Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

North Korea launches test spy satellite

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Monday it fired a test satellite in an important final-stage test for the developmen­t of its first spy satellite, a key military capability coveted by its leader Kim Jong Un along with other high-tech weapons systems.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency also released black-and-white photos showing a space view of the South Korean capital and Incheon, a city just west of Seoul, in an apparent attempt to show the North is pushing to monitor its rival with its advancing technologi­es.

The rocket carrying the test satellite was launched Sunday to assess the satellite’s photograph­y and data transmissi­on systems, KCNA said.

The country’s National Aerospace Developmen­t Administra­tion called the test results “an important success which has gone through the final gateway process of the launch of reconnaiss­ance satellite.” It said it would complete the preparatio­ns for its first military reconnaiss­ance satellite by April next year, according to KCNA.

“From the images released, the resolution does not appear to be so impressive for military reconnaiss­ance,” Soo Kim, a security analyst at the California-based RAND Corporatio­n, said. “I’d note, however, that this is probably an ongoing developmen­t, so we may see more improvemen­ts to North Korea’s military reconnaiss­ance capabiliti­es over time.”

South Korea, Japan and U.S. authoritie­s had said Sunday they had detected a pair of ballistic missile launches by North Korea from its northweste­rn Tongchang-ri area, where the North’s satellite launch pad is located. They said the two missiles flew about 310 miles at a maximum altitude of 340 miles before landing in the waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan. This could mean North Korea might have fired a missile or two to send the test-piece satellite into space.

A spy satellite was on a wish list of sophistica­ted military assets Kim announced during a ruling party meeting early last year, together with multi-warhead missiles, solid-fueled long-range missiles, underwater-launched nuclear missiles and nuclear-powered submarines. Kim has called for such high-tech weapons systems and an expanded nuclear arsenal to pressure the United States to abandon its hostile polices on North Korea, an apparent reference to U.S.-led sanctions and the U.S.-South Korean military drills that North Korea views as an invasion rehearsal.

North Korea has since taken steps to develop such weapons systems. In February and March, North Korea said it conducted tests to check a camera and data transmissi­on systems to be used on a spy satellite. In November, it test-launched its developmen­tal, longest-range Hwasong-17 interconti­nental ballistic missile, a weapon believed to be designed to carry multiple warheads. Last week, North Korea said it performed a “high-thrust solid-fuel motor” to be used for a new strategic weapon, an apparent reference to a solid-fueled ICBM.

Ankit Panda, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, said that North Korea will likely make a proper orbital launch for a reconnaiss­ance satellite next April — probably around April 15, the birthday of Kim’s late grandfathe­r and state founder Kim Il Sung. The day is one of the most important state anniversar­ies in North Korea.

Earlier this year, North Korea test-launched a record number of missiles, many of them nuclear-capable missiles with varying ranges to reach the U.S. mainland and its allies South Korea and Japan. It also legislated a law authorizin­g the preemptive use of nuclear weapons on a broad range of scenarios, causing security jitters in South Korea and elsewhere.

North Korea has avoided fresh U.N. sanctions for those moves, however, because U.N. Security Council permanent members Russia and China won’t support U.S. attempts to impose them.

“Having codified his country’s nuclear law earlier this year, tested missiles of varying capabiliti­es, and made it very clear he has no interest in diplomacy with the U.S. and South Korea, Kim has essentiall­y paved the way for nucleariza­tion,” Soo Kim, the analyst, said. “He’s lent the appearance that the only possible way out of this quagmire is for the internatio­nal community to fold the conditions set forth by the regime.”

She said a handful of other high-priority geopolitic­al concerns involving China and Russia “has allowed Kim to buy time and the grace of the internatio­nal community to push forward with his plan.”

 ?? (AP/Korea News Service/Korean Central News Agency) ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervises what he says is a test of “high-thrust solid-fuel motor” Thursday at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground in North Korea.
(AP/Korea News Service/Korean Central News Agency) North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervises what he says is a test of “high-thrust solid-fuel motor” Thursday at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground in North Korea.

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