Muscat Daily

Kim inspects North Korea’s first spy satellite: State media

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Leader Kim Jong Un has inspected North Korea’s first military spy satellite and gave the go-ahead for its ‘future action plan’, state media said on Wednesday.

Kim met with the Non-permanent Satellite Launch Preparator­y Committee on Tuesday before viewing the satellite, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported.

A month ago, Kim said constructi­on of the satellite was completed and gave the green light for its launch.

That report on April 18 came about a week after Pyongyang launched what it said was a new solid-fuel interconti­nental ballistic missile, marking a major breakthrou­gh in its banned weapons programmes.

Analysts have said there is significan­t technologi­cal overlap between the developmen­t of ICBMS and space launch capabiliti­es. On Tuesday, ‘after acquaintin­g himself in detail with the work of the committee, (Kim) inspected the military reconnaiss­ance satellite No. 1, which is ready for loading after undergoing the final general assembly check and space environmen­t test’, KCNA said.

Kim accused the United States and South Korea of escalating what he called ‘confrontat­ional moves’ against the North and said his country will exercise its right to self-defence.

Kim then ‘approved the future action plan of the preparator­y committee’, KCNA added.

The developmen­t of a military reconnaiss­ance satellite was one of the key defence projects outlined by Kim in 2021.

In December 2022, North Korea said it had carried out an ‘important final-stage test’ for the developmen­t of a spy satellite, which it said it would complete by April this year.

At the time, experts in South Korea quickly raised doubts about the results, saying the quality of black-and-white images released by North Korea - purportedl­y taken from a satellite - was poor.

Pyongyang has not provided a launch date, though last month Kim said the satellite would be sent up ‘at the planned date’.

North Korea declared itself an ‘irreversib­le’ nuclear power last year, effectivel­y ending the possibilit­y of denucleari­sation talks.

Pyongyang would struggle to do satellite reconnaiss­ance with its own technology and without high tech help from Russia or China, analysts say.

Still, ‘since North Korea’s reconnaiss­ance satellites are an important factor in the event of a nuclear pre-emptive strike, they

pose a significan­t threat to the South’, Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, told AFP last month.

Washington and Seoul have ramped up defence cooperatio­n in response, staging joint military exercises with advanced stealth jets and high-profile US strategic assets.

North Korea views such exercises as rehearsals for invasion and described them as ‘frantic’ drills ‘simulating an all-out war against’ Pyongyang.

A month ago, Kim Jong Un said constructi­on of the satellite was completed and gave the green light for its launch

 ?? (AFP) ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter, presumed to be named Ju Ae, meeting with the Non-permanent Satellite Launch Preparator­y Committee and inspecting a military reconnaiss­ance satellite, at an undisclose­d location in North Korea on Tuesday
(AFP) North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter, presumed to be named Ju Ae, meeting with the Non-permanent Satellite Launch Preparator­y Committee and inspecting a military reconnaiss­ance satellite, at an undisclose­d location in North Korea on Tuesday

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