North Korea Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

antiterror13

Brigadier
and they achieved that totally by themselves without any help or tech support, including funding from anybody ... really great achievement in a way
the area becoming increasingly dangerous. Do you guys honestly think this "young great leader" gets help from China an/or Russia ?
 

navyreco

Senior Member
North Korea Test Launched a Ballistic Missile From its New Sinpo-Class Ballistic Missile Submarine
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North Korea officially announced (and released pictures showing) the first SLBM test (Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile) from its new Sinpo class SSB (Ballistic Missile Submarine). North Korea leader Kim Jong-Un personally oversaw the launch, according to state-run KCNA agency. The report detailed how the launcher submarine dived at the sound of a combat alarm to test fire the missile.
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Miragedriver

Brigadier
North Korea is 'two or three' years away from submarine-launched missile, says South

Whether building nuclear warheads, improving its missiles or learning how to fire them from under the sea, North Korea is steadily enhancing its military arsenal

(Daily Telegraph) North Korea is only “two or three” years away from possessing a submarine capable of launching nuclear missiles, according to the government in Seoul.

This assessment followed North Korea’s claim to have tested a “world-level strategic weapon” by firing a ballistic missile from a submarine.

The test, supposedly conducted in the presence of Kim Jong-un, the “Supreme Leader”, provided more proof of how North Korea is steadily upgrading its military arsenal.

The country is believed to have amassed up to 20 nuclear weapons – and
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. In addition, its experts have mastered how to build nuclear warheads instead of free-fall bombs while also extending the range of their ballistic missiles and, most recently, learning how to fire these weapons from submarines.

An official photograph purported to show Mr Kim observing a North Korean missile bursting from the surface of the Pacific.

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Kim Jong-un watches a ballistic missile launched from underwater near Sinpo (KCNA)

South Korea’s government described this test as “very serious and concerning”, adding: "We urge the North to immediately stop development of the SLBM [submarine-launched ballistic missile] that threatens the security of the Korean Peninsula and north-east Asia.”

A South Korean official told Agence France Press news agency that the North could have a submarine capable of firing missiles in “two to three years”. An operational deployment “could take place within four or five years,” added the official.

In theory, North Korea could position a submarine carrying nuclear missiles within striking range of the United States.

On paper, the country’s navy has 72 submarines. However, most are
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. Whether any could be modified to fire missiles is doubtful.

Mark Fitzpatrick, a non-proliferation specialist from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said the latest test probably involved a missile being launched from an underwater tube rather than a submarine. The aim may have been to establish whether the weapon could break the surface of the ocean, not complete a full flight.

“But I don’t mean to understate the significance of this event,” added Mr Fitzpatrick. “This is a very serious development because having the ability to launch missiles from submarines extends North Korea’s range and potentially gives them a second strike capability.”

If North Korea’s nuclear weapons could be concealed on submarines, this would remove the risk of its arsenal being destroyed by a pre-emptive strike.

Mr Fitzpatrick said the latest test showed how North Korea is steadily transforming itself from a country that once possessed only a handful of crude atomic bombs into a fully-fledged nuclear power. “All this underscores that, while we’ve been paying attention to Iran, North Korea’s capabilities have been growing significantly and worryingly,” he said.



Back to bottling my Grenache
 
Just as explosive as the SLBM test:

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Wed May 13, 2015 6:46pm EDT
North Korea executes defense chief with an anti-aircraft gun: South Korea agency
SEOUL | BY JU-MIN PARK AND JAMES PEARSON

North Korea executed its defense chief by putting him in front of an anti-aircraft gun at a firing range, Seoul's National Intelligence Service told lawmakers, which would be the latest in a series of high-level purges since Kim Jong Un took charge.

Hyon Yong Chol, who headed the isolated nuclear-capable country's military, was charged with treason, including disobeying Kim and falling asleep during an event at which North Korea's young leader was present, according to South Korean lawmakers briefed in a closed-door meeting with the spy agency on Wednesday.

His execution was watched by hundreds of people, according to NIS intelligence shared with lawmakers.

It was not clear how the NIS obtained the information and it is not possible to independently verify such reports from within secretive North Korea.

"The NIS official said it had been confirmed by multiple sources. It is still just intelligence, but he said they were confident," Shin Kyoung-min, a lawmaker and member of the opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy, who attended the briefing, told Reuters.

Experts on North Korea said there was no sign of instability in Pyongyang, but there could be if purges continued.

Kim had previously ordered the execution of 15 senior officials this year as punishment for challenging his authority, according to the NIS. In all, some 70 officials have been executed since Kim took over after his father's death in 2011, Yonhap news agency cited the NIS as saying.

"There is no clear or present danger to Kim Jong Un's leadership or regime stability, but if this continues to happen into next year, then we should seriously start to think about revising our scenarios on North Korea," said Michael Madden, an expert on the country's leadership who contributes to the 38 North think tank in Washington.

Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea specialist at Dongguk University in Seoul, said the regime could "reach its limit" if Kim's purges continued.

"But it's still too early to tell," said Koh.

The lawmakers said Hyon, 66, was executed at a firing range at the Kanggon Military Training Area, 14 miles north of Pyongyang, according to the NIS.

The U.S.-based Committee for Human Rights in North Korea said last month that, according to satellite images, the range was likely used for an execution by ZPU-4 anti-aircraft guns in October. The target was just 100 feet away from the weapons, which have a range of 8,000 meters, it said.



INSULAR, OPAQUE

Hyon was said to have shown disrespect to Kim by dozing off at a military event, the Seoul lawmakers said, citing the agency briefing. Hyon was also believed to have voiced complaints against Kim and had not followed his orders several times, according to the lawmakers.

He was arrested in late April and executed three days later without legal proceedings, the NIS told lawmakers.

"When the NIS is talking officially, they are relatively reliable. There are good reasons to believe it is true, but we cannot be 100 percent sure yet," said Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Kookmin University in Seoul.

Last month, Hyon traveled to Moscow, where he spoke at a security conference. He was reported by North Korean state media to have appeared at an event in late April - shortly before the NIS told lawmakers he was executed - an outward indication that all was normal.

North Korea is one of the most insular - and unpredictable - countries in the world and its power structure is highly opaque. The current leader is the third generation of the Kim family that has ruled with near-absolute power since the country was formed in 1948.

Kim Jong Un's father, Kim Jong Il, was appointed successor to the North Korean throne two decades before coming to power in 1994, during which time he was able to purge and alienate potential political challengers. Kim Jong Un, by contrast, has had few years to consolidate power.

In 2013, Kim Jong Un purged and executed his uncle, Jang Song Thaek, once considered the second most powerful man in Pyongyang's leadership, for factionalism and committing crimes damaging to the economy, along with a group of officials close to him.

Lankov said that the purges in Pyongyang did not necessarily point to instability.

"The common assumption is that it's bad for stability, but I'm not so sure," he said, adding it could be Kim consolidating his power base and removing people who had not sufficiently proved their loyalty.

Pyongyang's military leadership has been in a state of perpetual reshuffle since Kim Jong Un took power. He has changed his armed forces chief four times since coming to power, while his father, Kim Jong Il, who ruled the country for almost two decades, replaced his chief just three times.

The South Korean spy agency told lawmakers that Ma Won Chun, known as North Korea's chief architect of new infrastructure under Kim, was also purged or punished, the lawmakers said.

Ma had also once served as vice director of the secretive Finance and Accounting Department in the ruling Workers' Party and, until recently, was effectively the regime's money man.
 

bluewater2012

Junior Member
and they achieved that totally by themselves without any help or tech support, including funding from anybody ... really great achievement in a way
the area becoming increasingly dangerous. Do you guys honestly think this "young great leader" gets help from China an/or Russia ?
I seem to recall a few years ago there was this news an South Korean scientist that defected to North Korea to help with their nuclear program. Not sure how much help that assisted in its nuclear program since South Korea also has their own nuclear research programs.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
North Korea executes defense chief with an anti-aircraft gun: South Korea agency SEOUL | BY JU-MIN PARK AND JAMES PEARSON

North Korea executed its defense chief by putting him in front of an anti-aircraft gun at a firing range, Seoul's National Intelligence Service told lawmakers, which would be the latest in a series of high-level purges since Kim Jong Un took charge.

Hyon Yong Chol, who headed the isolated nuclear-capable country's military, was charged with treason ...falling asleep during an event at which North Korea's young leader was present.
That's a hellatious separation from service, layoff, or RIF program.

Kim is a bastardly, murderous, raging tyrant...very immature and drunk with total power. Worse than his father IMHO.

What goes around, comes around...and you reap what you sow. One day it is going to come back on him.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
That's par for the north Koreans. Ranking officials and official executions are via antiaircraft guns. If your a member of the north Korean government best you can hope for is not to be responsible for anything then they just send you, and three generations off to the labor camps.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Just as explosive as the SLBM test:

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Where's the evidence? This coming from South Korea's intelligence services who didn't know at first when did Kim Jong IL was dead. I wait for more evidence to show up. I remember last years news about how Kim Jong Un executed a prisoner or opposition party member by releasing hungry ravenous dogs at him only to find out that the news are not true.
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
Mystery threat to American warships is likely North Korean

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(The Week) In 2013, the U.S. Navy's Pacific Fleet hinted at a mysterious and "newly discovered threat" to American warships. Whatever it was, it was serious  —  and had America's admirals spooked.

We knew the threat was probably a missile, because the Navy's only mention of it was inside a contracting request for a new electronics countermeasures system designed for surface ships.

The Navy awarded a $65-million contract to the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory to develop the system within a "critically short" time frame.

Military & Aerospace Electronics, which first
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, suggested that the threat was a radar-guided anti-ship missile from a country or terrorist group in the Middle East. We
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a Chinese anti-ship missile.

It's neither. The threat is most likely from a country the United States is still technically at war with  —  North Korea.

More precisely, the threat is probably a North Korean Kh-35 anti-ship cruise missile.

The Navy's hurried development of a missile-defense system, begun just a year before the existence of the new North Korean cruise missile became public in the West, is a window into how the Pentagon is keeping tabs on the reclusive, hostile country  —  and how the U.S. responds to new dangers.

It's also a window into the world of open source intelligence, where ordinary people dig through publicly available information for nuggets of information governments don't necessarily want them to know.

The Pentagon didn't specify the exact nature of its new countermeasures system  —  officially designated AN/SLQ-59. But most likely, the device can jam the radars of anti-ship missiles. Almost every modern anti-ship missile has a small radar that guides the weapon and helps detect targets.

If you want to prevent an incoming missile from sinking your ship, the best way is to overwhelm it with electromagnetic interference. It's easier than shooting it down.

The Naval Research Laboratory and defense contractor ITT Excelis had developed a prototype of the electronic warfare system in 2012, and wanted help from industry to field the first system by 2014. The Pacific Fleet needed up to 24 of the systems.

So why does this have anything to do with a North Korean missile? Well, there are several reasons why.

The Kh-35 first attracted attention outside of Western military and intelligence circles in June 2014, when arms control expert Jeffrey Lewis
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in a North Korean propaganda video.

North Korean videos typically feature action-packed montages at their very end, sometimes with tantalizingly brief clues showing off new weapons and capabilities.

In the North Korean video below  —  shortly after the 49-minute mark  —  there is a brief, one-second clip of a surface ship firing a cruise missile.


But as far as the West knew when the video debuted, North Korea didn'thave any cruise missiles. Only a handful of countries make cruise missiles, and even fewer would sell them to North Korea.

The missile in the video resembles an anti-ship missile, similar to the American Harpoon and French Exocet. The missile's canister launcher is visible, and although it resembles the launcher of the Russian Kh-35 anti-ship missile, it isn't a perfect match.

A number of people  —  myself included  —  volunteered to comb the Internet for clues. A search of anti-ship missile launches on YouTube made it clear it wasn't a Western design. It wasn't Chinese, either.

Plus, the footage was unique. North Korea didn't steal some other video of a missile and fence it off as its own. Pyongyang may bluster and make threats, but it doesn't bluff regarding capabilities.

The missile was indeed a Kh-35. Made by Russian defense contractor Zvezda, the Kh-35 flies at Mach 0.8 at just 10 to 15 meters above the ocean surface. It has a range of 70 miles.

It packs a 320 pound shaped-charge warhead, making it extremely dangerous to destroyer-sized ships.

Now recall that the Navy's request for a countermeasures system came from the Pacific Fleet, meaning the threat was a country in the Asia-Pacific region. The only countries even potentially hostile to the U.S. in that region are China and North Korea.

The U.S. and China are nowhere near coming to blows  —  ruling out China as the source of an "urgent need."

North Korea, on the other hand, has attacked American and South Korean ships before, including the 1968 seizure of the spy ship USS Pueblo and the 2010 sinking of the South Korean corvette ROKS Cheonan.

Spontaneous acts of violence are part of North Korea's foreign policy. Defending ships of the U.S. Pacific Fleet from the Kh-35 would be an urgent priority indeed.

Exactly how and why North Korea got the Kh-35 is a good question. North Korea and Russia have become increasingly close during the Kim Jong Un era, and Pyongyang could have bought the missiles from Moscow.

Another possibility is Myanmar, which has openly purchased the Kh-35 from Russia, and has bought weapons from Pyongyang. North Korean technical advisers have assisted Myanmar's ballistic missile program  —  and
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its nuclear weapons program.

It's possible that Pyongyang received anti-ship missiles in return for weapons … or nuclear know-how.

The Kh-35 missile connection isn't definitive. Nobody knows for sure how North Korea got its missiles, and it's even possible  —  albeit remotely  —  that they might be a totally new design.

With North Korea, it's hard to rule out anything. But the announcement of the threat, clues about the threat and the sudden appearance of the Kh-35 is an awfully big coincidence.

We'll probably never know how U.S. intelligence found out about North Korea's Kh-35. Still, thanks to open source analysis, we civilians have a pretty good idea they're there  —  and where they might have come from.



Back to bottling my Grenache
 
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