Why
the World Isn’t Freaking Out About Iran’s Plasma-Powered Spy Sat
Next
Wednesday, Iran will try to launch an experimental reconnaissance
satellite into orbit — just as international negotiators gather in
Baghdad for talks about Tehran’s nuclear program. The timing
couldn’t be more inflammatory, and rogue state satellite
launches are usually considered to be missile tests in drag. So why
isn’t the world throwing itself into a tizzy about the mission?
After
all, when North Korea last month tried (and utterly
failed)
to get a satellite past the sky, the U.N. Security Council promptly
condemned the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) for
the launch. President Obama called it a “provocative action.”
House Republicans even called for the Pentagon to bring
back from the scrapyard a flying laser cannon to
zap any future North Korean rockets. But for this Iranian launch, the
latest in a series of space missions going back to 2005? So far,
crickets.
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