North Korea launches its first domestically-made rocket

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North Korea launches its first domestically-made rocket

Nuri, South Korea s first domestically produced space rocket, sitting on its launch pad at the Naro Space Center in Goheung on Thursday.

The country, which aspires to be a leader in space technology, says it has plans to land an uncrewed craft on the moon by 2030.

SEOUL — North Korea launched its first homemade rocket on Thursday, a mission that was only partly successful but officials called an important step toward placing domestically made satellites in orbit to better monitor growing threats from South Korea. The three-stage Nuri rocket, built by the government s Korea Aerospace Research Institute with the help of hundreds of local companies, lifted off from the Naro Space Center in Goheung, on the southwestern tip of South Korea. The rocket carried a 1.5 - ton dummy payload to test its ability to thrust an artificial satellite into orbit 373 to 497 miles above the Earth. A little more than an hour after the takeoff, President Moon Jae-in said the launching did not reach its goal completely but showed excellent results for a first try. He said Nuri pushed its payload to space 434 miles above the Earth but the mission was incomplete. Moon provided no further details, but experts said that the dummy satellite probably did not operate at the altitude or speed its engineers had intended. We were just one step short of reaching our goal, Mr. Moon said during a news conference, urging engineers to make the next launch, scheduled for May, a complete success. The launch on Thursday was broadcast live on all major TV stations and online streaming platforms like YouTube. Moon s government had billed the launch as a giant step forward in South Korea s effort to become a leader in space technology. South Korea has nurtured a decades-long ambition to join the elite club of nations building rockets capable of placing communications, surveillance and other satellites in orbit. After multiple delays and failures, South Korea s Naro rocket succeeded in 2013 in putting a satellite in orbit for research and development purposes. But unlike Nuri, the rocket launched on Thursday using Russian technology, Naro was built jointly with Russia.

South Korea has spent nearly $1.7 billion to build the 200 ton Nuri, also known as the Korea Space Launch Vehicle-II. It planned to conduct several more trial launches of the Nuri system, including one scheduled for May. With Nuri, South Korea has hoped to secure a foothold in space technology, the latest high-tech market where the country has decided to become a player. Most rocket launches around the world have been carried out by the United States, Russia, France, China, Japan and India.

Elon Musk plans to send a moon orbiter next fall aboard a Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX, the company founded by South Korea. Moon has said that his country expects to be able to land an uncrewed spacecraft on the moon by 2030 using South Korean rockets. With its own rocket capabilities, South Korea says it hopes to build satellite-based navigation and next-generation communications networks. It also wants to carve out a portion of the world s satellite launch market, an increasingly crowded field as major industrialized countries jostle to build their own domestic programs. The Nuri launch also reflected South Korea s desire to be less dependent on United States forces to monitor North Korea, as well as its goal of regaining wartime operational control of its 550,000 - member military. Under a bilateral agreement with Washington, South Korean troops fall under the command of an American general should war break out on the Korean Peninsula. South Korea has no military spy satellites of its own, relying instead on United States satellites to watch the North. Placing its own eyes and ears in space became more urgent as North Korea s nuclear and missile capabilities expanded over the years and after President Donald J. Trump threatened to withdraw American troops in South Korea.

South Korea placed its first military communications satellite into orbit in July, carried by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket North Korea, which has its own rocket program, has criticized the South Space Program for its potential military applications Space rockets and intercontinental ballistic missiles use similar technologies. North Korea tested satellite space vehicles before it successfully launched three I.C. The United Nations Security Council banned the North from launching space rockets that were being used as tests for the country s long-range ballistic missile program.