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North Korea Rocket Test: Launch Pad Set Despite Warnings Of Sanctions

By JEAN H. LEE 04/ 8/12 11:04 PM ET AP

North Korea Rocket Test
A crowd of media gather around a North Korean official on a road in front of North Korea's Unha-3 rocket, slated for liftoff between April 12-16, stands at Sohae Satellite Station in Tongchang-ri, North Korea on Sunday April 8, 2012. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

TONGCHANG-RI, North Korea -- North Korean space officials have moved all three stages of a long-range rocket into position for a controversial launch, vowing to push ahead with their plan in defiance of international warnings against violating a ban on missile activity.

The Associated Press was among foreign news agencies allowed a firsthand look Sunday at preparations under way at the coastal Sohae Satellite Station in northwestern North Korea.

North Korea announced plans last month to launch an observation satellite using a three-stage rocket during mid-April celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the birth of North Korean founder Kim Il Sung. The U.S., Japan, Britain and other nations have urged North Korea to cancel the launch, warning that firing the long-range rocket would violate U.N. resolutions and North Korea's promise to refrain from engaging in nuclear and missile activity.

North Korea maintains that the launch is a scientific achievement intended to improve the nation's faltering economy by providing detailed surveys of the countryside.

"Our country has the right and also the obligation to develop satellites and launching vehicles," Jang Myong Jin, general manager of the launch facility, said during a tour, citing the U.N. space treaty. "No matter what others say, we are doing this for peaceful purposes."

Experts say the Unha-3 rocket slated for liftoff between April 12 and 16 could also test long-range missile technology that might be used to strike the U.S. and other targets. Unha means galaxy in English.

North Korea has tested two atomic devices, but is not believed to have mastered the technology needed to mount a warhead on a long-range missile.

On Sunday, reporters were taken by train past desolate fields and sleepy farming hamlets to North Korea's new launch pad in Tongchang-ri in North Phyongan province, about 50 kilometers (35 miles) south of the border town of Sinuiju along North Korea's west coast.

All three stages of the 91-ton rocket, emblazoned with the North Korean flag and "Unha-3," were visibly in position at the towering launch pad, and fueling will begin soon, Jang said. He said preparations were well on track for liftoff and that international space, aviation and maritime authorities had been advised of the plan, but did not provide exact details on the timing of the fueling or the mounting of the satellite.

Engineers gave reporters a peek at the 100-kilogram (220-pound) Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite due to be mounted on the rocket, as well as a tour of the command center.

About two weeks before North Korea unveiled its rocket plan, Washington announced an agreement with the North to provide it with much-needed food aid in exchange for a freeze on nuclear activity, including a moratorium on long-range missile tests. Plans to send food aid, as well as a recently revived project to conduct joint searches for the remains of U.S. military personnel killed during the Korean War, have now been suspended.

Jang denied the launch was a cover for a missile test, saying the relatively diminutive rocket and fixed Sohae station would be "useless" for sending a mobile intercontinental ballistic missile.

"During the recent senior-level North Korea-U.S. talks, our side made clear there's only a moratorium on long-range missile launches, not on satellite launches," he said. "The U.S. was well aware of this."

Japan and South Korea, meanwhile, said they are prepared to shoot down any parts of the rocket that threaten to fall in their territory – a move North Korea's Foreign Ministry warned would be considered a declaration of war.

The launch is scheduled to take place three years after North Korea's last announced attempt to send a satellite into space, a liftoff condemned by the U.N. Security Council. North Korea walked away from nuclear disarmament negotiations in protest, and conducted an atomic test weeks later that drew tightened U.N. sanctions.

It is meant to show that North Korea has become a powerful, prosperous nation, celebrate the centenary of founder Kim Il Sung's birth, and usher in a new era under his grandson, Kim Jong Un, said Koh Yu-hwan, a professor of North Korean studies at Seoul's Dongguk University.

"North Korea needs to show some tangible achievements to its people to solidify Kim Jong Un's leadership," he said. "North Korea intends to provide its people with a sense of pride."

Kim Jong Un took power following the December death of his father, longtime leader Kim Jong Il, and is expected to assume more top posts during high-profile political and parliamentary meetings later this week – a step analysts say will formally complete the country's second hereditary power transfer.

The satellite is designed to send back images and information that will be used for weather forecasts as well as surveys of North Korea's natural resources, Jang said. He said a western launch was chosen to avoid showering neighboring nations with debris.

He said two previous satellites also named Kwangmyongsong, or Bright Shining Star, were experimental, but the third will be operational.

However, Brian Weeden, a technical adviser at Secure World Foundation who is a former Air Force officer at the U.S. Space Command, questioned whether North Korea truly has the technology to successfully send a satellite into orbit.

"The end goal is to test and develop their ballistic missile program and show their people and the world that they are strong," Weeden said from Washington.

___

Associated Press writers Foster Klug and Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report.

___

Follow Jean H. Lee on Twitter at twitter.com/newsjean.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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TONGCHANG-RI, North Korea -- North Korean space officials have moved all three stages of a long-range rocket into position for a controversial launch, vowing to push ahead with their plan in defiance ...
TONGCHANG-RI, North Korea -- North Korean space officials have moved all three stages of a long-range rocket into position for a controversial launch, vowing to push ahead with their plan in defiance ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Tyson
Dyslexic and smart
04:42 AM on 04/10/2012
Having spent a year on that peninsula, and seen the South and how the North pokes and prods to make sure they know they are STILL at war after 60 years. When I was there in the late '80's the north sent jets to over fly Souel just to stir stuff up. I was there before the Olympics so the security was wound very tight. Sappers floated down the Haun river at least 2-3 times a year just to try and make international trouble. The North Korean Government has always tried to flex its power to make life uncomfortable for the South Korean people. With China now the only other large Communist country the Little Giant wants more say in the world arena.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
09:45 PM on 04/09/2012
And now in the afterlife, Dear Leader feels really ronery, wishing that he could've lived long enough to see this.
08:45 PM on 04/09/2012
Considering our that this is a communist country we're talking about, and one overparticular who is rather violent, the pictures seem a bit out of place don't you think? I personally believe they should be allowed to develop their satellites at ease, but do they really have to provide photo's that are not generally true?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
albalatrv
04:06 PM on 04/09/2012
Why don't we just stop sending them food? They will see their children starving and become motivated to change their policies and priorities.
02:24 PM on 04/09/2012
I hope the food aid ends the second that rocket lifts off. If they can afford to launch rockets they can afford to pay for food but choose not to! The deal was no rocket launches!
01:59 PM on 04/09/2012
We'll see how it goes. This video looks like it is predicting everything in order of events: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJuPl7TTvcs
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ed Baggett
Havana Cruise
12:38 PM on 04/09/2012
Anyone unhappy with America should buy a 1 way ticket to Iran or North Korea.
02:21 PM on 04/09/2012
So in other words you know nothing of American history! Deep thoughts in a shallow pool!
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
09:46 PM on 04/09/2012
Trolls don't know how to think analytically.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Texplaygrl
02:30 PM on 04/09/2012
I am never unhappy with my country America...However I am unhappy with the way it is being run...BIG difference!
01:28 PM on 04/10/2012
going by your avatar, you deserve the country you live in. Texas playgirl voting for republican - talk about oxymoron.
12:21 PM on 04/09/2012
We have a world more tightly interdependent that any other time in history, with individual egos at their most extreme. This makes for a most deadly game of "booby trap" whether this is just part of Kim Jong Un's ascension-to-power ego trip, an actual maneuvering on a schedule to North Korean ICBM capability, or both.

But in its interdependence, the world is just a mirror of us all. It is only if we all, at a grass roots level, strive in introspection, societal environment change, and educational inovation, toward a heartfelt mutual concern, and and practical mutual responsibility -- will we be able to avoid the brink and steer to a future with hope.

And what do we tell these great egos that we all have then? Exactly this, "Humanity -- your survival and prosperity is too important not to act! And the cause is too noble for someone as great as Yourself not to pursue!" And if we are finding out the Nature is too deep, interconnected, and vast for us to conquer and control in a balance that we need to survive and thrive, since we are too proud to submit, then we say: "Let us strive to voluntarily, consciously imitate Nature in its unconscious interconnected, altruistic model and become its partner, like soul to body."
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
09:48 PM on 04/09/2012
I'm currently taking a course on WMD proliferation, and we talked a little bit about North Korea today. The professor said that Kim Il-sung had a lot of charisma, and that's how he was able to take over. Kim Jong-il had less charisma, and Kim Jong-un is only getting started, so it remains to be seen how he'll be.
12:02 PM on 04/10/2012
Yes, your professor's points are insightful. The less ominous possibility is that this is merely a display of bravado for fear-based "prestige/respect." The more ominous implication lies in an initiative implemented by the father to put North Korea up as a full-scale world nuclear power.

It is certainly an ego as big and xenophobic as a Hitler's at work here, if not with the same vicious, genocidal racism. But just regarding raw ego, the problem is that it's grown so much that the world has a whole weed colony of Caesers, Ghengis Khans, Napoleons, and Hitlers -- and we are all being pushed forward. In counter-parallel, our world is locking into the organ-like specialized economies, trade tendons, and Internet nervous system of an integrated Humanity. This pushes us up against Nature in a intense way, and we need to match it in form. But ego -- at least the individual and national as we pursue it, is the antithesis of natural altruism -- the total cohesion of natural elements save the honest needs of individual self-preservation.

Yet our ego brings us a special gift of free choice to use "our enemy's weight against him" to actually swing us away from destruction to a harmonious future. It is our very ego -- transferred from "me" to "my Human family" -- that can be our salvation. In fact, it is our only hope because we can't change Nature (no ego to work with), but we can redirect ourselves.
10:27 AM on 04/10/2012
Thank you, great post.
toastw
My micro-bio is empty.
11:49 AM on 04/09/2012
You know, honestly I think the idea of them sending a satellite into space, particularly on an historically selected day to instill some sort of national pride, is not inherently harmful. However, if their rocket makes its way into another nation's territory, THAT is the act of war, not the response of shooting it down. Be careful, North Korea. Your rockets haven't had a brilliant history of success. Good luck with that.
02:04 PM on 04/09/2012
I agree with you, but can we be sure this is not an EMP equipped satellite? If it is, it could prevent our technology from working and taking out.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mouse223
Tornado at your doorstep.
11:43 AM on 04/09/2012
I say let 'em shoot it, and then if it does prove to have characteristics other than what N. Korea is saying, then take action. Until then, I see no harm in them sending a satellite into orbit to help out with their economy, because we really have no proof that it is a long range missle and not what N. Korea says it is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Larry Sirhall
10:57 AM on 04/09/2012
These photos are misleading. The country is starving its populace on a scale equivalent with Mao and Stalin. I'd hoped the grandson would change things. Apparently not. Still beholden to the military which is a de facto criminal organization with its counterfeiting, drugs, etc. At some point, with the changing weather and exacerbated starvation, something must give. Either the West will concede and feed. Or the North Koreans will revolt. The current path cannot continue unabated. This, coupled with Israel's predicament vis-a-vis Iran presents real challenges. North Korea and Iran are allies, to the extent their xenophobic governments allow such. Perhaps the Hopi Elder's prediction from the 1950s, the appearance of the Kuchina, may hold truth. We are a little over 8 months away from 12/21/2012, not that I beleive there will not be a December 22nd. It does seem, however, that world events have taken a collective change for the worst. I wish mankind the wisdom necessary to survive. Larry
10:46 AM on 04/09/2012
it only proves,they have the money for thier own intrest,not to feed the people,sounds like the politicans in this country.
10:43 AM on 04/09/2012
Anyone who thinks they can selectively put the Technology Genie back in the bottle is badly mistaken. Mankind is going to prove to be so intelligent that that it wipes itself out in the process as Hell hath no evil, as created by man in his quest for ultimate Power and we all have front row seats.
10:40 AM on 04/09/2012
If you look at the map of No. Korea, China is on one border and So Korea is on the other. China puts up with these nuts because they don't want to see their buffer disappear
10:39 AM on 04/09/2012
This satellite technology they want won't be for "direct TV"....A spy satellite more like, and remember, Red China has there back door....