The Boston Globe

North Korea says it has spy satellite

Seoul says launch would violate sanctions

- By Hyung-jin Kim and Kim Tong-Hyung

SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said his country has built its first-ever military spy satellite and that he planned to launch it on an undisclose­d date, state media reported Wednesday.

Previous missile and rocket tests have demonstrat­ed that North Korea can send satellites into space, but many experts question whether it has cameras sophistica­ted enough to use for spying from a satellite because only low-resolution images were released after past test launches.

During his visit to the country’s aerospace agency Tuesday, Kim said that having an operationa­l military reconnaiss­ance satellite is crucial for North Korea to effectivel­y use its nuclearcap­able missiles. Kim cited what he described as serious security threats posed by “the most hostile rhetoric and explicit action” by the United States and South Korea this year, according to the official Korean Central News Agency. He likely hopes to pressure his rivals on issues including joint military drills and internatio­nal economic sanctions on North Korea.

Kim said “the military reconnaiss­ance satellite No. 1” had already been built and ordered officials to speed up preparatio­ns for its launch. He said North Korea must launch several satellites to establish an intelligen­cegatherin­g capability, KCNA said.

North Korea has said its ongoing run of weapons tests, including its first test launch of a solid-fueled interconti­nental ballistic missile designed to strike the US mainland last week, are a response to joint military exercises between the United States and its regional allies South Korea and Japan. North Korea has carried out about 100 missile tests since the start of last year, including about 30 this year.

The US and South Korean militaries have been expanding combined drills in response to North Korea’s growing nuclear threats. This week, the allies launched a 12day aerial exercise involving some 110 warplanes and staged a one-day naval missile defense exercise with Japan.

Spy satellites are among an array of major weapons systems that Kim publicly vowed to develop during a major ruling Workers’ Party conference in January 2021. Kim also pledged to build solid-propellant ICBMs, nuclear-powered submarines, hypersonic missiles, and multi-warhead missiles. North Korea has since conducted tests of such weapons, but observers say those high-tech weapons are still in developmen­t stages.

After North Korea launched a test satellite last December, it publicized black-and-white photos showing a space view of South Korean cities. Some civilian experts in South Korea said at the time the photos were too crude for a surveillan­ce purpose and that they were likely capable of only recognizin­g big targets like warships at sea or military installati­ons on the ground.

Kim’s sister and senior North Korean official Kim Yo-jong said the test satellite carried a commercial camera because there was no reason to use an expensive, high-resolution camera for a single-shot test.

Kim Jong Un said one of the objectives of its spy satellite is acquiring the ability to “use preemptive military force when the situation demands.”

Tuesday’s KCNA dispatch focused on US military assets like aircraft carriers and longrange bombers that have been deployed in South Korea in recent months, but made no mention of possible targets in the mainland US. That could imply that North Korea intends to use its reconnaiss­ance satellites to identify key targets in South Korea, including US military bases, in order to attack them with shortrange missiles.

Putting a reconnaiss­ance satellite into orbit would require a long-range rocket. The UN bans such launches by North Korea because it views them as cover for testing its long-range ballistic missile technology.

In response to a question posed by the Associated Press, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said North Korea’s launch of a spy satellite would threaten regional peace and violate multiple UN Security Council resolution­s.

 ?? ?? North Korea’s Kim Jong Un said a launch is planned.
North Korea’s Kim Jong Un said a launch is planned.

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