North Korea has confirmed it will launch a reconnaissance
satellite in June, saying it is needed to monitor military movements of the
United States and its partners in real time, state media reported Tuesday,
citing a senior defence official.
Japan said Monday it had been informed by Pyongyang that a
satellite launch could happen as early as this week, but Tokyo warned the North
may in fact be planning a sanctions-defying ballistic missile test.
KCNA cited Ri Pyong Chol, vice-chairman of the ruling
party’s central military commission, as saying the “military reconnaissance
satellite No. 1” would be “launched in June”.
That satellite, along with “various reconnaissance means due
to be newly tested, are indispensable to tracking, monitoring… and coping with
in advance in real time the dangerous military acts of the US and its vassal
forces”, the statement said.
Citing “reckless” acts by Washington and Seoul, Ri said
North Korea felt “the need to expand reconnaissance and information means and
improve various defensive and offensive weapons” in an effort to bolster
military preparedness.
The official also accused the United States of conducting
“hostile air espionage activities on the Korean peninsula and in its vicinity”.
North Korea informed Japan it will launch a rocket between
May 31 and June 11, identifying waters near the Yellow Sea, the East China Sea
and to the east of Luzon Island in the Philippines as warning areas, a Japanese
coast guard spokesman told AFP.
Such zones are usually designated for falling debris or
rocket stages.
In 2012 and 2016, Pyongyang tested ballistic missiles that
it called satellite launches. Both flew over Japan’s southern Okinawa region.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un this month inspected the
country’s first military spy satellite as it was prepared for launch, and gave
the green light for its “future action plan”.