A government source said on Sunday that one of the three pictures that South Korea’s intelligence agency disclosed as evidence of North Korean troop deployment to Russia was captured by a satellite the South has been operating.
Two of the three photos were attributed to Airbus, a global satellite imagery provider, but the third was not attributed when the National Intelligence Service (NIS) presented them Friday while confirming North Korean deployment of troops to Russia for its war in Ukraine, Yonhap news agency reported.
Disclosing the satellite images, the NIS said that the North has decided to send around 12,000 troops to Russia to support its war against Ukraine and has already deployed 1,500 special forces troops to Vladivostok. “The unattributed photo was taken by a satellite that we’ve been operating,” the source said.
That picture appears to have been taken by a satellite equipped with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) that can collect data regardless of the weather by using remote sensing systems.
South Korea has been operating multiple SAR-equipped satellites, including a military reconnaissance satellite. Images taken by military satellites are usually not included in government press releases as they are classified as military secrets.
South Korea has been closely tracking North Korea’s movements using satellites operated by the government and the military amid growing speculation about deepening military cooperation between Moscow and Pyongyang.
–IANS
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