The Sun (Malaysia)

N. Korea hails engine test

> Kim: ‘New birth’ for rocket industry

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SEOUL: North Korea has tested a powerful new rocket engine, state media said yesterday, with leader Kim Jong-Un hailing the successful test as a “new birth” for the nation’s rocket industry.

The test was apparently timed to coincide with the visit of US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to Beijing Saturday, where he warned that regional tensions had reached a “dangerous level”.

State news agency said Kim had overseen the operation, and “emphasised that the whole world will soon witness what eventful significan­ce the great victory won today carries”, KCNA reported, hinting that the North could use the new engine to launch a rocket to put a satellite in orbit.

Rocket engines are easily repurposed for use in missiles.

Outside observers say that the nuclear-armed Pyongyang’s space programme is a fig leaf for weapons tests.

“The developmen­t and completion of a new-type highthrust engine would help consolidat­e the scientific and technologi­cal foundation to match the world-level satellite delivery capability in the field of outer space developmen­t,” KCNA reported.

“The leader (Kim) noted that the success made in the current test marked a great event of historic significan­ce as it declared a new birth of the Juche-based rocket industry.”

On Saturday, the US and China pledged to work together to address the threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear programme.

Tillerson has also visited US allies Japan and South Korea where he said the US would no longer observe the “failed” approach of patient diplomacy with Pyongyang, warning that American military action against the North was “on the table”.

The tougher US talk followed two North Korean nuclear tests last year and recent missile launches that Pyongyang described as practice for an attack on US bases in Japan.

The last ground test of a high- powered rocket engine was in September last year, which was also observed by Kim.

Kim at that time hailed the test and called for more rocket launches to turn the country into a “possessor of geostation­ary satellites in a couple of years to come”.

A geostation­ary satellite must be propelled to an altitude of 36,000km and North Korea is showing off its progress in developing a long-range inter-continenta­l ballistic missile that can reach the US east coast, Professor Yang Moo-Jin of the University of North Korean Studies said.

“The North is hinting strongly that it will soon launch a new satellite rocket” from its Sohae satellite launch site, Yang said.

It may also carry out a secretive interconti­nental ballistic missile test using a mobile launcher, he added. – AFP

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