Korean Civil Rocket Launch Called Off, Again
Last Thursday, South Korea canceled the launch of its first space rocket after an anomaly in the propulsion system stopped the countdown just minutes before the scheduled lift-off.
It was South Korea's third attempt to put a rocket into orbit and the second time this particular mission has failed.
October's scheduled launch was also called off due to a glitch in the Russian-built booster.
"We are currently analyzing the cause and expect it will take additional time to identify the exact cause," Lee Joo-ho, Minister of Education, Science and Technology told reporters.
South Korea's rocket program has irritated neighbor North Korea, which says it is unjust for it to be singled out for U.N. sanctions for launching long-range rockets as part of its space program to put a satellite into orbit.
Regional powers believe the North's rocket launches are to test its long-range ballistic missiles, in violation of a U.N. ban. The North's latest rocket test in April ended in failure after it crashed minutes into flight.
South Korea is already far behind regional rivals China and Japan in the effort to build space rockets to put satellites into orbit and has relied on other countries, including Russia, to launch them.
Thursday's glitch was in the thrust vector control in the upper second stage of the rocket that guides the propulsion of the vehicle, launch officials said.
The 2009 and 2010 launch attempts also ended in failure.
Recent satellite images have indicated that North Korea too may be readying a new rocket launch.