The Borneo Post

N. Korea conducts rocket engine test — Report

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SEOUL: North Korea recently tested a small rocket engine, a monitoring group said yesterday, after a US official had reportedly suggested the test could be a step to develop an interconti­nental ballistic missile.

The respected 38 North analysis group however said it was not clear whether the test, conducted at the North’s Sohae satellite launch site, involved an ICBM engine.

Based on satellite imagery analysis, the Washington-based group said the nuclear- armed state appeared to have conducted a ‘small rocket engine test’ on or around June 22.

Previous satellite imagery of the site taken on June 10 showed no signs of test preparatio­ns, which showed North “possesses the technical and logistical capabiliti­es to conduct such tests with little or no advance warning”, it added.

An unnamed Washington official told Reuters last week that the North had tested an engine that “could be for the smallest stage of an ICBM rocket”.

But 38 North, which is part of Johns Hopkins University, remained cautious, saying it was “not possible” to confirm whether the latest test was for an ICBM engine using satellite imagery alone.

The impoverish­ed, isolated North has staged two atomic tests and dozens of missile launches since the beginning of last year, raising concerns over the gradual upgrade in its disputed weapons programmes, which have seen it subjected to multiple rounds of United Nations sanctions. — AFP

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