N. Korea says it is preparing satellite launch

By The Associated Press | SEOUL, South Korea - North Korea says it is preparing to launch a satellite — in a reference to what neighboring countries believe is an imminent test of a long-range missile.

The North's space technology agency said Tuesday that full-fledged preparations are under way to launch satellite "Kwangmyongsong No. 2" at Hwadae in the country's northeast, Pyongyang's clearest reference yet to an approaching launch.

Hwadae is widely believed to be the launch site for the North's longest-range Taepodong-2 missile.

North Korea said last week that it has the right to "space development" — a term it has used in the past to disguise a missile test as a satellite launch. When it test-fired a shorter-range Taepodong 1 missile over Japan in 1998, it claimed to have put a satellite into orbit.

Medium-range missile deployed
The report comes a day after South Korea's Defense Ministry said that North Korea recently deployed a new type of medium-range ballistic missile capable of reaching northern Australia and the U.S. territory of Guam.

The new medium-range ballistic missile can travel at least 1,800 miles (3,000 kilometers), which would put the Pacific island of Guam, the northern tip of Australia and much of Russia and India within striking distance, the ministry said in a defense assessment of North Korea issued every two years.

It did not offer any other details on the new missile, including exactly when or how many missiles have been deployed and where their launching grounds are located.

The new missile is believed to be the same type displayed at a military parade in North Korea in 2007. The communist nation has been developing the missile since the late 1990s, the report said.

Barrage of insults
Relations have been tense since South Korean President Lee Myung-bak took office a year ago, calling on the impoverished North to honor its commitment to disable its nuclear program and refusing to give it unconditional aid.

North Korea's state media have been churning out near-daily criticism of Lee, calling him a "traitor" and "human scum." On Monday, the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper accused Lee of driving the Koreas "to the brink of a war."

Media reports say the longer-range missile being readied for launch could be an advanced version of the Taepodong-2 that could reach even farther than Alaska to the U.S. west coast.

North Korea's missile program is a major security concern for the region, along with its nuclear weapons development.

The country test-launched a Taepodong-2 missile in 2006, but it plunged into the ocean shortly after liftoff.

That test alarmed the world and gave new energy to the stop-and-go diplomacy over North Korea's nuclear program, though the North is not yet believed to have mastered the miniaturization technology required to put a nuclear warhead on a missile.

North Korea also has shorter-range Scud and Nodong missiles capable of hitting neighboring South Korea or Japan.

South Korea would be the most likely target of the Scuds, which have a range of up to 310 miles, while Japan would be the likely focus for Nodongs. The North is believed to have more than 1,000 Nodong and Scud missiles in its arsenal.

Also beefing up troops, navy
The defense report called North Korea a "direct and serious threat" and noted an increase in its troops. About 180,000 of the North's 1.19 million troops are special warfare forces trained for nighttime, mountain and street fighting — up from 120,000 reported two years ago, it said.

The move shows the North is prepared for various types of attacks on the South in case of war, the report said.

It also said North Korea has been beefing up its navy, bolstering submarines and developing new ground-to-ship and ship-to-ship missiles and torpedoes amid concerns it may provoke an armed clash in waters near its disputed sea border with South Korea.

The report said North Korea is believed to have secured about 88 pounds of plutonium — thought to be enough to make six or seven nuclear bombs — and conducted an atomic test in 2006.

It did not give an estimate of the number of atomic bombs North Korea has, dropping a reference in a previous report that said the North is believed to have built one or two nuclear weapons.

Former U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry told a forum in Seoul on Monday that he supported a dialogue to reduce tension on the Korean peninsula but was opposed to giving in to the North's saber rattling.

"I believe that we should continue to talk, but under no conditions should we show any signs of weakness under North Korean provocations," said Perry, who headed the Pentagon during a 1994 nuclear standoff with North Korea.

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