...not WW3/Ukraine material, so bringing it here.
NK has test-launched a rocket (ICBM-class, whatever they say, but they don't seem to be too bothered) to a height of 6,000km.
Sent on a mostly vertical trajectory, to land practically in their back yard (in the Sea of Japan), prior generations of missile were sent to 3,000km and 4,500km. Estimates were that these would translate to 10,000km and 13,000km range, respectively, in more typical inter-continental trajectories. The former put LA in range, the latter took in basically the whole of the US (just). And, in the other direction would have easily found Europe (just over 10k km to Portugal) or even most of Africa (Johannesburg is just a tad over 13k km away.)
Assuming 6k km test-height maps to ~16k km of mission range (it'll not be so linear, but I'm not sure quite how non-linear) then that's a significant additional buffer for either a more evasive/surreptitious track or a greater payload. Though not, in itself, looking like a valid 'peaceful' satellite launcher. Much of South America remains out of the theoretical range (Brasilia is 17.5k-ish km away, launching westerly, Santiago more than 18k km easterly, as an example), but any of NK's traditional opponents are within the conceptual strike-range.
Not that they will, or necessarily have the warheads necessary (to make a launch more than a kinetic/explosive 'demonstration', once the world stops retaliating and works out what the provocation actually consisted of), but it's all adding to the obvious capabilities and potential ambitions in this peculiar little corner of the world.