AP/ April 12, 2012, 1:58 AM

North Korea draws world's attention as launch window opens for controversial rocket

A North Korean man looks down from a balcony at the General Launch Command Center for North Korea's space agency on the outskirts of the capital city of Pyongyang April 11, 2012.

A North Korean man looks down from a balcony at the General Launch Command Center for North Korea's space agency on the outskirts of the capital city of Pyongyang April 11, 2012. / AP Photo

(AP) PYONGYANG, North Korea - North Korea's first chance at a rocket launch passed Thursday with no word of a liftoff, but also with no sign that Pyongyang intends to abandon what the U.S. and its allies consider an attempt to test long-range missile technology.

The launch window for what North Korea says is an observation satellite opened during a week aimed at celebrating Sunday's centennial of the birth of Kim Il Sung, the country's late founder. Events also include high-level meetings where new leader Kim Jong Un has received at least three new titles to further cement his rule.

North Korea has said it will launch the rocket between Thursday and Monday, between 7 a.m. and noon local time. Space officials showed foreign journalists the launch control center Wednesday and said fueling was under way, but they did not comment further on the timing.

Poor weather made a Thursday launch unlikely, Philippine disaster management agency chief Benito Ramos said, citing an assessment he received from the Philippine military, which is being briefed by U.S. and Japan counterparts. Wind in particular can scuttle rocket launches.

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The United States, Japan, Britain and others say the launch would be a provocation and would violate U.N. Security Council resolutions banning North Korea from developing its nuclear and missile programs. Experts say the Unha-3 carrier is similar to the type of rocket that could be used to fire a missile mounted with a nuclear warhead to strike the U.S. or other targets.

Japan's parliament adopted a resolution Thursday condemning the scheduled rocket launch.

"A launch is a serious act of provocation that would affect peace and stability in the region that includes our country," Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said, reading the resolution adopted unanimously at the lower house. "We strongly urge North Korea to use self-restraint and not to carry out a launch."

South Korea's Defense Ministry said it was prepared to shoot down any rocket that strays into its territory.

North Korea denies that the launch is anything but a peaceful civilian bid to send a satellite into space. The Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite is designed to send back images and data that will be used for weather forecasts and agricultural surveys.

Pyongyang made two previous attempts to launch a satellite, in 1998 and 2009, but the U.S. and other outside observers say there is no evidence that either reached orbit. This week's planned launch came with more fanfare, with Pyongyang inviting a possibly unprecedented crowd of foreign journalists and other guests.

North Korea also is elevating Kim Jong Un, who has been firmly in power since his father, Kim Jong Il, died in December.

He was named first secretary of the ruling Workers' Party at a conference Wednesday, a new top title that allowed the party to grant Kim Jong Il the posthumous title of "eternal general secretary."

Though he already is considered supreme commander of the armed forces, Kim is expected to gain other new titles formalizing his position as "supreme leader."

Revised party rules now refer to Kim Jong Il as "suryong" — a title meaning "leader" previously reserved for Kim Il Sung.

The elevation of Kim Jong Il to his father's status provides a glimpse into how North Korea will handle the nation's second hereditary succession and indicates he will be honored much in the same way father Kim Il Sung was made "eternal president" following his 1994 death.

Footage aired on state TV on Thursday showed Kim Jong Un seated at the front of the conference with white statues of his grandfather and a new statue of his father in his trademark khaki work ensemble, one arm on his hip. On Mansu Hill, once the domain of a huge bronze statue of Kim Il Sung, a second covered statue awaits its unveiling.

Another key meeting, the Supreme People's Assembly session, opens Friday.

Workers' Party delegates also elected younger officials to key posts, including Choe Ryong Hae, a new vice marshal who will join Kim on the powerful Presidium of the Central Committee's Political Bureau.

Ken Gause, a North Korea specialist at CNA, a U.S.-based research organization, said younger members also were promoted at the last party conference in September 2010, when Kim Jong Un was made vice chairman of the Central Military Commission.

"I expect in the near future, as Kim Jong Un begins to consolidate his power, we will see more," he said in an email.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
15 Comments Add a Comment
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BanRacism says:
Kim Jong Un probably thinks of it as a giant bottle rocket to celebrate his grandfather's centennial. It's true that the data collected will help North Korea refine its delivery system, just as "peaceful nuclear energy" doesn't look so peaceful when Ahmadinejad says he wants to "wipe Israel off of the map."
http://youarenews.com/articles/world/north-korea-prepares-rocket-
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cbsnews_viewer says:
The more you dig into this story, the less grandiose it all becomes.
North Korea is a proven liar. It is a country based on lies. Come on. Read some news articles from scientists and technicians. Get the facts. "Physicist: Overreaction to rocket not yet in flight" by Giovanni Tapang, PhD April 13, 2012 is a good start.
The current US administration is hyping this launch: The south Koreans used a similar flight path for two of their rockets (which failed also) and "were similar to that planned by the North Koreans we heard neither panic nor warnings from the government"
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obicera1 says:
Next North Korea will launch a man into space, which will give it more capability than the U.S.
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verrz says:
I know this a truly serious situation. But at the risk of sounding callous and glib, consider this: Kim Jong-il was a master at this kind of thing. Recall his missile launch and nuke tests, nail biting events that had much of the world on the edge of its seat.
But... the truth is, Kim Jong-il, an avid film buff who had 10,000 foreign films in his library, the man who kidnapped two South Korean stars to make his own movies, always wanted to be a director and producer of movies. Fate of course did not allow this. So what did he do? He took Shakespeare literally when he said "All the world's a stage..." and so transformed North Korean politics into the greatest show on earth, with him directing the whole gargantuan production. And so, with his son appearently a chip off the old block, we, his audience, in a sense feed into the whole process by consuming it as media spectacle.
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cbsnews_viewer replies:
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You know recent North Korean history more than the "average" person, no doubt. Yet, the US administration is hyping this up. It is a country with the Gross Domestic Product similar to central Africa.
=North Korea doesn't have international tracking infrastructure *Brian Weeden, a former U.S. Air Force Space Command officer
"One can wonder why there is all the hoopla about this satellite test" asks a Physicist. Washington DC continues to want to police the world. North Korea helps in that purpose. But the reality is less than the current administration readily admits.
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myopinionpal says:
Just shoot it down with a heat seeking loaf of bread missile.
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Resin-Smoker says:
Doesn't help matters that North Korea (NK) is provoking everyone with this latest stunt but honestly just let them launch and ignore them after the fact. Most likely the missile will fail & splash down harmlessly, with the NK leadership declaring it a success in any event.

The key to winning all of this, is not to feed into the NK propaganda machine as it will only encourage more of the same behavior. (Think of NK as a group of misbehaving children with guns.) By ignoring NK, there will no longer be any incentive to create further drama knowing the world no longer react.

Besides NK is largely irrelevant in today's world and should be treated as such. Now, "IF" NK attacked anyone, they "might" be able to do it once before the combined militaries of the world came down on them.

After that, life as they once know it would come to a sudden screeching halt.
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karek40 replies:
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If we shoot it down with a laser, they will not know why it failed or if it failed. Seems like a better option. Failure will cause loss of face and do more to stop their misbehaving than success.
cbsnews_viewer replies:
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Its not "provoking everyone". It got the hell bombed out of it in 1953. Do you think its going to go along with 'the program'?. They are prisoners of their own history. Vietnam, remember those guys that took over the South from the US in 1975 just pays European companies to put its real communication satellites in orbit. Not this joke of a communications satellite.
No policymaker gives a rat's butt about Vietnam. There is no drama. Who profits from the Drama? Washington DC, so you can feel they are protecting the free world. Go Team Go. Raw Raw Raw.
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parisdakar says:
Gives me the urge to see "Team America - World Police" again. ...Areck Bawwwin.
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Resin-Smoker replies:
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lol
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venusvegasvada says:
I hope that satellite has a camera on it. That way you can see just how much food the rest of the world has while you are wasting your time and money on bombs and propaganda.

We'll send some new recipes over the wall on how to eat grass and insects this winter. Bon Appetit!
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foo8259 says:
I think I just succeed in putting a Hex on that rocket launch.
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thechooch1 replies:
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foo8259 you missed, got Santorum.
Resin-Smoker replies:
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Na i think he nailed them both. (fingers crossed)
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