North Korea says it has completed its first military spy
satellite, and leader Kim Jong Un has approved final
preparations for a launch to place it in orbit, without
publicising a date.
Commercial satellite imagery from Monday shows that progress on
a new launch pad in a coastal area east of North Korea’s Sohae
Satellite Launching Station is moving forward at a "remarkable
pace", 38 North, a Washington-based programme that monitors
North Korea, said in a report on Thursday.
"While the key components of the Sohae complex have been
undergoing modernization and expansion over the past year, this
uptick in activity suggests a new level of urgency in making the
site ready to accommodate satellite launches," the report said.
The new launch pad appears to feature a rail-mounted assembly
structure, a possible mechanism for lifting a rocket into place,
lighting towers, and a tunnel for funnelling flames away.
If it is meant to service liquid-fuelled rockets, additional
infrastructure will most likely be needed, the report added.
At Sohae's main launch pad, crews appear to have completed
modifications to the gantry tower, while work continues on a
storage for fuel and oxidizer.
A new area for VIPs to observe launches also appears largely
completed, 38 North concluded.
Analysts say a military satellite is part of the reclusive,
nuclear-armed state's efforts to advance surveillance
technology, including drones, to improve its ability to strike
targets in the event of a conflict.
North Korea has tried several times to launch "earth
observation" satellites, of which two appeared to have been
successfully placed in orbit, including the latest in 2016.
International observers have said the satellite seemed to be
under control, but there was lingering debate over whether it
had sent any transmissions.
(Reporting by Josh Smith. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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