*Source: DTN News / Int'l Media
(NSI News Source Info) SEOUL, South Korea - August 18, 2009: South Korea was counting down Aug. 18 to the launch of its first space rocket, a move aimed at joining Asia's space race despite protests from rival North Korea. The Korea Space Launch Vehicle-1, South Korea's first space rocket, sits on its launch pad at the Naro Space Center in Goheung, south of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2009. South Korea will launch the country's first rocket on Wednesday.
Officials said the rocket, partially built by Russia would blast off late in the afternoon of Aug. 19, weather permitting, and put into orbit a South Korean-built 22-pound (100-kilogram) satellite.
A successful launch from the Naro Space Centre at Goheung, 300 miles (475 kilometers) south of Seoul, will mean the nation has joined an elite club of nine nations which have put a satellite into orbit.
Security was tight around the launch site, where about 1,600 police were on guard. The defense ministry said a squadron of fighter jets and an Aegis-class warship would deploy in the area.
The blast-off has been delayed several times from late 2008 for technical reasons.
South Korea has sent 10 satellites into space using launch vehicles from other countries.
In November 2007, Seoul announced a plan to launch a lunar orbiter by 2020 and send a probe to the moon five years after that.
It unveiled the project one month after China launched its first lunar orbiter and two months after Japan did the same.
In April 2008, Seoul sent its first astronaut into space aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket.
It has spent 502.5 billion won ($419 million) since 2002 to produce the 108-foot (33-meter) rocket, with the first stage built solely by Russia and the second by local engineers.
North Korea, smarting over U.N. Security Council censure of its own rocket launch in April, has said it will watch closely to see whether world powers also refer the South's launch to the Council.
Pyongyang insists it was unfairly punished for its April 5 launch, saying it put a peaceful communications satellite into orbit.
Washington and its allies say no satellite was detected in orbit and the North's launch was a disguised test of a Taepodong-2 missile.
Seoul has bristled at any comparisons with the North's operation, insisting its launch is purely for scientific purposes.
"North Korea is not happy with South Korea acquiring advanced space rocket technology," Baek Seung-Joo of the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses told AFP.
But he noted that the South's launch would not cause global concern since Seoul has faithfully observed international accords.
Science ministry officials denied Seoul is using Russian technology because Washington refused to transfer know-how.
"That's not because of objections from Washington. We picked Russia after comparing price and other terms," a ministry official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
He refused to comment on newspaper reports that Russia had been under pressure from Washington to limit technology transfer.
Park Jeong-Joo, director of the Korea Aerospace Research Institute, told journalists in July that Seoul "experienced a lot of difficulties in securing technology cooperation from developed countries."
Seoul's closest ally Washington, concerned about a possible arms race in northeast Asia, has sought to restrict South Korea's missile development.
A 2001 accord with the United States bars South Korea from developing missiles with a range of more than 187 miles (300 kilometers).
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
DTN News: South Korea Counts Down To Rocket, Satellite Launch
DTN News: South Korea Counts Down To Rocket, Satellite Launch
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DTN News,
Russia,
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South Korea
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