N. Korea says high
2024-05-29 01:47:13

This <strong></strong>Dec. 19, 2022 file photo, carried by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency, shows the North firing a vehicle carrying a 'test-piece' satellite at its Tongchang-ri rocket launching facility during a 'final-stage' test to develop a military reconnaissance satellite the previous day. Yonhap
This Dec. 19, 2022 file photo, carried by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency, shows the North firing a vehicle carrying a "test-piece" satellite at its Tongchang-ri rocket launching facility during a "final-stage" test to develop a military reconnaissance satellite the previous day. Yonhap

North Korea's development of a high-thrust engine capable of carrying a rocket has provided a "sure guarantee" for the country to launch various satellites into orbit, according to state media Monday.

Pak Kyong-su, vice director of the National Aerospace Development Administration, made the remarks amid speculation the North is likely to put a military spy satellite into orbit by April.

In an interview by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Sunday on the occasion of the 14th anniversary of the North's accession to the international outer space treaty, Pak said the North has made "steady" progress in the work to develop "multi-functional and high-performance" satellites.

"It succeeded in developing high-thrust engine for carrier rocket and thus provided a sure guarantee for launching various kinds of satellites into relevant orbits," Pak said in an English-language dispatch carried by the KCNA.

He said the North has applied its space science technology to various areas, including agriculture, meteorological observation communication and natural resources exploration.

"All these successes foretell the bright future of the DPRK's space development," the official said, using the acronym of the North's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

In December last year, North Korea said it had tested a high-thrust solid-fuel rocket engine for a "new-type strategic weapon system," a move seen as developing a solid-propellant intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.

On Dec. 18, Pyongyang fired a vehicle carrying a "test-piece" satellite at its Tongchang-ri rocket launching facility during its "final-stage" test to develop a military reconnaissance satellite. The country unveiled a plan the same day to put a military spy satellite into orbit by April. (Yonhap)


(作者:新闻中心)