North Korea had said it used a new "liquid oxygen and petroleum
engine" in the satellite, which exploded minutes after lift-off.
But Seoul's National Intelligence Service (NIS) told lawmakers
that there were no signs of North Korea having developed such an
engine, and it was possibly from Russia.
"Given that liquid oxygen and kerosene were used in the engine
for the first time, they had likely received Russian support,"
Lee Seong-kweun, a member of the parliamentary intelligence
committee, told reporters after being briefed by the NIS.
The agency had said Moscow also helped with Pyongyang's
successful, first launch of a reconnaissance satellite last
November, two months after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's
rare trip to Russia, during which President Vladimir Putin
promised to help him build satellites.
Putin reciprocated with a visit to Pyongyang in June, during
which the two sides signed a "comprehensive strategic
partnership" pact. Russia and North Korea have denied arms
transactions but have vowed to intensify military cooperation.
Lee also said Kim's daughter, Ju Ae, was being trained to become
the next leader, citing the NIS. North Korea's state media has
reported on her public activities, but not on her political
future.
Park Sun-won, another member of the committee, said the NIS told
them the recent indictment in the United States of Sue Mi Terry,
a foreign policy expert who once worked for the CIA and on the
White House National Security Council, had no impact on
intelligence cooperation between Washington and Seoul.
Terry was indicted early this month on charges that she worked
as an unregistered agent of South Korea's government in exchange
for luxury goods and other gifts.
The indictment came as a surprise to many Seoul officials at a
time when Presidents Joe Biden and Yoon Suk Yeol have been
ramping up security partnerships.
"The NIS said they're working hard to learn a lesson from this,"
Park said. "But there are no major problems with intelligence
cooperation between the two countries, and it is actually
expanding."
(Reporting by Hyonhee ShinEditing by Bernadette Baum and Ros
Russell)
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