Seoul closely monitoring North Korea for missile launch: Military

People watch a television broadcast on North Korea's Sohae rocket-testing facility, at Seoul Station in Seoul, South Korea, on March 7, 2019. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SEOUL (AFP) - South Korea's military said on Monday (March 11) that it was closely monitoring North Korean facilities after a series of satellite images triggered international alarm that Pyongyang might be preparing a long-range missile or space launch.

Analysis indicates increased activity at two key sites - the Samundong missile research facility and the Sohae rocket-testing facility. Any launch could send stuttering talks on denuclearisation into disarray.

South Korea is "closely tracking and looking into all activity for possible scenarios including a missile launch" across the border, in close coordination with the United States, said Joint Chiefs of Staff spokesman Kim Joon-rak.

Satellite images of Samundong taken on Feb 22 showed cars and trucks at the site, as well as rail cars and cranes at a yard, US news outlet NPR reported.

"When you put all that together, that's really what it looks like when the North Koreans are in the process of building a rocket," Dr Jeffrey Lewis, a researcher at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, California, was quoted as saying.

Located on the outskirts of Pyongyang, the Samundong facility was built in 2012 to support the development of long-range missiles and space-launch vehicles.

As well as developing the Hawsong-15 ICBM, which analysts agree is capable of reaching the whole US mainland, Samundong constructed the long-range rockets that were then transported and successfully launched from the Sohae satellite launch station in 2012 and 2016.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un agreed to shutter the Sohae site at a summit with the South's President Moon Jae-in in Pyongyang last year.

Satellite pictures in August suggested workers were dismantling an engine test stand at the facility.

But the Washington-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies suggested last week that rebuilding was progressing quickly at the facility.

A moving structure that had been used to carry vehicles to a launch pad on rails has been restored, said respected research website 38 North project.

It added that the work had started before last month's failed meeting on denuclearisation between Mr Kim and US President Donald Trump.

Mr John Bolton, President Trump's national security adviser, said on Sunday that the US sees "exactly what they are doing" in regard to possible missile or rocket launch moves by the nuclear-armed state.

"We see it unblinkingly, and we don't have any illusions about what those are," he warned, adding his boss would be "pretty disappointed" if a nuclear-armed state conducted a new missile test.

North Korea has been banned by the UN Security Council from carrying out space launches, as some of its technology is similar to that used for intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs.

Since the collapse of the Hanoi summit, Mr Trump has been cautious in his forecasts, continuing to suggest a deal remains possible.

Mr Trump said Mr Kim promised he would carry out no more missile or nuclear testing, adding: "I take him at his word."

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