Tuesday, December 11, 2012

North Korea ignores international opposition, launches rocket

Despite U.N. sanctions and international warnings, North Korea launched a long-range rocket on Wednesday. Most analysts agree the move was intended to bolster national support for?Kim Jong-un.

By Jack Kim and Mayumi Negishi,?Reuters / December 11, 2012

North Korean make their way in Pyongyang, North Korea Wednesday morning. North Korea has made no mention yet of a rocket that South Korean and Japanese officials say was launched from a west coast site.

AP Photo/Kyodo News

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Isolated and impoverished North Korea?launched its second long-range rocket of 2012 on Wednesday and may have finally succeeded in putting a satellite into space, the stated aim of what critics say is a disguised ballistic missile test.

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The rocket was launched just before 10 a.m. Korean time (0100 GMT) and overflew the Japanese island of Okinawa.

A rocket launch by North Korea?in April was aborted after less than two minutes flight. Wednesday's launch came after the North?carried out repairs on the rocket, which South Korean officials said had been removed from its gantry on Monday.

Both?South Korea?and?Japan?called meetings of their top security councils after the launch and?Japan?said it could not tolerate the action.?Japanese television station NHK?said the second stage of the rocket had crashed into seas off the?Philippines?as planned.

It was not immediately clear if the third stage carrying the satellite had made it into space.

"Whether the satellite launch (orbit) itself succeeds or not, it is a success for North Korea?anyway," said Kim Young-soo, a North Korea?expert at?Sogang University?in South Korea.

There was no immediate annoucement from North Korea?on the launch. It made a formal announcement when the April launch had failed, but has previously claimed that it put a satellite into space in 2009, something no one has been able to verify.

"We will convene an emergency security meeting at 10:30. The launch was made around 9.50 a.m.," an official at South Korea's presidential office in?Seoul?said.

The?North launched the rocket close to the Dec. 17 anniversary of the death of former leader?Kim Jong-il?last year and as elections loom in?South Korea?and?Japan.

Pyongyang?says it is entitled to launch a satellite into space but critics say the rocket development is aimed at nurturing the kind of technology needed to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range missile.

North Korea is banned from conducting missile and nuclear-related tests under U.N. sanctions imposed after its 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests.

The rocket's path was scheduled to pass between the Korean peninsula and?China, with a second stage splashing down off the?Philippines?before launching the satellite into orbit.

Most political analysts believe the launch is designed to bolster the credentials of new leader?Kim Jong-un?as he cements his rule over the country of 22 million people.

A government official in?Seoul?said recently that the transition of power to?Kim Jong-un?did not appear to be going as smoothly as anticipated and there were signs that the regime was concerned over the possibility of rising dissent.

Kim is the third of his line to rule North Korea, whose national output is around one-fortieth of that of prosperous South Korea.

Plans for the launch had drawn criticism from?South Korea,?Russia,?Japan?and the?United States?as well as NATO and the?United Nations.

The?North's only major diplomatic ally,?China, has expressed "deep concern" over the launch but is thought unlikely to back any further sanctions against its ally.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/XQxc-Nr8SWI/North-Korea-ignores-international-opposition-launches-rocket

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