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White House spokesman Gordon Johndroe said the United States sees the several short-range guided missiles the North lobbed into the sea that separates it from Japan "as a routine exercise that they do from time to time."
U.S. officials, eager to make progress on a nuclear disarmament accord with the North that has been stalled over a financial dispute, have been hesitant to criticize Pyongyang.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called the tests "extremely regrettable" but said his country does not consider them a serious threat to national security.
At the State Department, deputy spokesman Tom Casey said he did not believe that the tests had any particular implications for the six-party nuclear disarmament process.
"I don't think it causes any fundamental shift in either their ( North Korea's) military posture or anyone else's," he said.
Casey added that the tests have no apparent effect on the moratorium that North Korea has imposed on long-range missile tests.
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