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N. Korea denies rocket launch will breach US pact
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 20, 2012


North Korea has denied that its upcoming satellite launch will breach an agreement with the United States, and blasted South Korea for a "smear campaign" against the widely criticised plan.

The North says it will launch a long-range rocket between April 12 and 16 to put a satellite into orbit. The United States and other nations see it as a thinly veiled missile test which would breach a United Nations ban.

Washington says it would also violate a February bilateral deal, under which Pyongyang agreed to suspend long-range missile tests while receiving US food aid.

"The launch of the working satellite is an issue fundamentally different from that of a long-range missile," Pyongyang's official news agency KCNA said in a commentary late Monday.

There are more than 100 worldwide launches of space vehicles a year on average and North Korea's own exercise is purely for scientific purposes, KCNA said.

"The South Korean puppet forces are busy with an odd smear campaign over the issue," the agency said, accusing Seoul's conservative government of trying to derail the North's US agreement to preserve its own influence with Washington.

Pyongyang's most recent long-range launch on April 5, 2009 -- also purportedly to put a satellite into orbit -- brought UN Security Council condemnation and tightened sanctions.

In response, Pyongyang staged a second nuclear test the following month.

A Security Council resolution approved later in 2009 bans the North from further nuclear tests or from launching a ballistic missile for any purpose.

The US-North Korean deal announced February 29 briefly raised hopes of progress in long-stalled six-nation nuclear disarmament efforts.

The North agreed to suspend its uranium enrichment programme, along with long-range missile launches and nuclear tests, in return for 240,000 tonnes of US food aid.

It insists a satellite launch is not a missile test. But the United States, Japan, Russia and other nations have called for it to scrap the plan, and even close ally China has expressed concern.

On Monday US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland voiced hope the North would call off the launch, noting that the five other nations that had been involved in the six-party talks were united.

The State Department has told the North that any launch would be a "deal-breaker" for the food aid agreement.

Blast-off is timed to coincide with mass celebrations in North Korea marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung.

South Korea in strongly worded comments Monday accused its neighbour of trying to develop a nuclear-armed missile.

The North's news agency late that day said the blast-off would be a "historic occasion" for all Koreans and ridiculed the South's own two failed attempts to launch a satellite.

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Japan says may try to shoot down N. Korean rocket
Tokyo (AFP) March 20, 2012 - Japanese Defence Minister Naoki Tanaka has said Tokyo may try to shoot down a North Korean rocket if it heads towards Japanese territory or waters, according to reports on Tuesday.

The North has said it intends to launch a long-range rocket next month to put a satellite into orbit, but the United States and other nations consider it a thinly veiled missile test that would breach a United Nations ban.

"I am considering giving an order to intercept it," Tanaka told parliament on Monday. Such an order would be subject to approval by the prime minister, he added.

The leading Asahi and Yomiuri newspapers reported that Japan was considering deploying several Aegis-class warships and surface-to-air PAC-3 Patriot missiles to take down the rocket.

The Japanese government said late Monday that North Korea had informed the International Maritime Organisation of the rocket's scheduled trajectory.

It added that it believed the projectile may pass over part of the Okinawa island chain in the far south of the country.

The government said it expects the first stage, which powers the rocket's initial ascent, to come down in waters west of South Korea with the second stage booster falling east of the Philippines.

In 2009, Pyongyang launched a long-range rocket over Japan in what it said at the time was an attempt to get a satellite into orbit. Tokyo and its allies said they considered it to be a ballistic missile test.

In that launch, the rocket passed over Japanese territory without incident or any attempt to shoot it down.



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NUKEWARS
China worried over Pyongyang's satellite
Beijing (UPI) Mar 19, 2012
China added its voice to international apprehension over North Korea's announcement that it will launch a satellite next month. A statement from the Chinese Foreign Ministry said Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Zhijun met with North Korean Ambassador Ji Jae Ryong "to express China's worry over the matter," China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported. Zhang said China has noted Nort ... read more


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