North Korea reasserts right to satellite launch

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea warned the United States, Japan and their allies not to interfere with its plan to launch a satellite into space next month, saying today any intervention could doom already stalled talks on ending its nuclear weapons program.

North Korea has declared its intention to send a communications satellite into space between April 4 and 8. Regional powers suspect the North will use the launch to test its long-range missile technology, and has warned Pyongyang the launch would trigger international sanctions.

A 2006 U.N. Security Council resolution prohibits North Korea from engaging in ballistic activity, which Washington and its allies say includes firing a long-range missile or using a rocket to send a satellite into space.

The North’s Foreign Ministry today reasserted its right to peaceful development of its space program.

“The countries which find fault with (North Korea’s) satellite launch including the U.S. and Japan launched satellites before it,” said the statement carried by the North’s official Korean Central News Agency. The stance proves their “their hostility toward us,” it said.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported that South Korea’s top nuclear negotiator, Wi Sung-lac, said his country is working on contingency plans in case Pyongyang goes ahead with the rocket launch.

“As the clock ticks, we are placing more weight on countermeasures after a launch,” he was quoted by Yonhap as saying today.

The North also warned that any sanctions would violate the spirit of a disarmament pact Pyongyang signed in 2005 with five other nations: China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the U.S.

Under the deal, the North pledged to abandon its nuclear program in exchange for aid and security guarantees. In 2007, the country agreed on the initial disarmament steps — disabling its main nuclear facilities in return for the equivalent of 1 million tons of energy aid and other benefits.

The disarmament process, however, has been stalled since last year over a disagreement with Washington over how to verify the North’s past atomic activities.

The statement warned that sanctions would “deprive the six-party talks of any ground to exist or their meaning.”

The North also said it would not abandon its nuclear weapons and had no choice but to strengthen its forces in the face of such hostility. The statement didn’t elaborate.

Regional powers are looking to China, North Korea’s biggest benefactor and longtime communist ally, to help calm tensions in the region and persuade the North to return to the negotiating table. Both China’s president and premier have urged North Korea to come back to the talks in recent days.

Tensions have been running high on the divided Korean peninsula since a pro-U.S., conservative government took office in Seoul one year ago with a tougher policy on Pyongyang. The North cut off ties with South Korea, halted key joint projects and significantly restricted border traffic.

The U.S. stations about 28,500 troops to deter aggression from North Korea, which is still technically at war with South Korea since their 1950-53 Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.

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