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DND to monitor No. Korea rocket launch
Topic Started: Mar 22 2012, 03:42 AM (6,806 Views)
Ayoshi
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Philippine Defense dept. to monitor North Korea rocket launch

MANILA, Philippines -- The Department of Defense (DND) on Wednesday said it would strictly monitor North Korea's rocket launch which is expected to be done on April 12 to 16.

"What can we do is monitor (the event) and we'll ask appropriate agencies with capabilities to know more about this," said DND Spokesman Peter Paul Galvez.

He issued this statement following reports that rocket launch will dump debris off Luzon as it enters its flight path.

"We will try to know more about this, the details of the flight path, so we can appropriately warn people of the possible areas which will be affected by the debris," Galvez stressed.

But the DND spokesman is hopeful that nothing untoward will happen as debris from space often disintegrate upon reentry from the Earth's atmosphere.

"It disintegrates basically but it's good enough for all of us to ensure the safety of our people so we try to know specifically what areas (that) might be affected with this missile launch," he said.

The United States, Japan and South Korea see North Korea’s plan as a thinly veiled long-range missile test, which would breach a United Nation ban and violate last month’s denuclearization deal with Washington.

Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency said such criticism was a “sinister provocation by hostile forces.”

It said that North Korean has a right to peaceful development in space, adding its government had notified international aviation and maritime bodies of the rocket’s flight path.

Next month’s rocket launch is timed to coincide with mass celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the birth of the nation’s founding president, Kim Il-sung.

SOURCE
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Hitman
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ayoshi
Mar 22 2012, 03:42 AM
Philippine Defense dept. to monitor North Korea rocket launch

MANILA, Philippines -- The Department of Defense (DND) on Wednesday said it would strictly monitor North Korea's rocket launch which is expected to be done on April 12 to 16.

"What can we do is monitor (the event) and we'll ask appropriate agencies with capabilities to know more about this," said DND Spokesman Peter Paul Galvez.

He issued this statement following reports that rocket launch will dump debris off Luzon as it enters its flight path.

"We will try to know more about this, the details of the flight path, so we can appropriately warn people of the possible areas which will be affected by the debris," Galvez stressed.

But the DND spokesman is hopeful that nothing untoward will happen as debris from space often disintegrate upon reentry from the Earth's atmosphere.

"It disintegrates basically but it's good enough for all of us to ensure the safety of our people so we try to know specifically what areas (that) might be affected with this missile launch," he said.

The United States, Japan and South Korea see North Korea’s plan as a thinly veiled long-range missile test, which would breach a United Nation ban and violate last month’s denuclearization deal with Washington.

Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency said such criticism was a “sinister provocation by hostile forces.”

It said that North Korean has a right to peaceful development in space, adding its government had notified international aviation and maritime bodies of the rocket’s flight path.

Next month’s rocket launch is timed to coincide with mass celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the birth of the nation’s founding president, Kim Il-sung.

SOURCE

what can they monitor North Korea with when we do not even have modern radars? ask the US again? lol. what else.
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spearhead
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^^They need manual observations using numerous manned binoculars!

Man, just after the US allowed the access of food aid for NK and this is what the UN got in return.
"Men of War must learn the art of numbers or he will not know how to array his troops." - Plato

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pachador


This is a good news media opportunity for the AFP to show the newsmen that they really need radars and interception aircraft/missiles. when the rocket is launched, the AFP should invite the news reporters and congressmen to observe how the AFP is monitoring the rockets with their eyeballs and binoculars :lollol:
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israeli
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so what are we going to do now aside from filing diplomatic protests? add anti-ballistic missile defense systems in our planned weapons and equipment purchases?

190 kilometers is way too close to the Philippines. that rocket might even fall into waters that are deep within Philippine territory!
"To secure peace is to prepare for war." - Carl Von Clausewitz
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Hitman
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israeli
Mar 22 2012, 09:24 AM
so what are we going to do now aside from filing diplomatic protests? add anti-ballistic missile defense systems in our planned weapons and equipment purchases?

190 kilometers is way too close to the Philippines. that rocket might even fall into waters that are deep within Philippine territory!

well, Philippine officials can only pray that when that rocket falls in the Spratlys, it will hit a PLAN warship or their aircraft carrier Liang. lol. then thats a free hit for us, not even doing anything, and thats whats our officials love, getting a direct hit without spending a centavo and no need for modernization and more for pabaons. lol
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AVBsupersonic
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This is just great.. while all our Neighbors have the capability to INTERCEPT these rockets in case they enter in their area of responsibility, while the Philippines only have the capability to monitor and watch the ROCKET's falling from the sky, unfazed by the possible THREAT's it may cause to our People and Country territory.... Pathetic Fools!!!
"Some are just lucky that they're not under oath and are not classified!"- Blue badge
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didu
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AVBsupersonic
Mar 22 2012, 07:17 PM
This is just great.. while all our Neighbors have the capability to INTERCEPT these rockets in case they enter in their area of responsibility, while the Philippines only have the capability to monitor and watch the ROCKET's falling from the sky, unfazed by the possible THREAT's it may cause to our People and Country territory.... Pathetic Fools!!!

really, so which of our neighbors has the ability to INTERCEPT an intercontinental rocket in flight?

AFAIK only Taiwan & Japan has the Patriot missile system and even the Patriot is not capable of intercepting an ICBM.

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seWer Rat
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Wardog
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AVBsupersonic
Mar 22 2012, 07:17 PM
This is just great.. while all our Neighbors have the capability to INTERCEPT these rockets in case they enter in their area of responsibility, while the Philippines only have the capability to monitor and watch the ROCKET's falling from the sky, unfazed by the possible THREAT's it may cause to our People and Country territory.... Pathetic Fools!!!

Well, you just made a "pathetic fool" of yourself by posting this ignorant rant of yours.

Not one of our neighbors has the ability to intercept an ICBM like North Korea's Taepodong 2.

Japan's Aegis and Patriot systems are designed and most effective against short range tactical ballistic missiles in the terminal phase of flight and will be hard pressed, if impossible in shooting down the North Korean rocket especially in the boost phase. (Refer to map posted by SR).



Anyone who comes to a counter-insurgency thinking it`s about killing terrorists is missing the boat. It`s really about winning the people. You can kill all the terrorists but then you`ve pissed people off and created 100 more.

-Col. Bradley Becker
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