North
Korea has indicated that it will launch a satellite sometime between February
8-25, a United Nations agency said Tuesday -- a launch that has drawn American
concerns because of the rocket to be used.
North
Korea told the International Telecommunication Union on Tuesday that it intends
to launch an Earth observation satellite, ITU spokesman Sanjay Acharya said.
The ITU registers all satellite transmission frequencies to ensure there is no
cross-satellite interference.
The
launch could raise international tensions. U.S. officials have said the same
type of rocket that would put the satellite into orbit could be used on a
different occasion as an intercontinental ballistic missile.
Over
the years, there have been various efforts by the international community to
negotiate an end to North Korea's nuclear weapons program -- and its missile
program, as well -- according to the website of the Arms Control Association, a
nonpartisan Washington-based organization dedicated to promoting public support
for "effective arms control policies."
The
U.S. has been anticipating a new missile launch
But,
while there have been agreements and near-agreements over the years, all
efforts have eventually collapsed, the Arms Control Association said. And North
Korea contends it has withdrawn from any international agreements that would
limit its weaponry.
A scenario
similar to the current one unfolded in 2012, when North Korea announced it was
launching a rocket carrying a satellite. North Korea said that operation was
for peaceful purposes, but Japan, the U.S. and South Korea decried it as a
cover for a long-range ballistic missile test.
The
United States has been anticipating a new launch.
In
recent days, U.S. satellites have spotted activity at a launch station in
North Korea, and the United States has assessed that the North has assembled
all the elements, equipment and technology for the launch of a satellite atop a
long range rocket, and that a launch could happen at any point, several U.S.
officials told CNN.
Tuesday's
announcement comes about a month after North Korea bragged about what it said
was the "spectacular success" of its first hydrogen bomb test, on
January 6. A U.S. official directly familiar with an assessment of the test
said last week there may have been a partial, failed test of some
type of components associated with a hydrogen bomb.
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