Seoul accuses Moscow of helping Pyongyang launch spy satellite – news

Seoul said yesterday that Moscow helped Pyongyang launch a military spy satellite on Tuesday, the South Korean intelligence service said.

This agency said that, “following the summit” between Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in September, “the North provided Moscow with the plan and data for the launch of the first and of the second satellites,” said Rep. Yoo Sang-bum. “Russia, in turn, analyzed this data and provided information to the North,” confirmed the politician.

North Korea assured, on Wednesday, that it placed the country’s first military spy satellite into orbit, following launching a space rocket detected by Seoul and Tokyo.

“The Chollima-1 space rocket flew normally along the predefined trajectory and accurately placed the ‘Malligyong-1’ satellite into orbit (…) 705 seconds [quase 12 minutos] following launch,” North Korean state news agency KCNA reported.

North Korea defended the placement of the satellite into orbit as part of its legitimate right to strengthen defensive capabilities, and promised to launch more of these intelligence devices “in a short period of time,” according to the KCNA note, cited by the intelligence agency. South Korean news Yonhap.

Only yesterday the launch was confirmed by Seoul, which said, however, that it was too early to know whether the satellite was working.

“The national intelligence service assessed that the launch of the spy satellite was successful and that it was placed in an orbital trajectory,” this agency revealed to South Korean deputies, according to Yoo Sang-bum.

The launch of the spy satellite was condemned by a large part of the international community for violating the sanctions imposed by the United Nations on the regime.

The launch “reveals, once once more, that [Pyongyang] has no desire to respect the military agreement”, said, also yesterday, the Minister of Defense of South Korea, Shin Won-sik.

On Wednesday, during a parliamentary session, Shin said that the partial suspension of the military agreement signed with Pyongyang five years ago, which allows the South to resume reconnaissance activities in areas around the militarized border with the North, “is a measure essential to protect the lives and security of the people” and a proportionate response.

Shortly following South Korea partially suspended this agreement, on Wednesday, the country deployed drones and reconnaissance planes in border areas, military sources revealed to Yonhap.

Shin’s comments came hours following North Korea announced that it would abandon the pact in its entirety, warning the South that it will “pay dearly” for the decision, and having carried out a missile test – apparently without success – during the night.

“If North Korea carries out provocations under the pretext of suspension, we will respond immediately, with force and to the end,” added the South Korean minister.

The 2018 military agreement, signed in Pyongyang during a summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and then-South Korean President Moon Jae-in, was an important step towards reducing military tension on the peninsula, especially around along the borders.

However, following the failure of denuclearization negotiations with the United States in 2019, Pyongyang approved an armament modernization plan, which includes the installation of military satellites and involves missile tests, in addition to refusing to resume dialogue and seek , on the other hand, strengthen ties with China and Russia.

Seoul and Washington have reinforced military cooperation with Tokyo and strengthened the deterrence mechanism, deploying a growing number of North American strategic assets to the Korean peninsula, such as the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, which arrived this week in Busan, southeast of Seoul.

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