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SEOUL: North Korea has launched what it claims is a spy satellite, Seoul said Tuesday, Pyongyang’s third attempt this year to get a military eye in the sky.

North Korea’s previous efforts to put a spy satellite into orbit in May and August both failed, and Seoul, Tokyo and Washington had repeatedly warned Pyongyang not to proceed with another launch, which would violate successive rounds of UN resolutions.

But the North vowed to go ahead anyway, informing Japan of a launch window between Wednesday and December 1.

Seoul’s spy agency this month warned the third launch could go better as Pyongyang appears to have received technical advice from Russia, in return for sending at least 10 shipments of weapons for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

Seoul’s military “detected at 10:43 pm (1343 GMT) one alleged military surveillance satellite,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The JCS did not give any details on whether the launch appeared to have succeeded or failed.

Japan also confirmed the launch, with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s office posting on X: “North Korea has launched a suspected ballistic missile”.

North Korea flags plan to launch satellite rocket between Nov 22 and Dec 1, Japan says

Space launch rockets and ballistic missiles have significant technological overlap, experts say, but different payloads, and Pyongyang is barred by UN resolutions from any tests involving ballistic technology.

“Even if they call it a satellite, the launch of an item that uses ballistic missile technology is clearly a violation of the relevant United Nations resolutions,” Kishida said, adding he condemned the launch “in the strongest possible terms”.

Tokyo warned residents in the southern region of Okinawa to take shelter, but soon lifted the alert, saying the projectile had “passed into the Pacific”.

Hiroyuki Miyazawa, state minister of defence, said Japan was “analysing whether it is a failure or a success. We are unable to say anything with certainty.”

‘Confidence in success’

Seoul has been saying for weeks that Pyongyang was in the final stages of preparation for another spy satellite launch, warning it would take “necessary measures” if it went ahead.

The office of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol – who is in London for a state visit – hinted earlier Tuesday that it would consider suspending the September 19 military agreement, a key deal aimed at de-escalating tensions on the peninsula, in response.

“The launch that came hours before its time window notification seems to underscore two things: Pyongyang’s confidence in success and intention to maximise surprise factor to the outside world,” Choi Gi-il, professor of military studies at Sangji University, told AFP.

Pyongyang appears “pretty confident that it’ll be a success, though we have to wait and see whether that’ll be the case,” he added.

The North’s May launch failed due to the “abnormal” startup of its second-stage engine, and the August launch due to an error in the “emergency blasting system” during the third-stage flight, according to Pyongyang state media at the time.

Russian help

Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested in September after meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that his nation could help Pyongyang build satellites.

Seoul and Washington have both subsequently claimed Pyongyang has been shipping weapons to Russia, with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warning this month that military ties between North Korea and Russia were “growing and dangerous”.

Successfully putting a spy satellite into orbit would improve North Korea’s intelligence-gathering capabilities, particularly over South Korea, and provide crucial data in any military conflict, experts say.

In a commentary carried by the North’s official Korean Central News Agency Tuesday, Ri Song Jin, a researcher of the National Aerospace Technology Administration, slammed South Korea’s own spy satellite plans, saying they were “extremely dangerous military provocations”.

Seoul plans to launch its first spy satellite via a SpaceX rocket later this month, South Korean officials have said.

This shows that the North needs “practical and effective capabilities of space-based reconnaissance and surveillance” as a key way of “exercising the war deterrent more clearly and promoting the strategic security balance in the region”, KCNA said.

North Korea has conducted a record number of weapons tests this year.

Seoul, Washington and Tokyo have ramped up their defence cooperation in response, and on Tuesday a US nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, arrived at South Korea’s Busan Naval Base.

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