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Seoul.
North Korea on Sunday rejected criticism of its planned long-range missile
launch which threatens to upset its only major benefactor, China, and put
relations with the United States back in the freezer just as they seemed to be
starting to thaw.
Political
analysts say the launch, which would violate UN resolutions on the heavily
sanctioned state, is aimed at boosting the legitimacy of its young new ruler
Kim Jong-un who inherited power after his father’s death in December.
“The
peaceful development and use of space is a universally recognized legitimate
right of a sovereign state,” the North’s state KCNA news agency said. North
Korea says it is using the rocket to launch a satellite to mark the 100th
anniversary of the birth of Kim Il-sung, the country’s founding ruler and
grandfather of the current ruler.
The United
States, and others, say it is much the same as a ballistic missile test and
therefore off-limits for the isolated state which has for years been trying to
build a nuclear arsenal.
Washington,
which last month agreed to supply North Korea with food in exchange for a
suspension of nuclear tests, missile launches and uranium enrichment and to
allow nuclear inspectors into the country, called the planned launch “highly
provocative”.
More
troubling perhaps for Pyongyang, which is long accustomed to trading invective
with Washington, Beijing called the planned launch a “worry” in a rare attempt
to put public pressure on its impoverished ally.
The North
has invited foreign observers and journalists to attend the launch. It
announced the planned launch on Friday just weeks after the deal with
Washington. It will coincide with the 100th anniversary of the birth of its
founder Kim Il-sung.
In April
2009, North Korea conducted a ballistic rocket launch that resulted in a new
round of UN sanctions, squeezing the secretive state’s already troubled economy
and deepening its isolation. That launch was dismissed as a failure after the
first stage fell into the Sea of Japan without placing a satellite in orbit.
Another
test failed in similar circumstances in 1998. The new launch is due to take
place between April 12-16, to coincide with Kim Il-sung’s centenary
celebrations and will coincide with parliamentary elections in South Korea.
Japan has said it would consider deploying PAC3 missile interceptors as it did
in a 2009 launch by North Korea.

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