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    12
    Dec
    2012
    8:36am, EST

    ANALYSIS: 'Spoiled child' North Korea snubs key ally China with rocket test

    The international community is condemning North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket, with the US and its allies calling it a test of technology that Pyongyang would need to mount a nuclear warhead on a missile. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Ian Williams, NBC News writes

    BEIJING - There was anger and dismay after North Korea launched a long-range rocket into orbit on Wednesday -- plenty of it in South Korea and Japan. There was also surprise.

    North Korea had warned of a possible delay to the launch for "technical reasons," although there was speculation that the real reason was political, that China was applying pressure behind the scenes. After all, Beijing had expressed "deep concern" over the test, and that is pretty strong for China, the North's closest diplomatic and economic ally.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    So Wednesday's test would seem to be an extraordinary snub to China, when it might be assumed that North Korea's new young leader, Kim Jong Un, would want to get off on a good footing with China's new Communist Party chief, Xi Jinping.

    North Korea watchers have been speculating that Kim is angling for an early audience with Xi, which so far has been denied.

    North Korea says it successfully launched controversial satellite into orbit

    KCNA via Reuters

    North Korean scientists work as a screen shows the Unha-3 (Milky Way 3) rocket being launched Wednesday.

    Launching a rocket in defiance of Beijing would hardly seem a great way of achieving it.

    Beijing's initial response was a masterful piece of diplomatic contortionism -- expressing "regret" and calling on Pyongyang to abide by U.N. Security Council resolutions, but at the same time making clear that China isn't about to back sanctions against the North.

    A Foreign Ministry spokesman called for a resumption of six-party talks, even though these have been widely discredited, and called for "all sides" to act calmly.

    There was anger, dismay and some surprise as North Korea launched a rocket in defiance of its critics abroad. NBC's Ian Williams reports from Beijing.

    North Korea claims US mainland within range of its missiles

    International talks are a big favorite of Beijing, which likes the role of diplomatic ringmaster.

    Pyongyang squandered the United States’ trust earlier this year after its April missile test torpedoed a February agreement with the Americans that would have traded U.S. food aid for a suspension of major elements of its nuclear program.

    So, what to make of North Korean-China relations? And what pressure is China willing and able to exert on North Korea?

    Despite the rocket launch’s international reverberations, Pyongyang's motive was largely domestic, according to Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt of the International Crisis Group, a non-governmental organization that works to prevent deadly conflict around the world.

    The move was meant to boost the standing of the young Kim, who has not yet fully consolidated power, and whose credibility was damaged by the failure earlier this year of another attempt to put a satellite into orbit (a thinly disguised ballistic missile test in the view of the U.S. and her allies), she said.

    North Korea leader Kim Jong Un still a mystery, Leon Panetta says

    And it is fair to speculate that Kim was probably on the edge of his seat during the launch.

    "This definitely will be used heavily for internal propaganda in North Korea," Kleine-Ahlbrandt told NBC News. "It's certainly important in light of the failed rocket launch we saw in April."

    There have also been reports in the South Korean press (always to be taken with caution) that after purging his enemies, Kim himself  was feeling vulnerable, and had limited his travel outside of Pyongyang while beefing up security around his residences with armored vehicles.

    Pyongyang also probably wanted to show Beijing that it is not beholden to anybody, Kleine-Ahlbrandt said, which would seem like quite a high stakes game given the parlous state of the North Korean economy.

    Reuters TV

    A North Korean KRT TV presenter announces the successful launch in this still image taken from TV.

    North Korea: We found a unicorn lair

    So, how to read China’s reaction?

    “They could certainly do more to pressure Pyongyang,” Kleine-Ahlbrandt said. “And the West would certainly like to see them do that.”

    As Beijing prizes stability above all else and would not want to do anything that would further exacerbate tensions or hasten the demise of a fragile regime, China may have a longer-term goal in mind, she said. Beijing was probably intent on heading off another nuclear test, which the North has hinted at, and that would be seen internationally as a far graver development than Wednesday’s rocket launch.

    Yan Xuetong, the dean of the Institute of International Studies at Beijing’s Tsinghua University, had a more nuanced view of Chinese diplomacy.

    “If China wants to maintain its relatively large influence over North Korea, it has no choice but to adopt a different policy,” than the U.S., he told Reuters.

    China was likely as surprised as anybody else by the timing of the launch.

    If it is to step up pressure, Beijing is unlikely to publicize it actions. Its immediate aim has been to get the North to adopt Chinese-style economic reforms.

    Back in 2010, as part of the leak of the U.S. diplomatic cable, it was revealed that Chinese officials had described North Korea as a “spoiled child.”  That assessment is unlikely to have changed.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Pope Benedict sends his first tweet
    • Analysis: Egypt is rapidly approaching its own 'cliff'
    • Nelson Mandela suffers recurrence of lung infection
    • Banking giant HSBC to pay record $1.9 billion in money-laundering case
    • Suspect in US envoy's killing in Libya arrested in Egypt
    • Cuba's jailing of American contractor 'arbitrary,' UN panel concludes
    • Nearly 900 left missing by Typhoon Bopha in the Philippines
    • Video: Penguins in Tokyo take over as Santa's elves

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    188 comments

    China needs to understand that North Korea is nobody's 'ally', and NK will attack anyone at any time over the most inconsequential thing. The rulers of NK do not seem to understand that even though they have a moderate amount of power for the size of their country, they cannot possibly manage to sus …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, north-korea, rocket, launch, south-korea, featured, ian-williams
  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    3:59pm, EDT

    Failed rocket launch? What rocket launch?

    After experiencing a critical failure, there has been almost no talk about the rocket that never entered orbit. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    Ed Flanagan writes

    PYONGYANG, North Korea – Quickly after the failed launch of the Kwangmyongsong-2 rocket, two things became abundantly clear: We, the foreign press corps brought in to cover the launch, knew far less about it than our colleagues outside of North Korea, and the only people we would be informing about anything today would be our government-assigned guides/minders.

    Many of the foreign news crews – which have been in Pyongyang for about a week – had been assured multiple times by our minders that we would get the opportunity to witness the launch. Two large video screens installed in our little hotel newsroom late Thursday appeared to validate that belief.

    Between scuttlebutt gleaned from our research and talks with North Korean space officials, many of us believed that our coverage would begin with an early wake-up call Friday morning from our minders whenever they got the word.

    Instead, that wake-up call came not from any North Korean officials, but from NBC’s foreign news desk, prompting us to head down to the newsroom – the only place in the hotel where we can access the Internet – to confirm what was happening.

    But what was there to report? Inside the newsroom, the video screens were blank, and local North Korean TV was not showing any rocket coverage. A section of the newsroom seemingly set-up as a post-launch podium for North Korean officials to answer questions was staffed by a disinterested minder.


    Meanwhile, on Twitter and foreign news websites, initial reports of a botched launch were being followed up with details about the failure: the location of the debris, what the rocket looked like before it exploded and initial reaction from foreign governments on the incident.

    Yet the North Koreans minders were idly chatting among themselves, completely oblivious to the botched launch that just happened, and apparently planning for just another day of guiding us on another highly orchestrated visit through the city.

    The North Korean rocket launch fails as the world is watching. See NBC's Richard Engel first report shortly after learning the news in Pyongyang.

    That sense was confirmed as I ran back and forth between the newsroom and the live shot positions outdoors. “Please be ready to go this morning for a music festival,” said one minder as he cornered me on a trip back to the newsroom.

    “There is no way we’re going on that trip!” I replied. “You know the satellite launch failed today, right?”

    My declaration was met with an incredulous stare before the minder slowly turned around and walked away. It was a scene replayed multiple times as minders, unsure what all the excitement was about, corralled journalists and had the news broken to them.

    This led to a mass exodus of minders.

    North Korea faces rocket reality: Failure is an option

    Ironically though, at the one moment when we the press suddenly had the most freedom we’d had all trip, no one had the means to take advantage and begin covering the North Korean side of the launch.
      
    As the pandemonium of the initial push to break news passed, many of us expected the North Koreans to call some sort of press conference to acknowledge the failure and explain what had gone wrong.

    But the podium remained unused and the pokerfaced North Koreans in the room gave no hint that we would hear anything from the government about the launch failure. A terse statement on North Korean state television had acknowledged the rocket’s flop into the water to the public, but nothing else.

    The lone statement was a great first step toward North Korea becoming a more open and possibly reflects a quiet confidence in the country’s new leader, Kim Jong-un.

    Kyodo / Reuters

    Kim Jong-un (C), current leader of North Korea, reacts after fireworks were released during the unveiling ceremony of bronze statues of North Korea founder Kim Il-sung and late leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang on Friday. North Korea said its much hyped long-range rocket launch failed on Friday, in a very rare and embarrassing public admission of failure by the hermit state.

    Unlike his father, Kim Jong-il, who covered up past launch failures, the younger Kim has demonstrated a degree of assuredness in publicly acknowledging the rocket disaster to his people.

    This certainly doesn’t mean that the country is turning over a new leaf – after all, the rocket test stunt itself shows that bad habits die hard, if at all. However, Kim’s concession suggests that this young, new leader may not strictly follow the game plan of his predecessors.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Syrians take to streets in first test of truce with Assad regime

    North Korea's rocket breaks up after launch

    Ex-spy chief looms over election in Egypt

    'Fit as a fiddle' Mugabe returns to Zimbabwe after illness rumors

    Aged-nun accused in Spanish baby-stealing cases

    London bans 'gay cure' ads from buses

     

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    176 comments

    I could do better with a $100 rocket kit.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: satellite, missile, north-korea, launch, failure, featured, ed-flanagan
  • 13
    Apr
    2012
    10:07am, EDT

    NBC's space expert Jim Oberg on N.Korea launch failure

    North Korea’s controversial rocket launch failed early Friday within 90 seconds of taking off.  

    It was an embarrassing set-back for North Korea’s new leader Kim Jong-un. But with all eyes on the reclusive country and the presence of foreign media, officials were forced to acknowledge the failure with a brief statement on state TV.

    James Oberg, NBC News’s space expert and a 22-year NASA veteran, answered reader questions about the failed launch from Pyongyang earlier today.

    Please click on the link below to read the chat.

    Click to see more of Oberg's reports from North Korea

    22 comments

    Obama to North Korea: No soup for YOU!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: satellite, missile, north-korea, launch, failure, featured, jim-oberg

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