North Korea blames ‘new-type engine’ for satellite launch failure
The North’s rocket carrying a spy satellite exploded after takeoff, state media reported.
North Korea’s latest attempt to launch a military reconnaissance satellite was unsuccessful because of a problem with the reliability of a new rocket, which led to a mid-air explosion during the first-stage flight, state media reported on Tuesday.
The launch came just hours after leaders of South Korea, Japan and China reaffirmed their commitment to pursuing the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula in their first summit in five years, in Seoul.
North Korea had earlier notified Japan of its plan to launch a satellite sometime before June 4, in violation of U.N. sanctions, and designated three areas where rocket debris could have fallen.
The rocket carrying the satellite exploded after its takeoff from the Sohae Satellite Launching Station on North Korea’s northwest coast on Monday, said the vice general director of the North’s National Aerospace Technology Administration, or NATA, the North’s Korean Central News Agency reported.
“The launch failed due to the air blast of the new-type satellite carrier rocket during the first-stage flight,” the NATA official was quoted as saying.
A preliminary examination by experts from the North’s launch preparatory committee concluded that the “accident” was attributable to the operational reliability of a new “liquid oxygen plus petroleum” engine, said the official, adding that other causes of the failure would also be examined.
U.S. Indo-Pacific Command criticized North Korea’s rocket launch, saying it was assessing the situation in close coordination with allies and partners.
“We are aware of the DPRK’s May 27 launch using ballistic missile technology, which is a brazen violation of multiple unanimous UNSC [U.N. Security Council] resolutions, raises tensions and risks destabilizing the security situation in the region and beyond,” the command said in a statement.
DPRK or the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea is North Korea’s official name.
Russian support
The launch came amid speculation that deepening military cooperation with Russia might have helped North Korea advance its space rocket launch capabilities and other military programs.
A senior South Korean government official told the media on Sunday that a large number of Russian experts had entered North Korea to help with its spy satellite efforts after Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged to support such a program last year.
A South Korean military official told reporters on Tuesday that Russia may have provided the first stage propellant for the new launch vehicle.
“We have to keep open the possibility of technical assistance at all levels,” said the official. “I think we have to look at the time frame, whether it was just technical assistance, whether they provided parts, and so on.”
The official added that unlike during the two failures last year, the North has not announced plans for additional launches and has said that they have reached only preliminary conclusions about the cause of this failure, so further launches are likely to take some time.
North Korea successfully launched its first satellite in November.
‘Unusual move’
North Korea also condemned the trilateral summit declaration on the denuclearization of the peninsula as a “grave political provocation and sovereignty violation,” which South Korea’s Ministry of Unification said was an unusual reaction.
“While [the North’s criticism] was focused on South Korea, it was unusual for it to publicly malign a meeting attended by China,” a ministry spokesperson told reporters in Seoul on Tuesday.
It was hard to find a precedent for public North Korean criticism of a summit attended by China, the official said, with the exception of a 2015 China-South Korea summit.
At Monday’s summit, the three neighbors’ first since 2019, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida denounced the North’s planned satellite launch as a violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions that ban its use of ballistic missile technology.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang called on all “related countries” to exercise restraint to mitigate tensions, without referring to North Korea directly.
Edited by Mike Firn.