Experts divided over North Korean rocket's political target
Everyone agrees one big aim of North Korea's rocket launch was to influence others abroad
![South Koreans watch a TV news reporting launch of the Unha rocket from Tongchang-ri, North Korea. Photo: AP](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/2012/12/13/south_korea_north_korea_rocket_launch_sel113_32990801.jpg?itok=Vey77UJQ)
North Korea's rocket launch marked a huge leap in its strategic capabilities, but given its timing, experts are divided over who the launch was aimed at influencing.
With South Koreans going to the polls to elect a new president on December 19, some believe that the timing was aimed southward, particularly given that the South's own space programme is moribund. South Korea has twice failed to launch a satellite. A third attempt is on hold, because of technical problems.
Seoul's presidential race is between two candidates. On the right, Park Geun-hye; on the left, Moon Jae-in. Moon is more favourable toward North Korea than Park, saying he will restart the "Sunshine Policy". Moon was formerly chief-of-staff to the late president Roh Moo-hyun, the most enthusiastic champion of unconditional engagement.
But even Park wants more engagement than the current Lee Myung-bak administration. Lee's hard-line approach held humanitarian aid in a (failed) attempt to pressurise Pyongyang into halting its nuclear programmes.
If anything, North Korea's launch is likelier to favour the left.
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