Are you retarded or something, they only tested a long range missile last week or the week before.
Based on its maximum altitude reached (apoapsis), speed and the angle of launch you can reliably predict it's range.
It was launched at an extremely acute angle and came down at another sharp angle so as to remain in NK territory, but numerous tracking services around the world got enough that from that to reliably predict it's potential range.
You can keep wishing it's not happening but it's happening and Trump sabre rattling does absolutely nothing to prevent that and if anything provides a reason for NK expediency.
That is written by idiots that have absolutely no clue how an ICBM works.
It's not a fucking bottle rocket. You don't just tilt it and that's where it goes and all is well. It doesn't work that way AT ALL.
First off, you have to launch vertical. You can't launch at an angle because the rocket will never survive. The stress will rip it apart.
An ICBM goes vertical until it reaches the upper atmosphere before it starts to angle at all. By that time the air is thin enough so the rocket can withstand the stress. As it reaches it's upper limits it then begins it's angled decent to the target.
At this point, about as far as their EMPTY ROCKET THEY HAVE BEEN TESTING can reach is about half way across the Atlantic.
IT STILL HAS NO WARHEAD ON IT.
By the time they mount a useable warhead, which they don't have, it's going to double the weight of the rocket. That's going to make them double the amount of fuel, which will again increase the weight of the rocket, which is going to cut its useable range by 75% or thereabouts.
That means that even if they somehow shit a re-entry vehicle (which they don't have) and a useable warhead (which they don't have just yet) about as far as they can make it is Japan.
But the problem gets worse: North Korea doesn't have an outer orbit guidance satellite. So they will, quite literally, be guessing where the damn thing is going to hit if it hits at all.
Right now, they'll be launching with about the same accuracy as Germany had with the V2. At best.