Sunday, December 23, 2012

N. Korea develops missiles capable of reaching US – Seoul

Pyongyang is developing missiles capable of reaching the US, South Korean officials have claimed. The allegations came as North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un called for the development of more powerful rockets after the successful launch of a satellite.
The North's launch of a three-stage Unha-3 rocket on December 12 prompted numerous allegations that the event was a secret missile test, rather than the purported satellite launch. South Korea has claimed that their analysis of the rocket's debris shows that Pyongyang may have developed technology allowing it to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range missile.

"Based on our analysis of the material of Unha-3, North Korea had secured a range of more than 10,000 km if the warhead is 500 to 600 kg," a South Korean Defense Ministry official said on Sunday.
If the claims are true, North Korea has developed missiles capable of reaching the US.

An undated image released by South Korea′s defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows a  piece of wreckage of North Korea′s Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket being pulled up by the South Korean navy. A minesweeper equipped with the sonar system detected three parts of the rocket in waters 151 km (94 miles) west of Gunsan city and 85 meters below the sea, according to Yonhap (Reuters / Handout)
An undated image released by South Korea's defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows a piece of wreckage of North Korea's Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket being pulled up by the South Korean navy. A minesweeper equipped with the sonar system detected three parts of the rocket in waters 151 km (94 miles) west of Gunsan city and 85 meters below the sea, according to Yonhap (Reuters / Handout)
South Korea said Sunday that it had retrieved the key parts of the rocket's first stage, except for the engine. The parts recovered included the fuel tank – which displayed the digit '3' – a chemical combustion chamber and an engine connection rod, officials reported.
An analysis of the parts will provide a clearer picture of North Korean advances in rocket technology, experts said.
They acknowledged, however, that there was no evidence that the North Korean rocket had the guidance systems or re-entry capability necessary for an effective intercontinental ballistic missile.
A study of the oxidizer container from the splashdown site of the Unha-3 revealed that the welding of the rocket was “crude, done manually,” a South Korean official said. Nations with advanced space technology rarely use such technology now, he added.
On Friday, Kim Jong-Un met with rocket scientists and urged them to advance the country`s long-range rocket program, North Korean state media reported.
An undated image released by South Korea′s defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows a piece of wreckage of North Korea′s Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket is seen on a navy vessel of South Korean navy (Reuters / Handout)
An undated image released by South Korea's defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows a piece of wreckage of North Korea's Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket is seen on a navy vessel of South Korean navy (Reuters / Handout)
The December satellite launch was condemned by several countries and international bodies, including the UN Security Council, who suspected the launch was a cover for illegal missile testing. North Korea maintained that the launch's only goal was putting a satellite into orbit.
According to lawyer and peace activist Eric Sirotkin, the North Korean launch was an assertion of the country's technological power.
“They believe in their sovereignty and speak about it all the time and consequently they felt that the launch of this missile, if you will, or the satellite was an effort to show that they are highly sophisticated technical nation,” Sirotkin told RT.
Pyongyang reportedly spent an estimated $480 million on the rocket launch. Since 1998, North Korea had made four unsuccessful attempts to launch a rocket.
Pyongyang is banned from carrying out nuclear tests under a UN resolution passed after it conducted such tests in 2006 and 2009.
Despite mounting international pressure, existing sanctions on the country have had little effect, North Korea expert Rudiger Frank says. Frank cautioned, however, that Pyongyang is not likely to engage in military aggression.
“It’s in no side’s interest to have war because if we have war in Korea, both Koreas will suffer a lot. As long as the regime is stable in North Korea – and that is actually the key question – I think we shouldn’t be concerned, but there is no immediate danger of a war breaking out,” he said.
An undated image released by South Korea′s defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows South Korean officers checking a piece of wreckage of North Korea′s Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket, at the Agency of Defense Development in Daejeon, south of Seoul (Reuters / Handout)
An undated image released by South Korea's defence ministry in Seoul December 23, 2012, shows South Korean officers checking a piece of wreckage of North Korea's Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket, at the Agency of Defense Development in Daejeon, south of Seoul (Reuters / Handout)
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.rt.com
23/12/12
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ΣΧΕΤΙΚΑ:


[1] North Korea rocket launch was 'missile test'



North Korea's launching of a rocket into space last week amounted to the test of a ballistic missile capable of carrying a half-ton payload over 10,000km, the South Korean defence ministry says. "Based on our analysis and simulation, the missile is capable of flying more than 10,000km with a warhead of 500-600kg," a defence ministry official told reporters on Sunday. North Korea launched its three-stage Unha-3 rocket on December 12, insisting it was a purely scientific mission aimed at putting a polar-orbiting satellite in space, but critics say it was aimed at nurturing the kind of technology needed to mount a nuclear warhead on a long-range missile.

3 comments:

  1. Intercontinental missile test-launched in US...

    VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, California:
    The U.S. Air Force launched an unarmed intercontinental ballistic missile from a California base on Wednesday, a month after the test flight was postponed because of tensions with North Korea.

    The Minuteman 3 lifted off at 6:27 a.m. PDT (1327 GMT) Wednesday from Vandenberg Air Force Base. It splashed down less than 30 minutes later and 4,000 miles (6,400 kilometers) away at the Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific Ocean, Air Force officials said.

    It was the first Minuteman test-launch of 2013. Several missiles are launched from Vandenberg each year to verify the weapon system's accuracy and reliability.

    The original mid-April flight was postponed by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel amid concerns that it might be misinterpreted during a time of heightened tension with North Korea.

    The launch was rescheduled for Tuesday morning but was pushed back a day due to a problem with range safety instruments.

    The U.S. has 450 nuclear-armed Minuteman 3 missiles ready for combat use, if directed by the president. They are in underground silos in five states.

    Read more: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/International/2013/May-22/218010-intercontinental-missile-test-launched-in-us.ashx#ixzz2U3NHVmKH
    (The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)
    22/5/13

    ReplyDelete
  2. Frightening Pentagon report warns that China, North Korea and Iran will soon be armed with nuclear missiles capable of striking the United States....

    By James Nye

    A sobering assessment of the nuclear threat the United States faces over the next decade has been published - which has been jumped upon by supporters of the beleaguered missile defense shield.

    The Pentagon report states that China, Iran and North Korea are aggressively developing nuclear missiles capable of striking the United States and proliferation among these nations of technology is rife.

    According to the Department of Defense, China, marked as the chief rival of the U.S. over the next century, will imminently be able to deploy submarine-launched ballistic missiles capable of hitting the United States from Chinese territorial waters..... http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2361330/Frightening-Pentagon-report-warns-China-North-Korea-Iran-soon-armed-nuclear-missiles-capable-striking-United-States.html#ixzz2YoFhdPpS
    11/7/13

    ReplyDelete
  3. Report: US DoD warns Iran nuke strike soon to be possible ...

    US intelligence agencies have assessed that as early as 2015, Iran will be set to test an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), encompassing the capability to strike the United States, the Daily Mail on Thursday cited a Pentagon report as stating.

    The US Department of Defense assessment reportedly covered the various possible nuclear threats the US could imminently face in the coming decade.

    The Mail cited the US Department of Defense report as stating that China, Iran and North Korea were rapidly proliferating the developments of nuclear warheads capable of hitting the United States.

    "Iran has ambitious ballistic missile and space launch development programs and continues to attempt to increase the range, lethality, and accuracy of its ballistic missile force," the Mail quoted the Pentagon report as saying.
    http://www.jpost.com/Breaking-News/Report-US-DoD-warns-Iran-nuke-strike-soon-to-be-possible-319629
    12/7/13

    ReplyDelete

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