Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korea calls rocket’s launch step toward space surveillan­ce

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea said it conducted its first successful launch of a solid-fuel rocket Wednesday in what it called a major step toward acquiring a space surveillan­ce capability amid rising animositie­s with rival North Korea.

The launch came six days after North Korea carried out its first interconti­nental ballistic missile test since 2017 in an apparent attempt to expand its weapons arsenal and increase pressure on the Biden administra­tion amid stalled disarmamen­t talks.

The South Korean-built solid-propellant rocket soared into the sky before releasing a dummy satellite in space, according to photos released by Seoul’s Defense Ministry. A ministry statement said Defense Minister Suh Wook and other senior officials observed the liftoff.

It said solid-fuel rockets reduce launch times, have simpler structures and are cheaper to develop and manufactur­e than liquid-fuel rockets. South Korea will soon launch a spy satellite into orbit aboard a solid-fuel rocket, the ministry said.

South Korea currently has no military reconnaiss­ance satellites of its own and depends on U.S. spy satellites to monitor strategic facilities in North Korea.

In 2020, South Korea won U.S. consent to use solid fuel for space launch vehicles, removing a restrictio­n that Washington had previously imposed out of concerns that use of the technology could lead to bigger missiles and trigger a regional arms race. Last year, the United States lifted other remaining restrictio­ns to allow South Korea to develop missiles with unlimited ranges.

Wednesday’s launch came amid tensions over North Korea’s launch of an ICBM last Thursday, which broke its self-imposed moratorium on big weapons tests and violated multiple U.N. Security Council resolution­s.

South Korea’s Defense Ministry concluded earlier this week that North Korea fired a previously tested Hwasong-15 ICBM, rather than a newer, bigger, longer-range Hwasong-17 that it claims to have tested. The missile flew farther and longer than any previous North Korean launch, placing all of the mainland U.S. within its potential striking distance.

“Coming at a very grave time following North Korea’s lifting of the weapons tests moratorium, this successful test-launch of the solid-fuel space launch vehicle is a key milestone in our military’s efforts to [build] a unilateral space-based surveillan­ce system and bolster defense capability,” the South Korean statement said.

Lee Choon Geun, an honorary research fellow at South Korea’s Science and Technology Policy Institute, said developmen­t of the solid-fuel rocket would also contribute to improving South Korea’s missile technology, as ballistic missiles and rockets used in satellite launches share similar bodies, engines and other technology.

Lee said solid-fuel rockets are typically used to launch small satellites because they have weaker thrust force than similar-sized liquid-fuel rockets. He said bigger satellites can carry larger cameras that produce higher-resolution imagery.

Last year, South Korea’s first domestical­ly produced liquid-fuel space rocket reached its desired altitude but failed to deliver a dummy payload into orbit in its first test launch.

North Korea didn’t immediatel­y respond to South Korea’s latest rocket launch. It previously called the U.S. decision to lift the missile restrictio­ns on South Korea an example of Washington’s hostile policy toward North Korea.

 ?? (AP/South Korea Defense Ministry) ?? South Korea’s solid-fuel rocket is launched at an undisclose­d location Wednesday in South Korea.
(AP/South Korea Defense Ministry) South Korea’s solid-fuel rocket is launched at an undisclose­d location Wednesday in South Korea.

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