- North Korea indicated it would launch a satellite earlier this week
- The plan was condemned by South Korea and Japan
North
Korea has moved up the launch window for a rocket by one day, the South
Korean Defense Ministry said Saturday. The new window, which was also
narrowed, is February 7-14; the old window was February 8-25. The areas
where debris would fall remain unchanged.
The announcement comes just days after the reclusive country's initial launch plans came to light, which drew condemnation from South Korea and Japan.
Though
North Korea says it's putting a satellite into orbit, the launch is
viewed by others as a front for a ballistic missile test.
U.S. officials have said the same type of rocket used to launch the satellite could deliver a nuclear warhead.
"Forcing
the launch is a clear violation against the [United Nations Security
Council] resolution and a serious provocation against the security to
our country," Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told a parliamentary
committee on Wednesday.
Officials
for the International Maritime Organization and the International
Telecommunications Union each told CNN that North Korea informed their
respective organizations that it intends to launch a satellite.
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