"Tag des Weltunterganges"?
Stalins 133. Geburtstag?
According to sources in the South Korean military, North Korea moved the first-phase rocket from the assembly site to the launch pad in the Tongchang-ri missile base in Cholsan County, North Pyongan Province, and installed it using a crane Monday morning. Another source said, “Circumstantial evidence secured by South Korean and U.S. intelligence suggesting that the North has also brought out the second- and third-phase rockets from the assembly site,” adding, “North Korea is expected to install all three rockets in two to three days and start follow-up work, including fueling, to complete preparations for the launch around Dec. 10.”
The Unified Progressive Party (UPP) has officially announced that South Koreans can hardly find fault with North Korea’s imminent plan to launch a long-range missile because it is no different from South Korea’s Naro rocket launch. The statement of the far-left party, which elected former lawmaker Lee Jung-hee as its candidate for the Dec. 19 presidential election, raises a serious question: Isn’t the party a second battalion of North Korean Workers’ Party?
The UPP’s startling comment came right after Pyongyang announced its plan to launch a “commercial satellite” into space. The splinter opposition party’s remarks were made by Kim Mi-hyui, a legislator of the party and spokesperson for Lee’s campaign.
Stalins 133. Geburtstag?
(03.12.2012, 23:55)Eugen613 schrieb: egkr1Die "Dong-A Ilbo" schreibt:
Es ist eine 3-stufige Rakte, bis jetzt wurde wohl nur die erste Stufe zum Startplatz gebracht.
Bilder und eine Analyse gibt es bei
http://38north.org/2012/11/sohae112912/
leider in Englisch und zum Übersetzen zu lang.
Die Bilder sind schon interessant.
According to sources in the South Korean military, North Korea moved the first-phase rocket from the assembly site to the launch pad in the Tongchang-ri missile base in Cholsan County, North Pyongan Province, and installed it using a crane Monday morning. Another source said, “Circumstantial evidence secured by South Korean and U.S. intelligence suggesting that the North has also brought out the second- and third-phase rockets from the assembly site,” adding, “North Korea is expected to install all three rockets in two to three days and start follow-up work, including fueling, to complete preparations for the launch around Dec. 10.”
(01.12.2012, 12:37)rroft schrieb: Der geplante Raketenstart sei eine "schwere Provokation" und eine Herausforderung der internationalen Gemeinschaft, teilte die südkoreanische Regierung mit. (Spiegel Online)Die "Joong-Ang Ilbo" schreibt:
The Unified Progressive Party (UPP) has officially announced that South Koreans can hardly find fault with North Korea’s imminent plan to launch a long-range missile because it is no different from South Korea’s Naro rocket launch. The statement of the far-left party, which elected former lawmaker Lee Jung-hee as its candidate for the Dec. 19 presidential election, raises a serious question: Isn’t the party a second battalion of North Korean Workers’ Party?
The UPP’s startling comment came right after Pyongyang announced its plan to launch a “commercial satellite” into space. The splinter opposition party’s remarks were made by Kim Mi-hyui, a legislator of the party and spokesperson for Lee’s campaign.