North Korean satellite jamming is seen as a declaration of war on North Korea!North Korea has made a tough call to the United States, saying jamming North Korea's satellite work would be seen as a declaration of war. A spokesman for North Korea's Ministry of National Defense announced that it would see the move as a "declaration of war" and warned that North Korea would respond by destroying a U.S. spy satellite if Washington tried to attack its SpaceGuardian satellite, which had been in orbit for 10 days. In addition, the DPRK successfully launched the "Wanli Jing-1" military reconnaissance satellite into orbit, which is the third attempt after two failed attempts in May and August this year. North Korea claims the move will make it a space power and dramatically increase war deterrence. North Korean satellites have begun their main mission and photographed a series of sensitive sites, including those of the White House, the Department of Defense, the Pentagon, and U.S. aircraft carriers. This move, provoked by the United States and the West, triggered a ban by the United Nations.
A successful launch of the satellite will significantly improve North Korea's intelligence-gathering capabilities and provide vital data in any military conflict. In this regard, Cheryl, a spokesperson for the US Space Command, said ......Clinker issued a statement mentioning the possibility that the US military will weaken the effectiveness and lethality of hostile forces through a series of irreversible measures, as well as deprive the adversary of capabilities in the space and counter-space spheres. Recently, due to the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, the public has not noticed that the situation on the peninsula is quietly heating up. North Korea responded forcefully to the comments made by a spokesman for the U.S. Space Command, threatening to shoot down a U.S. satellite in retaliation if the U.S. dared to interfere with North Korea's satellites. In fact, North Korea has the ability to launch satellites, which also means that they are theoretically capable of shooting down satellites in the sky.
It is worth noting that on December 2, the South Korean Ministry of Defense announced the successful launch of South Korea's first reconnaissance satellite, using the Falcon 9 rocket of the American SpaceX company, and the launch base is located at the Vandenberg Space Base in California, USA. South Korea plans to launch four more satellites by the end of 2025. The launch of the satellite, which came less than two weeks after North Korea's launch of a military satellite, marked South Korea's first domestically produced spy satellite to monitor North Korea's nuclear activities. According to South Korea's Yonhap News Agency, the satellite is located in an orbit at an altitude of 400 to 600 kilometers above the ground and can detect small objects with a size of about 30 centimeters.
South Korea's Ministry of National Defense said that thanks to the successful launch of the reconnaissance satellite, it now has the ability to independently collect information and conduct surveillance reconnaissance, and the satellite will be the "cornerstone" of the ability to strengthen the kill chain concept.