christina Applegate multiple sclerosis diagnosis: Actress discusses her resolve to finish the final season of ‘Dead To Me’



CNN
 — 

Christina Applegate is opening up about living with multiple sclerosis, and how finishing her acclaimed show “Dead to Me” was important to her.

The actress, 50, spoke with the New York Times for an article published on Tuesday, ahead of the premiere of the third and final season of her Netflix series later this month. Applegate reflected on what it was like to receive her MS diagnosis over the summer of 2021 during filming. At the time, production shut down for roughly five months as she began treatment for the autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system.

“There was the sense of, ‘Well, let’s get her some medicine so she can get better,’” Applegate said. “And there is no better. But it was good for me. I needed to process my loss of my life, my loss of that part of me. So I needed that time.”

The performer also noted that after that time, it wasn’t like she “came on the other side of it, like, ‘Woohoo, I’m totally fine.’ Acceptance? No. I’m never going to accept this. I’m pissed.”

She recalled even further back, how she began to experience balance and mobility issues as early as during production on the first season of “Dead to Me,” which premiered in May 2019.

“I wish I had paid attention,” she said. “But who was I to know?”

Over the production pause, Netflix had considered shutting the show down indefinitely in light of her health news. But Applegate felt that she “had an obligation” to both Liz Feldman, the creator “Dead to Me,” and Linda Cardellini, her friend and costar, as well as the story.

“The powers that be were like, ‘Let’s just stop. We don’t need to finish it. Let’s put a few episodes together.’ I said, ‘No. We’re going to do it, but we’re going to do it on my terms,’” she said.

And while Applegate said that finishing the series was the hardest thing that she has ever done, the crew and Cardellini, especially, had her back and supported her throughout.

“She was my champion, my warrior, my voice,” Applegate said of Cardellini. “It was like having a mama bear.”

But Cardellini told the Times that she “just wanted the best for the person that I love and care about and have the honor to work with.”

It was in keeping with her feelings on Applegate right from their very first meeting for the show. “I just had the immediate feeling that we were going have each other’s backs,” Cardellini said. “Jen and Judy [their characters in “Dead to Me”] support each other, love each other, help each other through things. Linda and Christina, the same thing.”

In addition to making sure to finish out the final season, it was also important to Applegate to do publicity for “Dead to Me” ahead of the Season 3 premiere on Netflix on November 17.

“This is the first time anyone’s going to see me the way I am,” she said. “I put on 40 pounds; I can’t walk without a cane. I want people to know that I am very aware of all of that.”

As for what viewers take away from the final season, the “Samantha Who?” star is hopeful, to a point.

“If people hate it, if people love it, if all they can concentrate on is, ‘Ooh, look at the cripple,’ that’s not up to me,” she said. “I’m sure that people are going to be, like, ‘I can’t get past it.’”

“Fine, don’t get past it, then,” she added. “But hopefully people can get past it and just enjoy the ride and say goodbye to these two girls.”

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Kate Middleton is Reportedly Planning to Reach Out to Meghan Markle to Resolve Tensions Mom to Mom

Moms know how to get things done better than anyone. And Kate Middleton has apparently decided it is time to help ease tensions between her husband Prince William and his brother Prince Harry, so she’s reportedly planning to reach out to Meghan Markle to clear things up — mom to mom.

“Once Kate and William’s Boston plans are set in stone, she’s planning to extend an olive branch to Meghan in a bid to reunite the brothers and heal the rift,” a source told Us Weekly today.

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This move is actually genius! Princess Kate is mom to Prince George, 9, Princess Charlotte, 7, and Prince Louis, 4, and she has to juggle school pickups, comfort her kids, work, travel, and do 500 other things all while being a royal, so why not add “heal family tensions” to the list as well? It’s just one more thing a mom can get done better than a man (even if the men in question are princes).

The insider added that Middleton believes extending the olive branch to Markle is what the late Queen Elizabeth II and the late Princess Diana — both fantastic mothers themselves — “would’ve wanted.”

Click here to read the full article.

Markle is also a busy mom to Archie, 3, and Lilibet, 1. She reportedly is willing to meet with Kate. “[Prince] Harry and Meghan are knee deep with their hectic schedules, but Meghan is willing to put in the effort as long as dates don’t clash,” the source told Us Weekly.

The Prince and Princess of Wales are visiting Boston and New York City in December, which will mark their first trip with their new titles.

A source told Us Weekly that the duo are “hoping to boost their royal profile across the pond,” adding, “Kate and William are not taking this trip lightly and have been brainstorming with their team about the most effective ways to make a positive impact in the U.S. They’re taking a hands-on approach with speeches and engagements.”

It also seems that Princess Kate is taking a hands-on approach to her relationship with Markle, which has been strained ever since the rumor about Middleton making Markle cry at her wedding to Prince Harry.

They have had their ups and downs throughout the years (see a complete timeline HERE), but recently, they have reportedly been making moves to repair the relationship. They greeted mourners together at Queen Elizabeth’s funeral, and they reportedly shared an “intimate dinner” together. The Sun shared, “the family affair was a small and private gathering with no pictures released.”

Hopefully the rift can be healed once and for all once these two amazing moms come together to fix the problem. Because if moms can’t get it done, who can?

These relatable moments show that Kate Middleton may be a royal mom — but she’s a regular mom too.

Launch Gallery: Our Favorite Photos of Kate Middleton Doing Regular Mom Things

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North Korea Tests World’s Resolve by Sending Missile Over Japan

SEOUL—North Korea’s latest missile launch over Japan represents a major escalation that returns Pyongyang to a pattern of provocation it hasn’t used in years, testing how much international resolve can be summoned to thwart it.

A particularly strong reaction came from Japan, where in two northern prefectures and islands that stretch south of Tokyo, citizens started their Tuesday mornings with emergency alerts about Pyongyang’s intermediate-range missile flying over their country. The incident will likely energize Japan’s plans to increase military spending—a policy shift aimed largely at deterring North Korea.

President Biden was scheduled to talk on Tuesday with Japanese Prime Minister

Fumio Kishida

to discuss a joint response. U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan spoke in separate calls with his Japanese and South Korean counterparts, reaffirming U.S. commitments to both countries.

South Korea, whose new conservative leader

Yoon Suk

-yeol has taken a more confrontational stance with the regime of North Korean leader

Kim Jong Un

than his predecessor, ordered jet fighters to fire precision bombs hours after the latest test. North Korea didn’t respond to calls via the inter-Korean liaison line, normally held twice a day, for the first time since June, according to South Korea’s Unification Ministry.

An image of Kim Jong Un appeared on a screen in Tokyo on Tuesday during a broadcast about North Korea’s latest missile launch.



Photo:

richard a. brooks/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The Kim regime appears to be back on a similar provocation trajectory as in 2016 and 2017, when a series of major weapons tests—including lobbing missiles over Japan—eventually drew the ire of its allies in Beijing and Moscow. Pyongyang hasn’t faced much resistance so far despite unleashing nearly two dozen ballistic-missile launches in 2022, the most it has conducted in a single year.

The ballistic-missile launches violate United Nations Security Council resolutions. But U.S.-led efforts to heap additional penalties on the rogue nation have been blocked by Russia and China, which advocate a relaxing of sanctions.

“There is no question Kim Jong Un is trying to drum up the same tension he did in 2017,” said Jean H. Lee, a senior fellow at the Korea program at the Wilson Center, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington. “The tension gives him the pretext to continue testing.”

In the coming weeks, North Korea could conduct its first nuclear test in five years, South Korea’s spy agency said last week. The geopolitical dynamics have changed since Pyongyang’s last test, with Moscow and Beijing engaged in a deepening standoff with the West. North Korea has drawn closer to Russia this year, publicly supporting the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine. While Beijing has called for a cease-fire and negotiations, China has backed Russia economically during the war. Separately, Chinese leader

Xi Jinping

in September exchanged letters with Mr. Kim pledging to strengthen ties further.

In March, Pyongyang’s first intercontinental-ballistic missile test in more than four years—once considered a step too far for Beijing and Moscow—concluded without any major reprimands.

The Tuesday morning missile test was the first to fly over Japan in five years. It halted trains, disrupted airports and spooked citizens en route to offices and schools. Tokyo officials called the launch an imminent threat to the region.

The missile test halted trains in Japan as officials called the launch a threat to the region.



Photo:

KYODO/via REUTERS

The North Korean test could give momentum to proposals from Mr. Kishida’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party to raise Japan’s defense budget, which has long hovered around 1% of gross domestic product, to around 2% of GDP within five years. Mr. Kishida has pledged to sharply raise Japan’s spending on missiles and other weapons to deter China and North Korea. On Friday, a Japanese government panel began discussions on how to fund a bigger defense budget.

North Korea has given no public indication it wants a swift return to formal talks with the U.S. after a three-year hiatus. The Kim regime has spurned numerous offers from the Biden administration to meet without preconditions, including outreach as recently as July.

North Korea is likely waiting for the U.S. to make a first move, expressing firmer commitments to sanctions relief before choosing to re-engage, or even floating the prospect of a summit with Mr. Biden, security experts say. But that moment hasn’t arrived, with the U.S. focused on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, rising Chinese aggression, plus a packed domestic agenda ahead of November’s midterm elections.

“Considering the recent rhetoric from the Kim regime I don’t see a quick return to diplomacy,” said Lee Yong-joon, a former South Korean nuclear envoy who has taken part in negotiations with North Korea.

The U.S., by effectively placing the North Koreans on hold, could be attempting to convey to Mr. Kim that the terms of engagement sit with Washington, rather than the other way around, said Soo Kim, a North Korean expert at Rand Corp., a policy think tank. But it is unclear if this is a tactical downplay, she added.

“The level of U.S. engagement on the issue is a key element in changing the rhythm of policy responses to the North Korean threat,” Ms. Kim said.

South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol ordered jet fighters to launch precision bombs after North Korea’s test.



Photo:

Associated Press

Recent North Korean tests coincided with Vice President

Kamala Harris’s

visit last week to the region and trilateral maritime exercises between Washington, Seoul and Tokyo. On Saturday, South Korea’s military showed off weapons meant to counter Pyongyang’s nuclear threat.

The initial details of Tuesday’s launch suggest it may have been the Hwasong-12 intermediate-range missile, unveiled in 2017 as part of what North Korea said was its plan to strike U.S. military bases.

“As opposed to short-range missiles largely targeting South Korea, an intermediate-range missile immediately grabs international attention, by directly threatening Japan and U.S. military bases,” said Cheon Seong-whun, a former South Korean National Security Council official.

—Alastair Gale in Tokyo contributed to this article.

Write to Dasl Yoon at dasl.yoon@wsj.com and Timothy W. Martin at Timothy.Martin@wsj.com

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