North Korea Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

SinoSoldier

Colonel
The suspected miniaturized North Korean nuclear device:

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The device, if the model is accurate, looks like an implosion-based device. Assuming that the entire main charge is what was shown, then it is very unlikely that the device was a thermonuclear one, as North Korea has claimed. There is no sign of a secondary fusion charge.

Can somebody ID the missile in the background? It looks like the KN-08, which was dropped in favor of the KN-14.
 

SouthernSky

Junior Member
The trend of playing down North Korea's advances in the field of WMD continues. I'm not sure this can wash for much longer.

A defiant and unpredictable regime in Pyongyang has made its now familiar move once again by conducting another nuclear test. While North Korea has engaged in four other nuclear tests since 2006, its latest one on September 9 was markedly different in several respects. Although it will take days or weeks to verify the nature and actual impact of North Korea’s nuclear detonation, early seismic data suggest that the latest test’s magnitude of 5.3 appears to be higher than the fourth test in January this year. More alarmingly, the nuclear explosion had the yield of 10 kilotons, in comparison to 6 kilotons last time. Pyongyang also claimed that it conducted a “nuclear warhead explosion” test, raising concerns about its rapid progress with the miniaturization and standardization of nuclear warheads.

North Korea’s fifth nuclear test came on the heels of repeated missile tests that featured more diverse (e.g., submarine-launched ballistic missiles, Rodong medium-range missiles) and more capable delivery means. Given that the latest nuclear test took place only eight months after the last one — while previous tests occurred roughly three years apart — it is hard to escape an overall sense of a rapid acceleration of nuclear and missile development in the North and greater escalation of tensions with its neighbors and the United States. Irrespective of the actual destructive power and future potential of Pyongyang’s nuclear program, the fact remains that North Korea is the only country that has withdrawn from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and conducted nuclear tests in the 21st century.

It is, however, important not to overestimate Pyongyang’s WMD capabilities, despite its tendency to exaggerate its progress in nuclear and missile development. Analysts still believe that North Korea has not mastered the technologies needed to place a nuclear warhead onto a missile, which was reaffirmed by South Korea’s National Intelligence Service briefing to the National Assembly after the latest nuclear test. In addition, North Korea has not shown the ability to successfully launch an intercontinental ballistic missile, not to mention demonstrating the survivability of nuclear warheads during reentry into the atmosphere.

While brutal and eccentric, the regime is not suicidal either. In fact, a primary motivation of North Korea’s pursuit of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) has been tied to its greater goal of ensuring the survival of the regime. It may be no coincidence that the nuclear detonation came in the wake of South Korea’s recent decision to deploy a U.S. missile defense system, reports of a high-level North Korean defection to Seoul, and broad condemnation of its WMD provocation at the G20, ASEAN, and East Asia summits. From Pyongyang’s perspective, the nuclear test, which appears intentionally timed for 9 am, September 9, its National Day, may serve as a means to boost the eroding legitimacy of the regime.

More broadly, North Korea’s rapid progress in WMD development will rekindle the decade-long debate on how to effectively curb its nuclear aspirations. Most scholars of international relations have maintained that Pyongyang is unlikely to actually use its nuclear weapons, since its nuclear capability serves mainly as a deterrent or bargaining chip. The presence of the U.S. nuclear umbrella in East Asia means that any North Korean nuclear attack on South Korea or Japan will trigger a far more devastating nuclear counterattack on Pyongyang. Preemptive strikes by the United States would have the disturbing potential to escalate into a major military conflict along the world’s most heavily militarized border and to incur mass casualties and tremendous economic costs.

A more likely scenario, following the cascade of global condemnations, is a new round of sanctions from the UN Security Council and the Obama administration. Remaining, however, is the more vexing long-term question of what kind of diplomatic negotiations, if any, to pursue vis-à-vis Pyongyang. The latest nuclear test, North Korea’s fourth during the Obama presidency, shows that the current policy of “strategic patience” aimed at North Korea’s isolation has not been successful in solving the nuclear conundrum. This is not to suggest that more hardline diplomatic pressure would necessarily work better. The George W. Bush administration’s North Korean policy was equally ineffective and had the added unintended consequences of strained alliance ties and fractured regional cooperation.

The United States does not face the difficult task of responding to North Korea’s nuclear provocation alone. More than any country, the latest nuclear test will put China in a diplomatic bind. On the one hand, Beijing not only strongly condemned its communist ally but also summoned the North Korean ambassador to express its concerns. At the same time, however, the Chinese government reiterated its previous position in a People’s Daily article, likely targeted at North Korea and the United States, that “China strongly urged relevant parties to focus on the big picture, watch their words and actions, and avoid mutual confrontation,” while imploring “relevant parties to make joint efforts to uphold peace and stability.”

China’s reluctance to rein in North Korea stems from its larger strategic quandary. While alarmed about Pyongyang’s nuclear provocations, Beijing is more concerned about the negative ripple effects of the collapse of the Kim regime, such as refugee flows, regional instability and the permanent loss of a strategic buffer state. Even in South Korea, the public is torn between growing concerns about North Korea’s nuclear gambit and diminishing hopes for eventual national reunification. This complex regional reality calls for a new approach that pays greater attention to regional understandings of the North Korean challenge.

In this vein, the so-called Perry Process, led by then U.S. North Korean special envoy William Perry during the Clinton administration, is worth revisiting. In the wake of North Korea’s ballistic missile test and suspected nuclear activities in 1998, the U.S. government launched a comprehensive process of regional consultation and coordination with South Korea and Japan, while engaging Pyongyang. Along with the 2000 U.S.-DPRK Joint Communiqué pledging political reconciliation and a North Korean moratorium on missile tests, the Perry Process resulted in better alliance coordination and improved regional cooperation.

To be sure, an engagement policy toward Pyongyang will be far more difficult in 2016 as the election year rhetoric against foreign threats will be ratcheted up and North Korea now has a small but increasing nuclear arsenal. But it should be equally clear by now that the mere slapping of sanctions and louder condemnation against Pyongyang are unlikely to slow down North Korea’s WMD pursuit. In the face of déjà vu on the Korean Peninsula, comprehensive engagement and greater regional coordination on both the nuclear and non-nuclear dimensions may be a meaningful first step in resolving the decade-long nuclear quagmire in East Asia.

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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
The trend of playing down North Korea's advances in the field of WMD continues. I'm not sure this can wash for much longer.



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Since Carter, all of the efforts to "enagage" with North Korea and somehow "talk them out of" getting Nukes and sending them food and monies have resulted only in these mad leaders using whatever resource was sent or offered...not for their people...but for furthering and speeding up their nuclear development.

And now they have them and are building more as we speak and challenging the entire region...including either ignoring or getting sassy with the PRC.

Canceling the Airborne Laser 747s was a mistake IMHO. We should have built 10-12 of them and had a couple within 500 km, at altitude, at all times...and then used them to cause "malfunctions" of every ballistic missile test the N Koreans tried to launch years ago.

Now...its really too late for that type of thing.

This guy is going to set one of those things off one day and things over there are going to go "you know where in a hand basket."
 
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Canceling the Airborne Laser 747s was a mistake IMHO. We should have built 10-12 of them and had a couple within 500 km, at altitude, at all times...and then used them to cause "malfunctions" of every ballistic missile test the N Koreans tried to launch years ago.
Yes always better have all :) in fact impossible ofc... but in full terrosrism war with 150000 troops in Irak, Afghanistan which costed 150 billions year ! you can' t all do
 

Gloire_bb

Captain
Registered Member
Since Carter, all of the efforts to "enagage" with North Korea and somehow "talk them out of" getting Nukes and sending them food and monies have resulted only in these mad leaders using whatever resource was sent or offered...not for their people...but for furthering and speeding up their nuclear development.
Because there was only one modern autocracy, which chose to throw away nuclear program(not even weapons) on their own.
 

SouthernSky

Junior Member
A new submarine for North Korea?

Summary

Commercial satellite imagery strongly suggests that a naval construction program is underway at North Korea’s Sinpo South Shipyard, possibly to build a new submarine. While there is no direct evidence that the program is for a boat to carry the ballistic missile currently under development, the presence of an approximately 10-meter-in-diameter circular component outside the facility’s recently renovated fabrication hall may be intended as a construction-jig
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or as a component for the pressure hull of a new submarine. However, it is also possible the ring may be related to another construction project. If this activity is indeed to build a new submarine, it would appear to be larger than North Korea’s GORAE-class experimental ballistic missile submarine (SSBA), which has a beam of approximately 7 meters.
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Laying the Groundwork for a New Program

While North Korea has built submarines at a number of locations, the vast majority of which have been built at the Sinpo South Shipyard.
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The shipyard is also the headquarters of the Maritime Research Institute of the Academy of National Defense Science responsible for research and development of maritime technology, naval vessels and submarines, and naval related armaments and missiles.
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North Korea’s GORAE-class submarine was built and is ported here.

Shortly after the launch of this submarine, North Korea began a revitalization program of the machine, fabrication and construction facilities at the shipyard. Most significantly, beginning in 2014, the North focused on renovating the main construction and adjacent fabrication halls that had been abandoned and roofless since about 2010.
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The fabrication building was externally complete by November 2014 and the construction hall by October 2015. These facilities provide North Korea with the capability to build new submarines much larger than the current GORAE-class or ROMEO-class.
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Key Signatures of Submarine Construction

The appearance and movement of raw steel, fabricated sub-components and finished components around the facilities construction and fabrication halls and parts storage yards are indicators of naval construction. Accompanying these signatures are the movement of vehicles and cranes around the same buildings and storage yards. Imagery from January to September 2016 indicates the following activities around these halls:

  • Movement of numerous large and small components within the two parts storage yards adjacent to the fabrication and construction halls;
  • The repositioning of both rail-mounted tower and gantry cranes supporting these parts storage yards
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    ;
  • The occasional presence of large groups of workers between the two halls and around the parts storage yards;
  • The occasional presence of heavy equipment transporters; and
  • The repositioning of the large access doors of both halls.
Moreover, imagery from September 24 shows the presence of a 10-meter-in-diameter circular component that may be intended for the construction of a new submarine—either as a construction jig or component of a pressure hull. This component is on a large rail-mounted transfer table outside the fabrication building. Components fabricated here would typically be moved out to the parts yard on a transfer table. Here, a rail-mounted overhead gantry crane would move them from the fabrication building’s transfer table to the construction hall’s transfer table. They would then be moved into the construction hall for assembly.

Figure 1. Workers and cranes seen near the construction and fabrication halls in January.

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Figure 2. Regular repositioning of cranes supporting the parts storage yards.




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Figure 3. Heavy equipment transporters appear.

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Continued next page.
 
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