The Unha or Eunha ( Korean : 은하, 銀河 , "Galaxy") is a North Korean expendable carrier rocket , which partially utilizes the same delivery system as the Taepodong-2 orbital launch system.
69-425: North Korea's first orbital space launch attempt occurred on August 31, 1998, and was unsuccessful. This launch attempt was performed by a Paektusan-1 rocket, which used a solid motor third stage, a Scud -missile-based second stage, and a Nodong-1 based first stage. Nodong-1 was a North Korean-developed stage thought to be a scale-up of the old Soviet Scud missile. The Paektusan-1 stood 22.5 metres (74 ft) tall,
138-740: A Scientific and Technical Intelligence Directorate on April 30, 1963. DIA assumed the staff support functions of the J-2, Joint Staff, on July 1, 1963. Two years later, on July 1, 1965, DIA accepted responsibility for the Defense Attaché System —the last function the Services transferred to DIA. During the 1960s, DIA analysts focused on China's detonation of an atomic bomb and the launching of its Cultural Revolution ; increasing unrest among African and South Asian nations; fighting in Cyprus and Kashmir ; and
207-498: A general rule, DIA handles national-level, long-term and strategic intelligence needs, whereas service-level intelligence components handle tactical, short-term goals pertinent to their respective services. DIA does, however, lead coordination efforts with the military intelligence units and with the national DOD intelligence services ( NSA , NGA , NRO ) in its role as chair of the Military Intelligence Board and through
276-474: A military intelligence officer, defined and established a clandestine services program under the U.S. Southern Command 's "Plan Green". The program was then authorized by JCS Chairman John Vessey, and sanctioned by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence ("SSCI"), with the sponsorship of Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC) and Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ). The Goldwater–Nichols DoD Reorganization Act
345-556: Is a national-level intelligence organization which does not belong to a single military element or within the traditional chain of command , instead answering to the Secretary of Defense directly through the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence . Three-quarters of the agency's 17,000 employees are career civilians who are experts in various fields of defense and military interest or application; and although no military background
414-544: Is a technical intelligence discipline that serves to detect, track, identify or describe the signatures (distinctive characteristics) of fixed or dynamic target sources. This often includes radar intelligence, acoustic intelligence, nuclear intelligence, and chemical and biological intelligence. DIA is designated the national manager for MASINT collection within the United States Intelligence Community , coordinating all MASINT gathering across agencies. DIA
483-556: Is also the national manager of the Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System (JWICS), the central Top Secret / Sensitive Compartmented Information (TS/SCI) processing network for the United States, and Stone Ghost , a network for US and partner nations. Directorate for Mission Services: The Directorate for Mission Services provides administrative, technical, and programmatic support to
552-782: Is an intelligence agency and combat support agency of the United States Department of Defense , specializing in defense and military intelligence . A component of the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Intelligence Community (IC), DIA informs national civilian and defense policymakers about the military intentions and capabilities of foreign governments and non-state actors . It also provides intelligence assistance, integration and coordination across uniformed military service intelligence components , which remain structurally separate from DIA. The agency's role encompasses
621-574: Is concentrated on broader, more general intelligence needs of the President and Cabinet . Additionally, due to DIA's designation as a combat support agency , it has special responsibilities in meeting intelligence requirements specifically for the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Combatant Commanders, both in peace and at war. Although there are misconceptions in the media and public about
690-410: Is followed by the depletion and separation of the second stage, 266 seconds into the flight, resulting in an impact about 1,650 kilometres (1,030 mi) downrange. The third stage, which is spin-stabilised, then burns for 27 seconds to insert the payload into low Earth orbit . The payload is estimated at 6 kg mass. Defense Intelligence Agency The Defense Intelligence Agency ( DIA )
759-652: Is located in the garden at the Defense Intelligence Agency Analysis Center in Washington, D.C. Since the September 11 attacks, DIA has been active in nuclear proliferation intelligence collection and analysis with particular interests in North Korea and Iran as well as counter-terrorism . DIA was also involved with the intelligence build-up to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and was a subject in
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#1732869827261828-513: Is not a collective of all U.S. military intelligence units and the work it performs is not in lieu of that falling under intelligence components of individual services . Unlike the Russian GRU , which encompasses equivalents of nearly all joint U.S. military intelligence operations, DIA assists and coordinates the activities of individual service-level intelligence units (i.e. 25 AF , INSCOM , etc.), but they nevertheless remain separate entities. As
897-536: Is propelled by two small gimballed motors. Recent satellite images of the Sohae Satellite Launching Station showing an enlarged launch tower under construction have prompted online speculation that an enlarged version, called "Unha-X", might be under development. On 24 February 2009, North Korea announced that a Unha rocket would be used to launch the Kwangmyŏngsŏng-2 satellite. According to
966-449: Is required, 48% of agency employees have some past military service. DIA has a tradition of marking unclassified deaths of its employees on the organization's Memorial Wall . Established in 1961 under President John F. Kennedy by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara , DIA was involved in U.S. intelligence efforts throughout the Cold War and rapidly expanded, both in size and scope, after
1035-916: The Berlin Wall , Air Force Lieutenant General Joseph Carroll took the lead in planning and organizing this new agency. The JCS published Directive 5105.21, "Defense Intelligence Agency" on August 1, and DIA began operations with a handful of employees in borrowed office space on October 1, 1961. DIA originally reported to the Secretary through the JCS. The new agency's mission was the continuous task of collecting, processing, evaluating, analyzing, integrating, producing, and disseminating military intelligence for DoD and related national stakeholders. Other objectives included more efficiently allocating scarce intelligence resources, more effectively managing all DoD intelligence activities, and eliminating redundancies in facilities, organizations, and tasks. Following DIA's establishment,
1104-743: The Federal Law Enforcement Training Center for three months before being certified. DIA Police operate under the U.S. Marshal's Office Special Deputation and jurisdictional and functional authority within the District of Columbia under a cooperative agreement with the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia . DIA Police have the following rank structure: DIA Police have K9, HAZMAT, SRT and also support DIA field operations. From World War II until
1173-622: The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) of his decision to establish the DIA in February 1961. He ordered them to develop a plan that would integrate all the military intelligence of the DoD, a move that met strong resistance from the service intelligence units, whose commanders viewed DIA as undesirable encroachment on their turf. Despite this resistance, during the spring and summer of 1961, as Cold War tensions flared over
1242-785: The Joint Chiefs of Staff with foreign military intelligence for defense policy and war planning. DIA also managed the National Intelligence University (NIU) on behalf of the Intelligence Community before transitioning it to ODNI in June 2021. NIU and the John T. Hughes Library is housed at the Intelligence Community campus in Bethesda, Maryland and has several branch campuses at RAF Molesworth , MacDill Air Force Base , and Marine Corps Base Quantico as well as academic programs at
1311-595: The Joint Special Operations Command in overseas operations. In October 2015, the Pentagon said that DIA appointed a British Royal Air Force officer as its first deputy director in charge of improving integration between U.S. intelligence units and spy agencies of other English-speaking countries in the Five Eyes alliance. This was the first time that a foreign national was appointed to a senior position at
1380-903: The Middle East intensified as the Iran–Iraq War spilled into the Persian Gulf . DIA provided significant intelligence support to Operation Earnest Will while closely monitoring incidents such as the Iraqi rocket attack on the USS ; Stark , the destruction of Iranian oil platforms, and Iranian attacks on Kuwaiti oil tankers. The "Toyota War" between Libya and Chad and the turmoil in Haiti added to DIA's heavy production workload, as did unrest in other parts of Latin America , Somalia , Ethiopia , Burma , Pakistan , and
1449-537: The Military Intelligence Board , which coordinates activities of the entire defense intelligence community . DIA is headquartered in Washington, D.C. , on Joint Base Anacostia–Bolling with major operational activities at the Pentagon and at each Unified Combatant Command , as well as in more than a hundred U.S. embassies around the world, where it deploys alongside other government partners (e.g.,
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#17328698272611518-804: The Missile and Space Intelligence Center , the National Media Exploitation Center , and the Underground Facilities Analysis Center (UFAC). Further, DIA is responsible for administering the JIOCEUR and various Joint Intelligence Centers which serve and are co-located with each of the Unified Combatant Commands . Additionally, DIA manages the Directorate for Intelligence, Joint Staff (J2) which advises and supports
1587-665: The NSA and NGA . The DIA has its own police force (established in 1963), made up of federal officers who protect DIA people and property. DIA Police provide law enforcement and police services, emergency response and physical security at DIA campuses. DIA Police have 170 sworn, uniformed officers that protect and police the six DIA sites (Headquarters, Reston, Charlottesville, DIA Logistics Operation Center, National Center for Medical Intelligence and Missile and Space Intelligence Center). DIA Police has 26 Special Agents that carry out security investigations. DIA Police Officers are trained at
1656-525: The Philippine Sea and confirmed that the satellite had entered orbit. Paektusan (rocket) Taepodong-1 ( Korean : 대포동-1 ) was a three-stage technology demonstrator developed by North Korea , a development step toward an intermediate-range ballistic missile . The missile was derived originally from the Scud rocket and was tested once in 1998 as a space launch vehicle. As a space launch vehicle, it
1725-632: The Philippines . With the end of the Cold War, defense intelligence began a period of reevaluation following the fall of the Soviet system in many Eastern European countries, the reunification of Germany , and ongoing economic reforms in the region. In response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 , DIA set up an extensive, 24-hour, crisis management cell designed to tailor national-level intelligence support to
1794-541: The President's Daily Brief and the National Intelligence Estimates . Analysts serve DIA in all of the agency's facilities and DIA has the most forward deployed analysts in the Intelligence Community. Directorate for Science and Technology: The Directorate for Science and Technology manages DIA's technical assets and personnel. These assets gather and analyze Measurement and Signature Intelligence , which
1863-688: The Senate . He or she is the primary intelligence adviser to the Secretary of Defense and also answers to the Director of National Intelligence . The Director is also the Commander of the Joint Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance , a subordinate command of United States Strategic Command , which is headquartered in Omaha, Nebraska. Additionally, he or she chairs
1932-808: The Senate Report of Pre-war Intelligence on Iraq . After the invasion, DIA led the Iraq Survey Group to find the alleged Weapons of Mass Destruction . The agency has conflicted with the CIA in collection and analysis on the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and has often represented the Pentagon in the CIA–DoD intelligence rivalry due to DIA's own Clandestine HUMINT collection. In 2012, DIA announced an expansion of clandestine collection efforts. The newly consolidated Defense Clandestine Service (DCS) would absorb
2001-547: The September 11 attacks . Because of the sensitive nature of its work, the spy organization has been embroiled in numerous controversies, including those related to its intelligence-gathering activities, to its role in torture , as well as to attempts to expand its activities on U.S. soil. The Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency is an intelligence officer who is nominated by the President and confirmed by
2070-899: The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan , the overthrow of Iranian monarchy , and the taking of American hostages from the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1979 . Also, of serious concern were the Vietnamese takeover in Phnom Penh , the China–Vietnam border war , the overthrow of Idi Amin in Uganda , the north–south Yemen dispute, troubles in Pakistan , border clashes between Libya and Egypt , the Sandinista takeover in Nicaragua , and
2139-731: The missile gap between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. In the late 1960s, crises that tested intelligence responsiveness included: the Tet Offensive in Vietnam ; the Six-Day War between Egypt and Israel ; continuing troubles in Africa, particularly Nigeria ; North Korea 's seizure of the USS Pueblo ; and the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia . The early 1970s were transitional years as
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2208-414: The 1980s, DIA had transformed into a fully integrated national-level intelligence agency. Its 1981 flagship publication Soviet Military Power , the most comprehensive overview of Soviet military strength and capabilities at the time, was met with wide acclaim; SMP continued to be produced by DIA as a serialized publication roughly over the next decade. In 1983, in order to research the flow of technology to
2277-879: The CIA) and also operates the U.S. Defense Attache Offices . Additionally, the agency has staff deployed at the Col. James N. Rowe Building at Rivanna Station in Charlottesville, Virginia , National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI) in Fort Detrick , Maryland, Missile and Space Intelligence Center (MSIC) in Huntsville, Alabama , Russell-Knox Building on Marine Corps Base Quantico , National Center for Credibility Assessment at Fort Jackson, South Carolina , and Defense Intelligence Support Center (DISC) in Reston, Virginia . DIA also recently completed
2346-549: The DIA–CIA rivalry, the two agencies have a mutually beneficial relationship and division of labor . According to a former senior U.S official who worked with both agencies, "the CIA doesn't want to be looking for surface-to-air missiles in Libya " while it is also tasked with evaluating the Syrian opposition. CIA and DIA Operations Officers all go through the same type of clandestine training at Camp Peary , an interagency Defense installation under CIA administration better known in popular culture by its CIA nickname "The Farm". DIA
2415-490: The Defense HUMINT Service and expand DIA's overseas espionage apparatus to complement the work of corresponding elements at CIA. DCS would focus on military intelligence concerns—issues that the CIA has been unable to manage due to lack of personnel, expertise or time—and would initially deal with Islamist militia groups in Africa, weapons transfers between North Korea and Iran, and Chinese military modernization. The DCS works in conjunction with CIA's Directorate of Operations and
2484-415: The Defense Intelligence School (now the National Intelligence University ), and on January 1, 1963, it activated a new Production Center. Several Service elements were merged to form this production facility, which occupied the "A" and "B" Buildings at Arlington Hall Station , Virginia . The agency also added an Automated Data Processing (ADP) Center on February 19, a Dissemination Center on March 31, and
2553-482: The Kuwaiti Theater of Operations to provide intelligence support. The Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (AFMIC), and the Missile and Space Intelligence Center (MSIC), associated with the Army for over 20 and 50 years respectively, became part of DIA in January 1992. This was part of the continuing effort to consolidate intelligence production and make it more efficient. On September 11, 2001, seven DIA employees lost their lives along with 118 other victims at
2622-479: The North Korean state media, which stated that the satellite achieved orbit about 5 minutes after launch. On this single launch, the main two-stage booster flew for 1,646 km without any significant problems. The rocket was launched eastward, passing over Japan at an altitude of over 200 km. The second stage came down into the Pacific Ocean about 60 km past Japan, and the third stage about 600 km beyond Japan. According to post-launch analysis of
2691-411: The Pentagon in a terrorist attack when American Airlines Flight 77 piloted by five Al-Qaeda hijackers plowed into the western side of the building, as part of the September 11 attacks . The death of seven employees at once was the largest combined loss in DIA's history. On September 11, 2009, DIA dedicated a memorial to the seven employees lost in the terrorist attacks on the Pentagon. The memorial
2760-467: The Services reluctantly transferred intelligence functions and resources to it on a time-phased basis to avoid rapidly degrading the overall effectiveness of defense intelligence. A year after its formation, in October 1962, the agency faced its first major intelligence test during the superpower Cuban Missile Crisis confrontation that developed after Soviet missiles were discovered at bases in Cuba by Air Force spy planes. In late 1962, DIA established
2829-461: The South Korean government, the launch took place on 5 April from the Tonghae Satellite Launching Ground in Hwadae county. Several countries, including South Korea, the U.S., and Japan, voiced concerns that the launch would violate United Nations Security Council Resolution 1718 which prohibits North Korea from testing ballistic missiles . Russia also announced they urged North Korea to refrain from its planned rocket launch. On April 5, 2009,
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2898-433: The Soviet Union, the Reagan Administration created Project Socrates within the agency. Over the following years Project Socrates's scope broadened to include monitoring of foreign advanced technology as a whole. Project Socrates ended in 1990 with Michael Sekora, the project's director, leaving in protest when the Bush Administration reduced funding. In 1984, the Clandestine Services organization, designated STAR WATCHER,
2967-425: The Soviet movement of combat troops to Cuba during the signing of the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty II . Following the promulgation in 1979 of Executive Order 12036 , which restructured the Intelligence Community and better outlined DIA's national and departmental responsibilities, the agency was reorganized around five major directorates: production, operations, resources, external affairs, and J-2 support. By
3036-402: The Taepo Dong 1 (TD-1) as a surface-to-surface missile in North Korea. We believe instead that the vehicle was a test bed for multi-stage missile technologies." In 2009, the US National Air and Space Intelligence Center assessed that the Taepodong-1 was a technology demonstrator, a development step toward longer-range missile development. The Taepodong-2 , or Unha-2 , was the successor to
3105-408: The Taepodong-1 technology demonstrator, with a first (unsuccessful) test launch in 2006. The rocket's first stage is a Rodong-1 MRBM , and the second stage uses a single engine from the Rodong-1. In a nominal space launch, the first stage burns for 95 seconds, before separating, and landing about 250 kilometres (160 mi) downrange. The payload fairing separates 144 seconds after launch. This
3174-406: The Unha-2 rocket was launched at around 02:30 hours UTC (11:30 hours KST). The U.S. Northern Command said that the first stage of the rocket fell into the Sea of Japan (East Sea of Korea), while the other rocket stages as well as the payload fell into the Pacific Ocean, and no object entered orbit. Later analysis indicated the rocket impacted 2,390 miles (3,850 km) from the launch site, and that
3243-428: The agency shifted its focus from consolidating its functions to establishing itself as a credible producer of national-level intelligence. This proved difficult at first since sweeping manpower decrements between 1968 and 1975 had reduced agency manpower by 31 percent and precipitated mission reductions and a broad organizational restructuring. Challenges facing DIA at this time included the rise of Ostpolitik in Germany;
3312-457: The agency's domestic and global operations and analytic efforts. The Directorate also manages DIA's training centers -- the Joint Military Intelligence Training Center and the Joint Military Attaché School . This includes providing counterintelligence to the agency as well as serving as the counterintelligence executive agent for the Department of Defense. Centers: DIA is divided into five regional centers and two functional centers which manage
3381-443: The agency's efforts in these areas of responsibility. These centers are the Americas and Transnational Threats Center, the Indo-Pacific Regional Center, the Europe/Eurasia Regional Center, the Middle East/Africa Regional Center, the China Mission Group, the Defense Resources and Infrastructure Center, and the Defense Combating Terrorism Center. DIA also manages Community-wide centers such as the National Center for Medical Intelligence ,
3450-511: The agency's role has occasionally been confused with those of law enforcement agencies. DIA's parent organization, the Department of Defense, features in fiction and media much more prominently due to the public's greater awareness of its existence and the general association of military organizations with warfare , rather than spycraft. DIA and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) are distinct organizations with different functions. DIA focuses on national level defense-military topics, while CIA
3519-413: The all-source analysis elements of DIA, and is responsible for developing and deploying analytic tradecraft throughout the Defense Intelligence Enterprise. Analysts analyze and disseminate finalized intelligence products, focusing on national, strategic and operational-level military issues that may arise from worldwide political, economic, medical, natural or other related processes. Analysts contribute to
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#17328698272613588-439: The co-located Joint Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance . The Military Intelligence Integrated Database (MIDB) is due to be replaced by the Machine-Assisted Analytic Rapid-Repository System (MARS) beginning in spring 2024. DIA is organized into four directorates and five regional centers Directorate for Operations: Directorate for Analysis: The Directorate of Analysis manages
3657-430: The coalition forces assembled to expel Iraq from Kuwait . By the time Operation Desert Storm began, some 2,000 agency personnel were involved in the intelligence support effort. Most of them associated in some way with the national-level Joint Intelligence Center (JIC), which DIA established at The Pentagon to integrate the intelligence being produced throughout the Community. DIA sent more than 100 employees into
3726-473: The collection and analysis of human-source intelligence (HUMINT), both overt and clandestine , while also handling U.S. military-diplomatic relations abroad. DIA concurrently serves as the national manager for the highly technical measurement and signature intelligence (MASINT) and as the Defense Department manager for counterintelligence programs. The agency has no law enforcement authority, contrary to occasional portrayals in American popular culture. DIA
3795-468: The collection and analysis of military-related foreign political, economic, industrial, geographic, and medical and health intelligence . DIA produces approximately one-quarter of all intelligence content that goes into the President's Daily Brief . DIA's intelligence operations extend beyond the zones of combat, and approximately half of its employees serve overseas at hundreds of locations and in U.S. embassies in 140 countries. The agency specializes in
3864-403: The creation of DIA in 1961, the three Military Departments collected, produced and distributed their intelligence for individual use. This turned out to be duplicative, costly, and ineffective as each department provided their own, often conflicting estimates to the Secretary of Defense and other Federal agencies. While the Defense Reorganization Act of 1958 aimed to correct these deficiencies,
3933-399: The emergence of the Palestine Liberation Organization in the Middle East ; and the U.S. incursion into Cambodia from South Vietnam . The agency's reputation grew considerably by the mid-1970s, as decision makers increasingly recognized the value of its products. Agency analysts in 1972 concentrated on Lebanon , President Richard Nixon 's visit to China , the 1973 Chilean coup d'état ,
4002-540: The formation of Sri Lanka , and the prisoners of war being held in Southeast Asia. Subsequent challenges involved: détente ; the development of arms control agreements; the Paris peace talks (Vietnam); the Yom Kippur War ; and global energy concerns. Intense Congressional review during 1975–76 created turbulence within the Intelligence Community. The Murphy and Rockefeller Commission investigations of charges of intelligence abuse ultimately led to an Executive Order that modified many Intelligence Community functions. At
4071-441: The intelligence responsibilities remained unclear, the coordination was poor and the results fell short of national reliability and focus. As a result of this poor organization, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed the Joint Study Group in 1960 to find better ways for organizing the nation's military intelligence activities. Acting on the recommendations of the Joint Study Group, Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara advised
4140-406: The launch vehicle, debris from the third stage fell as far as 4,000 kilometers from the launch pad. Some analysts believe that a three-stage space booster variant of the Taepodong-1 could be capable of travelling as far as 5,900 kilometers with a very small payload. In 2003, the US Defense Intelligence Agency reported to the Congress: "We have no information to suggest Pyongyang intends to deploy
4209-414: The organization was created to balance CIA's espionage operations which primarily targeted Soviet KGB / GRU officers, but ignored and were dismissive of Third World targets in areas of potential military conflict. Although there were previous attempts to establish such a DoD level espionage organization, there was no authorization document by which it could be established. This changed when Gregory Davis,
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#17328698272614278-460: The renovation of Intelligence Community Campus-Bethesda in Maryland, which serves as the new location of the National Intelligence University as well as a facility for DIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Less known than its civilian equivalent or its cryptologic counterpart , DIA and its personnel have at times been portrayed in works of American popular culture . As with other U.S. foreign intelligence organizations,
4347-585: The same time, with U.S. involvement in Vietnam ending, defense intelligence faced a significant decline in resources. During this period, DIA conducted numerous studies on ways of improving its intelligence products. Despite these and other Community-wide efforts to improve intelligence support, the loss of resources during the 1970s limited the Community's ability to collect and produce timely intelligence and ultimately contributed to intelligence shortcomings in Iran , Afghanistan , and other strategic areas. Special DIA task forces were set up to monitor crises such as
4416-420: The second stage operated normally but the rocket's third stage failed to separate properly. North Korea maintains that the rocket successfully put its payload in orbit. On December 12, 2012, the Unha-3 Unit-2 rocket was launched at 00:49 UTC (7:49 EST). The U.S. Northern Command said that the first stage of the rocket fell into the Yellow Sea , while the debris of the second stage was assessed to have fallen into
4485-400: Was 1.8 metres (6 ft) in diameter, and weighed about 21 tonnes. The Unha's first stage consists of four clustered Nodong motors, which themselves are enlarged Scud motors. The second stage was initially thought to be based on the SS-N-6 , although it, too, is now believed to be based on Scud technology. The third and last stage might be identical to the Iranian Safir's second stage which
4554-470: Was crafted partly to force military officers to serve in a Joint Services assignment in order to qualify for flag rank—ensuring the future of case officers from each Service. The clandestine organization within DIA grew and flourished, and was cited by the SSCI for its intelligence achievements. Personnel selection and training were rigorous, and the case officers were notable for their advanced educations, area knowledge, and multilingual capabilities. The program
4623-421: Was created under DIA with the mission of conducting intelligence collection on perceived areas of conflict and against potential adversaries in developing countries. A critical objective was to create a Joint Services career path for case officers, since individual Services were inconsistent in their support of clandestine operations, and case officers were routinely sacrificed during reductions in force. Ultimately,
4692-421: Was partially gutted under President Bill Clinton as he foresaw no conflict which would justify its existence, but, it was resurrected under President George W. Bush . Designated a combat support agency under the Goldwater–Nichols Act, DIA moved to increase cooperation with the Unified & Specified Commands and to begin developing a body of joint intelligence doctrine. Intelligence support to U.S. allies in
4761-404: Was sometimes called the Paektusan 1 . On August 31, 1998, North Korea announced that they had used this rocket to launch their first satellite Kwangmyŏngsŏng-1 from a pad on the Musudan-ri peninsula. However, the satellite failed to achieve orbit; outside observers conjecture that the additional third stage either failed to fire or malfunctioned. This is contrary to official statements of
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