North Korean Rocket Breaks Apart After Launch, Falls Into the Sea

AP Photo/David Guttenfelder
Dashiell Bennett 2,693 Views Apr 13, 2012

After all the bluster and hand-wringing over North Korea's big provocative rocket launch, the missile itself broke apart shortly after liftoff, falling into the Yellow Sea. Despite the technical failure, the rest of the world, particularly South Korea is still treating the launch as a serious and major provocation, quickly issuing condemnations and holding emergency security meetings. The U.N. Security Council is expected to meet later today and the United States has canceled a previously agreed upon plan to send food aid to the country. 

The failure of the launch is particularly embarrassing for the new leader, Kim Jong-un, after his regime took the unusual step of inviting Western reporters into the country ahead of the launch that they touted as part of the development of a space program. Now the highly secretive government is forced to admit to the world (and its own people) that their grand experiment didn't work. The biggest concern now is that the North's leaders may attempt to make up for the humiliation with an even bigger show of force, perhaps by testing a nuclear weapon.

The silver lining in the news is that North Korea is obviously nowhere close to having the capability of launching a long-rage ballistic missile, never mind mounting it with a nuclear warhead. The bad news is that the new leadership is apparently doubling down on the old leadership's preference for aggression over peace and international ambition above the welfare of its people. South Korean intelligence estimates that their famine and sanction-plagued neighbor spent about $850 million on the rocket launch, enough to feed its entire population for close to a year.

Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments or send an email to the author at dbennett at theatlantic dot com. You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.

Related Articles   More by Dashiell Bennett

North Korea Hit Up South Korea for Money at Service for Kim Jong-Il

Report Says North Korea Is Planning a Nuclear Test

South Korean security guards keep watch as South Korean trucks return to South Korea's CIQ (Customs, Immigration and Quarantine) after they were banned from entering the Kaesong industrial complex in North Korea,

North Korea Blocks Southern Workers From Crossing the Border

 

Read Obama's Big Speech on Drones and a New 'Targeted' War

The Mystery of the Queens Accountant Held for $3 Million for 32 Days

Elsewhere on the Web

User Comments

Please type your comment and click Post. If you’re not already logged in you will be prompted to log in or register

  • The Atlantic Wire on Twitter
  • The Atlantic Wire RSS Feed
  • The Atlantic Wire iPhone App