产品展示
  • 锐搏专用22新款汉兰达保险杠15-17-18-21款前后大包围改装配件
  • 适用于欧曼GTL后尾灯总成福田戴姆勒配件EST货车后尾灯刹车转向灯
  • 科鲁兹改装 火焰图腾汽车头贴纸 引擎盖车贴纸划痕 机盖贴车门贴
  • 汤浅LN3 EFB70ah启停蓄电池适用于丰田八代凯美瑞CHR奕泽汽车电瓶
  • 兔耳朵头盔装饰品猫耳朵麋鹿角装饰配件摩托车机车电车贴纸女可爱
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车音响

Korean presidential office says North Korea struggles to secure parts for spy satellite

2024-06-15 14:59:21      点击:790
Police discover balloons presumably sent by North Korea  in a field in Yongin,<strong></strong> a city on the south of Seoul, in this photo provided by a resident, May 29. Yonhap

Police discover balloons presumably sent by North Korea in a field in Yongin, a city on the south of Seoul, in this photo provided by a resident, May 29. Yonhap

North Korea's botched attempt to launch a military spy satellite was likely due to its difficulties in procuring related parts and developing technology because of ongoing sanctions, a presidential official said Wednesday.

North Korea made a failed attempt to launch a space rocket carrying a reconnaissance satellite hours after leaders of South Korea, Japan and China met in Seoul on Monday for a summit, the first since December 2019. The North denounced Seoul's reaffirming a commitment to the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula as a "serious infringement" upon its sovereign right.

"North Korea launched the military spy satellite somewhat forcibly shortly after the Korea-Japan-China summit," the presidential official told reporters.

"What is clear is that the continuous and unwavering sanctions regime of the international community, including the United Nations, is proving effective against North Korea's illegal nuclear and missile activities," he added.

The official emphasized the importance of maintaining the U.N. Security Council sanctions to make it harder for the Pyongyang regime to secure necessary parts to operate or upgrade the nuclear and missile programs.

"It is essential to maintain unwavering international coordination," the official said.

In regard to North Korea's sending more than 200 balloons carrying waste and trash into South Korea, the presidential office evaluated the move as being aimed at testing the South Korean government.

"North Korea appears to have wanted to test whether our people and government will be agitated or respond to their balloons and how such psychological warfare or small-scale hybrid threats will work, aside from direct provocations," the official said. "We will respond calmly." (Yonhap)

Second North Korean restaurant closes in Vietnam
UN committee adopts resolution criticizing chemical weapon use in Kim Jong