<p>North Korea said Sunday it had carried out a "very important test" at its space launch centre, as Pyongyang ramps up pressure on Washington over stalled nuclear talks.</p>.<p>The announcement of Saturday's test at the Sohae satellite launch site came just hours after US President Donald Trump said he'd be "surprised" by any hostile action from the North.</p>.<p>"A very important test took place at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground on the afternoon of December 7, 2019," a spokesman for North Korea's Academy of the National Defence Science said.</p>.<p>The result of the latest test will have an "important effect" on changing the "strategic position" of North Korea, the spokesman said in a statement carried by the KCNA news agency.</p>.<p>The statement did not provide further details on the test.</p>.<p>Satellite imagery taken on December 5 showed a large container box at the site that was "a decent indicator of an impending engine test", Jeffrey Lewis of the US-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies had said ahead of Pyongyang's statement.</p>.<p>Sohae, on North Korea's northwest coast, is ostensibly a facility designed for putting satellites into orbit.</p>.<p>But Pyongyang has carried out several rocket launches there that were condemned by the US and others as disguised long-range ballistic missile tests.</p>.<p>Rocket engines are easily repurposed for use in missiles and the international community has called Pyongyang's space programme a fig leaf for weapons tests.</p>.<p>North Korea dismantled the test stand at Sohae amid a rapid rapprochement in 2018 but reassembled it this year, Lewis said, adding, "Still, we had not seen any activity at the test stand" until now.</p>.<p>"It is clear that this is one more sign that North Korea is conducting more missile-related activities as Kim Jong Un's end-of-year deadline for sanctions relief approaches," he said, referring to the North Korean leader.</p>.<p>The latest test comes as Pyongyang is ramping up pressure ahead of its December 31 deadline for the US to propose a new offer to kickstart stalled nuclear talks.</p>.<p>Hours before North Korea announced its latest test, Trump had emphasised his "very good relationship" with Kim.</p>.<p>"Well, we'll see about North Korea. I'd be surprised if North Korea acted hostiley," he said on Saturday afternoon in Washington DC.</p>.<p>"(Kim) knows I have an election coming up. I don't think he wants to interfere with that. But we'll have to see."</p>.<p>Following his first summit with Kim in June 2018, Trump said Kim had agreed to destroy "a major missile engine testing site" without naming the facility.</p>.<p>Kim then agreed to shutter the Sohae site during a summit last year with South Korean President Moon Jae-in in Pyongyang as part of trust-building measures.</p>.<p>Kim has held three meetings with Trump since June 2018 but little progress has been made in efforts towards denuclearisation.</p>.<p>On Thursday, the North's vice foreign minister warned of returning to a war of words with the US, threatening to resume referring to Trump as a "dotard" -- Pyongyang's nickname for the US leader at the height of tensions in 2017.</p>.<p>The comments came a day after it warned that if the US used military force against the North it would take "prompt corresponding actions at any level".</p>.<p>At the recent NATO summit, Trump boasted about Washington's "most powerful military", adding: "Hopefully, we don't have to use it, but if we do, we'll use it. If we have to, we'll do it."</p>
<p>North Korea said Sunday it had carried out a "very important test" at its space launch centre, as Pyongyang ramps up pressure on Washington over stalled nuclear talks.</p>.<p>The announcement of Saturday's test at the Sohae satellite launch site came just hours after US President Donald Trump said he'd be "surprised" by any hostile action from the North.</p>.<p>"A very important test took place at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground on the afternoon of December 7, 2019," a spokesman for North Korea's Academy of the National Defence Science said.</p>.<p>The result of the latest test will have an "important effect" on changing the "strategic position" of North Korea, the spokesman said in a statement carried by the KCNA news agency.</p>.<p>The statement did not provide further details on the test.</p>.<p>Satellite imagery taken on December 5 showed a large container box at the site that was "a decent indicator of an impending engine test", Jeffrey Lewis of the US-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies had said ahead of Pyongyang's statement.</p>.<p>Sohae, on North Korea's northwest coast, is ostensibly a facility designed for putting satellites into orbit.</p>.<p>But Pyongyang has carried out several rocket launches there that were condemned by the US and others as disguised long-range ballistic missile tests.</p>.<p>Rocket engines are easily repurposed for use in missiles and the international community has called Pyongyang's space programme a fig leaf for weapons tests.</p>.<p>North Korea dismantled the test stand at Sohae amid a rapid rapprochement in 2018 but reassembled it this year, Lewis said, adding, "Still, we had not seen any activity at the test stand" until now.</p>.<p>"It is clear that this is one more sign that North Korea is conducting more missile-related activities as Kim Jong Un's end-of-year deadline for sanctions relief approaches," he said, referring to the North Korean leader.</p>.<p>The latest test comes as Pyongyang is ramping up pressure ahead of its December 31 deadline for the US to propose a new offer to kickstart stalled nuclear talks.</p>.<p>Hours before North Korea announced its latest test, Trump had emphasised his "very good relationship" with Kim.</p>.<p>"Well, we'll see about North Korea. I'd be surprised if North Korea acted hostiley," he said on Saturday afternoon in Washington DC.</p>.<p>"(Kim) knows I have an election coming up. I don't think he wants to interfere with that. But we'll have to see."</p>.<p>Following his first summit with Kim in June 2018, Trump said Kim had agreed to destroy "a major missile engine testing site" without naming the facility.</p>.<p>Kim then agreed to shutter the Sohae site during a summit last year with South Korean President Moon Jae-in in Pyongyang as part of trust-building measures.</p>.<p>Kim has held three meetings with Trump since June 2018 but little progress has been made in efforts towards denuclearisation.</p>.<p>On Thursday, the North's vice foreign minister warned of returning to a war of words with the US, threatening to resume referring to Trump as a "dotard" -- Pyongyang's nickname for the US leader at the height of tensions in 2017.</p>.<p>The comments came a day after it warned that if the US used military force against the North it would take "prompt corresponding actions at any level".</p>.<p>At the recent NATO summit, Trump boasted about Washington's "most powerful military", adding: "Hopefully, we don't have to use it, but if we do, we'll use it. If we have to, we'll do it."</p>