St. Petersburg Times
 tampabaycom
tampabay.com

Print storySubscribe to the Times

Japanese rocket carrying satellites destroyed before it reaches orbit

By Associated Press
Published November 30, 2003

TOKYO - Japan's space program suffered a setback Saturday after a rocket carrying two spy satellites meant to keep an eye on North Korea malfunctioned following liftoff and had to be destroyed, officials said.

The head of Japan's space agency, JAXA, said one of the H2-A's two rocket boosters failed to separate, making it impossible for the rocket to obtain sufficient height and speed to reach orbit. The malfunction prompted the agency to order the rocket blown up 10 minutes after liftoff.

"There was no chance of the mission being accomplished, so we destroyed the rocket," JAXA President Shuichiro Yamanouchi said at a news conference.

"It is extremely regrettable we failed this important mission," Yamanouchi said. "We are very sorry."

Saturday's launch was kept under tight security, with live film coverage of the liftoff banned because of the sensitivity of the rocket's payload.

Tokyo put its first two spy satellites into space in March as part of a project to watch North Korea's missile and nuclear programs.

Japanese officials say the program was prompted by North Korea's surprise test launch of a long-range missile over Japan's main island in 1998. The satellites are not meant as a provocation and would also be used for other missions such as monitoring natural disasters and weather patterns, they say.

A team of engineers and executives has been set up to investigate the cause of the malfunction.


World and national headlines
  • Massachusetts a state divided over same-sex marriage
  • Privacy, access at odds in Foster autopsy case
  • Official: Afghanistan still troubled by terrorists, drugs and warlords
  • Palestinian leader: Talks will stop if barrier doesn't
  • Jury ponders plague vial case
  • EU foreign ministers reach agreement on defense plan
  • Japanese rocket carrying satellites destroyed before it reaches orbit
  • Iran asserts it has right to enrich uranium
  • Marine muscle, Navy gizmos combine to fight terrorism
  • Turkey arrests suspect in synagogue bombing

  • Election 2004
  • Interest groups start early with $4-million in ads

  • Iraq
  • 7 Spanish officers, 2 Japanese diplomats killed

  • Nation in brief
  • U.S. Army officer in Cuba accused of security breach

  • The Canada Report
  • Departing deputy prime minister considers ambassador offer

  • World in brief
  • Airplane crashes in Congo, killing 22
  • Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111