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South Korea to launch its first military spy satellite to monitor rival North Korea
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  • South Korea to launch its first military spy satellite to monitor rival North Korea

South Korea to launch its first military spy satellite to monitor rival North Korea

FP Staff • November 6, 2023, 13:24:51 IST
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Jeon Ha Gyu, a spokesperson for the South Korean Defence Ministry, told reporters that the country’s first military spy satellite will be launched from California’s Vandenberg Air Force Base on Nov. 30.

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South Korea to launch its first military spy satellite to monitor rival North Korea

South Korea is gearing up to launch its first domestically manufactured spy satellite at the end of this month to monitor its rival North Korea as it continues to expand its nuclear weapons arsenal. This plan was revealed days after North Korea failed to follow through on a vow to make a third attempt to launch its reconnaissance satellite in October, likely due to technical issues. Jeon Ha Gyu, a spokesperson for the South Korean Defence Ministry, announced that the country’s inaugural military spy satellite is scheduled for launch on November 30 from California’s Vandenberg Air Force Base. The satellite will be carried into orbit by SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket. As part of a contract with SpaceX, South Korea has plans to launch an additional four spy satellites by 2025, as confirmed by South Korea’s Defence Acquisition Program Administration. Currently, South Korea does not possess any military reconnaissance satellites of its own and relies on US spy satellites to monitor North Korea’s activities. The possession of its own spy satellites would give South Korea an independent space-based surveillance system to monitor North Korea in almost real time. When operated together with South Korea’s so-called three-axis system — pre-emptive strike, missile defence and retaliatory assets — the country’s overall defence against North Korea would be sharply strengthened, according to Lee Choon Geun, an honorary research fellow at South Korea’s Science and Technology Policy Institute. Lee said U.S. spy satellites produce much higher-resolution imagery but are operated under U.S. strategic objectives, not South Korea’s. He said the U.S also sometimes doesn’t share satellite photos with highly sensitive information with South Korea. Last year, South Korea used a homegrown rocket to place what it called a “performance observation satellite” in orbit, becoming the world’s 10th nation to successfully launch a satellite with its own technology. Observers say a SpaceX rocket is a more reliable launch vehicle. They say South Korea’s 2022 launch showed it can send a heavier satellite into space, but that it needs more tests to ensure the rocket’s reliability. Lee also said it’s much more economical to use a SpaceX rocket to launch the spy satellite from the Vandenberg base. North Korea is also eager to acquire its own spy satellite. But its two launch attempts earlier this year ended in failure for technical reasons. The country said it would make a third attempt sometime in October but did not do so and its state media have not provided a reason. South Korea’s spy agency told lawmakers last week that North Korea is likely receiving Russian technological assistance for its spy satellite launch program. The National Intelligence Service said North Korea was in the final phase of preparations for its third launch, which the NIS said would likely be successful. The possession of spy satellites is part of ambitious arms build-up plans announced by North Korea leader Kim Jong Un in 2021. Kim said North Korea also needs more mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles, nuclear-powered submarines, hypersonic weapons and multi-warhead missiles to cope with intensifying U.S. military threats. South Korea, the U.S. and other foreign governments believe North Korea is seeking sophisticated weapons technologies from Russia to modernize its weapons programs in return for supplying ammunition, rockets and other military equipment for Russia’s war in Ukraine. Both Russia and North Korea have rejected the reported arms transfer deal as groundless. After North Korea’s first failed launch in May, South Korea retrieved debris from the satellite and concluded it was too crude to perform military reconnaissance. Lee said the North Korean satellite would still be capable of identifying big targets like warships so it could be militarily useful for North Korea. With inputs from AP.

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