Haneyrm and HVAC68 are exactly right. Large telephone equipment rooms are very little different than computer rooms: high sensible loads and a critical need to maintain 50% relative humidity. Unless a coil or A/C device is specifically designed for high-sensible cooling, though, its Sensible Heat Ratio will be about 65%. That means the A/C will only cool a sensible load to 65% of its rated capacity. The other 35% is latent cooling (moisture removal/dehumidifying).
For instance, if the unit is sized for total load - 5.9KW - the reality is that only 0.65 x 5.9KW = 3.8KW is available to cool your "radio equipment" load. If you size the unit according to sensible load, the total unit capacity will be something like 5.9KW/0.65 = 9.1KW. Typically, this capacity has to be balanced with available sizes, so you may end up with a 3 ton unit (10.6KW) before it's all said and done.
In typical applications, an oversized unit will result in runaway humidity, as the unit constantly short-cycles due to the load/capacity imbalance, and the resulting failure of the coil to ever dehumidify. This doesn't happen if you've sized the unit to match the sensible load. However, you are wasting a huge amount of energy and equipment expense.
If you size the unit just for total capacity - without regard to the sensible load - it will be undersized in sensible capacity. The result will be that the unit will almost always dehumidify, as it fails to ever adequately cool. The result will be a hot and super-dry environment: not ideal for electronic equipment.
That is why there is an entire A/C unit market devoted to computer room type cooling.
All that being said, though, your room seems quite small (5.9KW=1.68 tons), and all of these issues are tempered somewhat by that small size. Moreover, the additional loads and moisture leakage contribute to "tempering" the load's sensible heat ratio. Below 2-3 tons, I have had reasonable success with Mitsubishi ductless split systems in small telco/network closets.
Follow the advice by the other posters about accounting for the other loads - they are real.