South Korea salvages North’s satellite in intelligence win | Sangmi Cha & Jon Herskovitz / Bloomberg News

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South Korea salvaged a failed North Korean spy satellite from the sea, giving it a rare direct look at Pyongyang’s capabilities even as it concluded that the technology had little military value. Know more:

An object salvaged by South Korea’s military that is presumed to be part of the North Korean space-launch vehicle that crashed into sea following a launch failure in waters off on May 31.South Korea salvaged a failed North Korean spy satellite from the sea, giving it a rare direct look at Pyongyang’s capabilities even as it concluded that the technology had little military value.

Experts said the recovered pieces still could provide information about the secretive state’s rocket program and give clues about possible sanctions violations in the procurement of its components. Last month South Korea released photos of a 14.5-meter portion of the North Korean rocket. The two pieces it recovered in waters about 70 meters deep were from the second stage and likely contained the engine that did not fire, weapons experts said.

He added that it’s a matter of time before North Korea raises its game with reconnaissance, “since they have no other choice.”

 

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