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Pentagon urges North Korea to give up missile launch

Last Updated 04 May 2018, 05:49 IST

 The US Department of Defense has urged North Korea not to go ahead with its plans to launch a satellite.

“The North Koreans will be violating Security Council resolutions if they move ahead with such a launch and we call on them, as other countries have, not to launch the (satellite-launching) missile,” George Little, acting assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, said Thursday.

“This is very serious business when North Korea does something like this. We're monitoring it closely. We understand the impact it could have on regional stability,” Little said.

“We're working very closely with our Republic of Korea allies as well as our Japanese allies to monitor what's happening with respect to this missile launch. We hope it doesn't happen. But if it does, we'll be ready to track it,” he said.

North Korea is facing mounting international pressure to call off the launch of its long-range rocket planned for April 12-16, which will mark the 100th birthday of the nation's late founding leader Kim Il-sung. Pyongyang says the rocket will put an earth observation satellite into orbit.

The US has said the launch would violate a UN Security Council resolution and constitute a missile test. Japan and South Korea have also condemned the launch.

Japan earlier said it will strengthen its defence capabilities in response to the launch and South Korea warned it may shoot down the rocket if it violates its territory.

Under a deal signed in February, Pyongyang agreed to suspend uranium enrichment as well as nuclear and long-range missile tests in return for US food aid. But North Korean officials insist the launch is part of a peaceful space programme.

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(Published 06 April 2012, 06:53 IST)

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