N Korea Successfully Launches Missile, Upsets US, Russia & France

N Korea defied international warnings and launched a long-range rocket that the UN and others. 

AP
World
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In this image released by Japan’s Kyodo News agency, an unidentified object is photographed in the sky from Dandong, China, near the North Korean border, Sunday, 7 Feb 2016, at the same time a North Korea rocket was allegedly launched.  (Photo: AP)
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In this image released by Japan’s Kyodo News agency, an unidentified object is photographed in the sky from Dandong, China, near the North Korean border, Sunday, 7 Feb 2016, at the same time a North Korea rocket was allegedly launched. (Photo: AP)
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North Korea launched a long-range rocket on Sunday carrying what it called a satellite, but its neighbours and the United States denounced the launch as a missile test, conducted in defiance of UN sanctions and just weeks after a nuclear bomb test.

The US Strategic Command said it had detected a missile entering space, and South Korea’s military said the rocket had put an object into orbit.

Isolated North Korea had initially given a February 8-25 time frame for the launch but on Saturday changed that to February 7-14, apparently taking advantage of clear weather on Sunday.

North Korea said the launch of the satellite Kwangmyongsong-4, named after late leader Kim Jong Il, was a ‘complete success’ and it was making a polar orbit of Earth every 94 minutes. The launch order was given by his son, leader Kim Jong Un, who is believed to be 33 years old.

The launch prompted South Korea to announce it would begin talks with the United States on the deployment of an advanced missile defence, which China and Russia both oppose, to counter what South Korea sees as the North’s threat.

North Korea’s state news agency carried a still picture of a white rocket that closely resembled a previously launched rocket, lifting off. Another showed Kim surrounded by cheering military officials at what appeared to be a command centre.

A girl watches a TV screen as all TV screens at an electronics store in Tokyo show a news program on North Korea’s rocket launch with an image of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Sunday, 7 Feb 2016. (Photo: AP)

North Korea’s last long-range rocket launch, in 2012, put what it called a communications satellite into orbit, but no signal has ever been detected from it.

If it can communicate with the Kwangmyongsong-4, North Korea will learn about operating a satellite in space. Even if not, it gained experience with launching and learned more about the reliability of its rocket systems.
<b>David Wright, co-director and senior scientist, Global Security Program of the Union of Concerned Scientists</b>

The rocket lifted off at around 9:30 a.m. Seoul time (0030 GMT) on a southward trajectory, as planned. Japan’s Fuji Television Network showed a streak of light heading into the sky, taken from a camera at China’s border with North Korea.

North Korea had notified UN agencies that it planned to launch a rocket carrying an Earth observation satellite, triggering opposition from governments that see it as a long-range missile test.

The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on Sunday to discuss the launch, at the request of the United States, Japan and South Korea, diplomats said.

France condemns with the utmost firmness the new flagrant violation by North Korea of the resolutions of the Security Council. The launch is a senseless provocation. France calls for a rapid and tough response from the international community at the Security Council.
<b>Statement by Presidential Elysee Palace</b>
The launch and the 6 January nuclear test are seen as efforts by the North’s young leader to bolster his domestic legitimacy ahead of a ruling party congress in May, the first since 1980.
We urgently recommend that the North Korean leadership think whether the policy of placing yourself in opposition to the international community is in the country’s interests.
<b>Russian Foreign Ministry</b>

North Korea’s National Aerospace Development Administration called the launch “an epochal event in developing the country’s science, technology, economy and defence capability by legitimately exercising the right to use space for independent and peaceful purposes”.

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