South Korea scrubs first full four-stage solid-fuel military rocket launch from Jeju barge over safety concerns
The Agency for Defense Development canceled the debut flight of its classified 'Mir' solid-fuel space launch vehicle on June 30 after issues were detected during final preparations aboard the sea-launch platform off Jeju Island; a successful flight would have made South Korea the sixth country to hold independent solid-fuel orbital launch capability.
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Summary
South Korea's Ministry of National Defense scrubbed the debut launch of the "Mir" solid-fuel space launch vehicle on June 30, announcing that safety issues were detected during final preparations aboard a sea-launch barge positioned off the southern coast of Jeju Island. The mission, a full four-stage orbital demo flight by the Agency for Defense Development, would have been South Korea's first complete assembly of the classified military vehicle. Officials did not set a new launch date. A successful flight would have qualified South Korea as the sixth country after the United States, Russia, China, France, and Israel to possess an independent solid-fuel orbital launch capability.
Why it matters
The Mir launcher is the supply side of South Korea's military reconnaissance-satellite buildup. South Korea has five large reconnaissance satellites providing two-hour coverage windows over North Korea, but requires nineteen additional small SAR satellites to compress that to thirty minutes. The Mir vehicle is designed to put those lighter payloads into orbit faster and on shorter notice than civil rockets, underpinning South Korea's ability to monitor North Korea's accelerating missile test tempo. Each scrub delays the surveillance timeline.
What to watch
- Defense Ministry announcement of a rescheduled launch date and whether officials disclose the specific safety issue found during preparations.
- Whether the postponement is linked to a June 4 explosion at Hanwha Aerospace's solid-fuel propellant plant, which raised questions about the supply chain for the program.
- North Korea's response, if any: Pyongyang has previously treated South Korean military satellite launches as provocations warranting public comment.