North Korea has announced plans to launch an observational satellite this month, two United Nations agencies said Tuesday.
The international community has dismissed similar claims in the past as smokescreens for North Korean tests of ballistic-missile technology, which the country is banned from developing under U.N. regulations.
Two specialized U.N. agencies — the International Telecommunication Union and the International Maritime Organization — told NBC News by email Tuesday that they had been notified by North Korea of an upcoming launch.
The U.S. State Department called on the U.N. Security Council to impose new sanctions on North Korea, which earlier this month claimed it had tested a hydrogen bomb.
"We're not asking for some sort of preemptive resolution, here, to a launch that hasn't occurred. But the announcement of it, itself, is just all the more indication that the international community needs to get behind tougher action against them," State Department spokesman John Kirby said.
Pyongyang said the latest satellite in the "Kwangmyongsong" program was set to be fired into orbit between February 8 and 25, according to the IMO.
However, the ITU said the information provided by North Korea was incomplete and that it would be asking for the missing information before it formally published the country's notification.
Two years ago, North Korea failed to supply the ITU with the necessary information for what it said was another planned satellite launch, according to the agency. This meant the object could not be registered in the international satellite database known as the Master International Frequency Register.
Pyongyang last conducted it a long-range rocket test in December 2012. It said that launch was an observational satellite, but the U.S., U.N. and others condemned it as an illicit attempt to develop ballistic missiles.