North Korea starts fuelling long-range rocket
Impoverished North Korea rejected
international protests over its planned long-range rocket launch and said today
that it was injecting fuel "as we speak", meaning it could blast off
as early as tomorrow.If all goes to plan, the launch, which North Korea's
neighbours and the West say is a disguised ballistic missile test, will take a
three-stage rocket over a sea separating the Korean peninsula from China before
releasing a satellite into orbit when the third stage fires over waters near
the Philippines.Regional powers also worry it could be the prelude to another
nuclear test, a pattern the hermit state set in 2009."We don't really care
about the opinions from the outside. This is critical in order to develop our
national economy," said Paek Chang-ho, head of the satellite control
centre at the Korean Committee of Space Technology.Once the refuelling has been
completed, the North Koreans will have to inject chemicals into the rocket and
these chemicals cause corrosion, which means the firing could come tomorrow, at
the start of a five-day window announced already by Pyongyang.Weather
conditions on the Korean peninsula also appear to favour a launch tomorrow or
Saturday, according to meteorological reports from Japanese
television."The likelihood of a launch (tomorrow) is the greatest,"
said Francis Yoon, a professor of engineering at South Korea's Yonsei
University and an expert on rocket technology.The launch of the Unha-3 rocket,
which North Korea says will merely put a weather satellite into space, breaches
UN sanctions imposed to prevent Pyongyang from developing a missile that could
carry a nuclear warhead.James Oberg, a former rocket scientist with the US
space shuttle mission control who is in North Korea, said the rocket was not a
weapon, but "98% of a weapon", requiring more technology, although
not much.
This is the third long-range rocket test by North Korea. It claims
that its second succeeded in putting a satellite into orbit in 2009, although
independent experts say it failed.The firing coincides with the 100th birthday
celebrations of the founder of North Korea, Kim Il-sung, whose grandson, Kim
Jong-un, now rules. Kim Il-sung died in 1994.It will also follow today's annual
Workers' Party Congress which is expected to appoint Kim Jong-un as Secretary
General of the Workers' Party of Korea, the top post held by his late father,
Kim Jong-il.Paek, briefing foreign journalists in the North Korean capital of
Pyongyang, declined to comment on the launch date."And as for the exact
timing of the launch, it will be decided by my superiors", Paek said.South
Korea, which remains technically at war with the North after their 1950-53
conflict ended with a truce rather than a peace treaty, warned Pyongyang it
would deepen its isolation if it went ahead with the launch.Security sources in
Seoul, citing satellite images, have said that North Korea, which walked out of
"six-party" disarmament talks three years ago, is also preparing a
third nuclear test following the launch, something it did in 2009 and a move
bound to trigger further condemnation and isolation.South Korea holds
parliamentary elections today, although the rocket does not appear to have been
a major issue with voters more concerned about job security.US Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton warned that history pointed to "additional
provocations" from North Korea after the launch, an apparent reference to
a nuclear test."This launch will give credence to the view that North
Korean leaders see improved relations with the outside world as a threat to
their system," she told cadets at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland."And recent
history strongly suggests that additional provocations may follow."She
also called on China to do more to ensure regional stability.China, impoverished North Korea's only major ally, yesterday reiterated its pleas for calm and said it
had "repeatedly expressed its concern and anxiety about the
developments".
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