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N Korea plans rocket launch, ignores US warning

March 13, 2009 00:00:00


SEOUL, Mar 12 (Reuters): North Korea said Thursday it had given global agencies official notice of its plans to launch a satellite, with a report indicating it could occur in early April, in a move seen by Washington as a disguised missile test.

The United States said Wednesday it could pursue a range of options against the reclusive state if it launches the long-range ballistic missile, including squeezing it harder with UN sanctions imposed after separate missile and nuclear tests in 2006.

The latest move adds to mounting tension on the divided Korean peninsula with North Korea saying it was on the edge of war, though many analysts doubt Pyongyang would dare send its poorly equipped military into a direct attack on the South.

North Korea said it has acceded to an international treaty on space exploration "as part of its preparations for launching Kwangmyongsong-2, an experimental communications satellite," its KCNA news agency reported. Outside the North it is called Taepodong-2.

Its official media has also described itself as the victim of planned aggression by South Korea and its US ally.

An article in the North's Rodong Sinmun daily accused South Korea and the United States of using this week's joint military exercises as "madcap and reckless saber rattling ... in a bid to make surprise pre-emptive strikes at the DPRK (North Korea)."

The US Navy showed off to media its Aegis-class destroyer USS Chaffee, which is in South Korea for the drills and equipped to intercept missiles. Media reported last week that Japan and the United States might try to intercept any ballistic missile launched by the North.

The North says it would consider shooting down its rocket an act of war and has told South Korean commercial planes to keep away from its air space.

Adding to Pyongyang's fury, the USS John C Stennis aircraft carrier group is sailing off the south coast as part of the military exercises with the South, where the United States permanently stations about 28,000 troops.

Lending a degree of credibility to the North's rocket launch plans, Pyongyang said it had told agencies, including the International Civil Aviation Organisation, of its plans so they can inform aircraft.

The South's Yonhap news agency quoted sources as saying North Korea had told the agencies the launch would be between April 4-8.

Analysts said there were few technical differences between a satellite launch and a test of its longest-range ballistic missile, which use the same rocket.

"The missile launch requires additional technology because the missile needs to be able to re-enter the atmosphere," said a defence analyst in Seoul who asked not to be named because of the sensitive subject matter.

North Korea shocked the region when it fired a Taepodong-1 over Japan in 1998.

The later Taepodong-2, whose first and only test flight in 2006 failed, is designed to carry a weapon as far as Alaska.

Experts said a launch looks inevitable, partly because the government wants to flaunt a high-tech success at home and also display its prowess to the international community from which it is almost completely isolated.


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