Kim Jong Un sneaks into the White House with North Korea’s new “silent weapon.”

In the Pentagon and in the offices of the U.N. The alarms went off. The launch of North Korea’s first military spy satellite a few days ago was a success after two failed attempts. At least this is evident from the statements of high-ranking officials in the communist country, according to which the almighty Kim Jong Un already has the first images taken from space on his table, in which the White Housethe Pentagon itself and other American “targets,” including the Anderson Air Force Base, Guamin the Pacific Ocean (where the US has parked dozens of bombers), the Norfolk Naval Base and that Newport News Shipyard, according to the North Korean state agency KCNA.

This North Korean satellite is the so-called Chollima-1 and according to military observers, it appears to be a new design that includes the following Two-nozzle liquid fuel engines developed for the Hwasong-15 ICBMs from Pyongyang, inspired by Soviet designs. Although the launch vehicle uses the same RD250 engines as North Korea’s ICBMs, expert Jeffrey Lewis of the Middlebury Institute of International Studies claims there are differences between the two designs.

The Nov. 21 launch came amid growing concerns among some U.N. Security Council members about possible arms transfers from North Korea to Russia and closer cooperation between the two countries, in violation of several U.N. resolutions. South Korean intelligence believes that this launch was carried out as a result Cooperation between Russia and North Korea After the summit meeting between the Russian President, Wladimir Putin, and Kim last September. However, according to Lewis, “it is still too early for the North Koreans to integrate the aid promised by Russia.”

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What can the North Korean satellite detect?

What benefits does this satellite provide to North Korea? Does it really endanger the security of the United States? The satellite could help improve North Korean missile guidance and increase the threat to the United States and its allies, a report from the United States Institute of Peace said. In reality, it is unlikely that such a satellite would provide this North Korea detailed information on country-specific weapon systems such as: South Korea and the United States, but it would still be useful to identify large troop movements, explained Vann Van Diepen, a U.S. government weapons expert and fellow at the Stimson Center in Washington. “That is probablyIt is a relatively small optical satellite “It will be relatively low resolution,” he told Reuters. “But even a relatively low-resolution satellite is better than not having one, which is currently the case.”

The UN Under-Secretary-General for the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific, Mohamed Khaled Jiari, assured the Security Council this Monday that the launch of the North Korean satellite entails “significant risks” for civil aviation and international maritime traffic. Jiari clarified that while sovereign states have the right to enjoy “the benefits of peaceful space activities,” North Korea is barred from engaging in these actions due to its use of ballistic missile technology in numerous Security Council resolutions. “North Korea has consistently demonstrated its strong intention to continue its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs in violation of relevant Security Council resolutions.” emphasized the UN official, referring to the recent constitutional amendment that enshrined its nuclear policy in North Korea’s constitution.

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