WAR North Korea Main Thread - All things Korea May 27th - June 2nd

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Vincent Lee‏Verified account @Rover829 21m21 minutes ago

Yonhap: #SouthKorea defense ministry says notified President Moon's chief security adviser about 4 extra #THAAD launchers on May 26



Vincent Lee‏Verified account @Rover829 39m39 minutes ago

Reuters: #China state councilor Yang: insist on peaceful resolution to #NorthKorea issue
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
hmmm, do they have partisan holdout, saboteurs in their gov too? Seems like maybe, or it could be the other way around. The new gov people could be troublemakers. :confused: :hmm: :shr:

Vincent Lee‏Verified account @Rover829 36m36 minutes ago

Yonhap: #SouthKorea presidential office says defense ministry didn't tell Moon's top security aide about extra #THAAD launchers on May 26


Vincent Lee‏Verified account @Rover829 33m33 minutes ago

#SouthKorea presidential office, de facto transition committee calling out defense ministry's accounts of extra #THAAD launchers as not true
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use and discussion
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2017/05/30/70/0401000000AEN20170530009000315F.html

S. Korea, Canada agree to work together to denuclearize N. Korea

2017/05/30 17:18


SEOUL, May 30 (Yonhap) -- Senior diplomats of South Korea and Canada agreed Tuesday to work together to denuclearize North Korea, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs here said.

North Korea's nuclear development, inter-Korean affairs and bilateral collaboration on economic cooperation were also discussed in the talks between Vice Foreign Minister Lim Sung-nam and Canadian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Ian Shugart held earlier in the day, according to the ministry.

Lim called for Canada's continued and vibrant support in Seoul's efforts to denuclearize North Korea through "all possible tools" including sanctions and dialogue, in response to which the Canadian diplomat reaffirmed his country's steadfast cooperation, the ministry said.

The two sides also agreed to further expand their economic relations under their free trade agreement in 2014, it also said.

"Deputy Minister Shugart said he expected Canada-Korea exchanges to become more active on the opportunity of Seoul's hosting of the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics and both sides agreed to work together for the successful hosting of the event," the ministry said.

pbr@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use and discussion
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2017/05/30/58/0401000000AEN20170530006600315F.html

N. Korea moves to send students to study in Russia, China: watcher

2017/05/30 14:55


SEOUL, May 30 (Yonhap) -- A North Korean university is moving briskly to send its students abroad to gain advanced knowledge in science, technology, economics and other fields, a North Korea watcher said Tuesday, citing a source in Pyongyang.

Ahn Chan-il, the head of the Seoul-based World North Korea Research Center, said that Pyongyang University of Science and Technology (PUST), North Korea's only privately funded university, is hastening its efforts to dispatch its students to study in Russia and China, among others.

Citing a PUST official, Ahn told Yonhap News Agency that the Pyongyang university's co-president, Park Sang-ik, recently visited leading science and technology universities in Russia and other countries in a bid to help his students study there.

"If North Korea is successful with its sixth nuclear test and ICBM launches, leader Kim Jong-un may need to change the path of his country. If so, the North will be in need of more economic experts as well as scientists and engineers," the school official was quoted as telling Ahn.

"China sent its talented students to the United States, Britain and other Western countries after declaring an open door policy in 1978. Lacking such confidence, North Korea plans to send its students to Russia and China to push for limited economic reform," the official said.

In this regard, Ahn said North Korea may seek economic reform within the boundaries of socialism, as its remaining goal is to build up its economy after celebrating its repeated nuclear and missile tests.


PUST was established jointly by South Korea's Northeast Asia Foundation for Education & Culture and North Korea's education ministry in 2010. The school is co-headed by Park, appointed by the North, and a Korean-American scholar appointed by the South.

ycm@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

Lilbitsnana

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Steve Herman‏Verified account @W7VOA 2m2 minutes ago

Steve Herman Retweeted Wendy Howard

Looks like it.

Steve Herman added,
Wendy Howard @WendyAtTheBay
Did I just see the Vandenberg missile launch?


Steve Herman‏Verified account @W7VOA 4m4 minutes ago

US test-fires interceptor from California base in attempt to destroy simulated ICBM.
 

Lilbitsnana

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The Intel Crab Retweeted
Jonathan McDowell‏Verified account @planet4589 3m3 minutes ago

US missile defense test is underway. An @OrbitalATK target missile (probably a Minotaur 2?) has been launched from Kwajalein Atoll ...


The Intel Crab‏ @IntelCrab 2m2 minutes ago

The Intel Crab Retweeted NBC Nightly News

Test footage: https://twitter.com/NBCNightlyNews/status/869642514277343233

The Intel Crab added,
0:37
NBC Nightly NewsVerified account @NBCNightlyNews
JUST IN: US military launches missile in test that is designed to intercept an incoming missile over the Pacific.

The Intel Crab Retweeted
RT America‏Verified account @RT_America 6m6 minutes ago
Replying to @RT_America

Interceptor test-fired from Vandenberg Air Force Base in CA, targeted at mock missile fired from Marshall Islands https://on.rt.com/8d3p


The Intel Crab‏ @IntelCrab 5m5 minutes ago

The #Pentagon has officially tested her ICBM interceptor, sources tell me.
 

Warm Wisconsin

Easy as 3.141592653589..
JUST IN: U.S. interceptor missile successfully intercepts test ICBM fired from the Marshall Islands, Pentagon says. abcn.ws/2sjqJKp
13 minutes ago · Twitter
 

Vegas321

Live free and survive
JUST IN: U.S. interceptor missile successfully intercepts test ICBM fired from the Marshall Islands, Pentagon says. abcn.ws/2sjqJKp
13 minutes ago · Twitter

What's the odd's that the Norks fire another SCUD in the next few hours...

If SK President Moon wants the US out of SK, then we should leave. Also tell him, we will send no more military aid. And if the US feels the Norks cross the line, we will strike. SK will be on their own. Have the Chicoms and Canada come to their rescue.
 

Lilbitsnana

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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2017/05/31/0200000000AEN20170531000400315.html

Korean-American congressional candidate calls for Trump to come up with new approach to N. Korea

2017/05/31 05:02


LOS ANGELES, May 30 (Yonhap) -- A Los Angeles city planning commissioner aspiring to become the first Korean-American member of the House of Representatives in more than 18 years called Tuesday for President Donald Trump to adopt a new approach to the growing problem of North Korea.

"North Korea has conducted two underground nuclear tests and fired off dozens of ballistic missiles since 2016 in defiance of UN and international sanctions," said Robert Ahn, one of the two congressional candidates in the runoff election in California's 34th district.

"The response from the Trump administration has been to simply become more aggressive towards North Korea without a real long-term plan," he said, urging Trump to rethink his North Korea policy and move away from the saber-rattling and get back to building coalition among the regional players, including China, Japan and South Korea.

Ahn came in second in April's by-election with 22.25 percent of the vote after California Assemblyman Jimmy Gomez's 25.36 percent. The two advanced to the runoff vote set for June 6. The election was set up after Xavier Becerra left Congress to become California's attorney general.

Should Ahn win the election, he would be the first Korean-American to serve in the House since Jay Kim served in the House from 1993 to 1999. Ahn was born in Los Angeles and graduated from the University of Southern California Law School. He has served as LA city planning commissioner since 2013.

Robert Ahn Robert Ahn

jschang@yna.co.kr

(END)
 

Oreally

Right from the start
a coalition to do what exactly? that hasn't already been done, except maybe china shutting down the bridges over the yalu.
 

Vegas321

Live free and survive
a coalition to do what exactly? that hasn't already been done, except maybe china shutting down the bridges over the yalu.

They are only going to once again, chase the Norks tail. Same goes for Iran. These people never get it. Both NK and Iran will NEVER back down! The Norks are far more dangerous with their military antics, and will not back down to a real fight. The Mullahs in Iran are more of the chess player kind. They like to play behind your back and stab you there, if they got the chance to pounce.
 

hiwall

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The only answer is going to be war. Plain and simple. This year or next year, who knows, but war it will be.
 

Vegas321

Live free and survive
The only answer is going to be war. Plain and simple. This year or next year, who knows, but war it will be.

Starting to know what it's like for Israel, with their buds in Iran, who threatens to wipe them out. The Norks are doing the same too everyone! We know the Norks have the nuke. We can't let them test a hydrogen bomb to enable them to miniaturize a nuke on a ICBM. And we can't let them use a ICBM to target military bases in the Pacific, or the US Mainland.
 

L.A.B.

Goodness before greatness.
Perhaps the little turdburgler of the Norks, will get a bullet into the back of his head, by one of his generals, rather than see his nation turned into...

OldARcher

OldArcher, have you seen "his generals" in videos with him 'clapping their hands and jumping up and down like school girls.'?
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It is a conundrum. If we attack NK to protect our safety and interests, and those of our allies, South Korea is going to be mostly wiped out as a nation, either by the Norks with artillery or worse if sunshine or non-conventionals gets tossed around. China and Russia are real wild cards. Dangerous ones. Who knows what's in that Pandora's Box.

Otherwise, we try to keep NK boxed up, which is like herding rabid cats. NK is going to get out. And its bad when it does. If we had taken out Hitler before he started the European theater of WWII, history would have been much different. Hitler wasn't threatening to take out another country if attacked though. Not like this NK beast is doing now.

If we don't take out NK now, who knows what hell on earth he will let loose either himself, through Iran, or through nuclear blackmail.

I'm glad the decision isn't mine to make. May God guide the hand of those who do.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/north-korean-h-bomb/

A North Korean H-bomb

30 May 2017|Paul Bracken

A hydrogen bomb fits North Korean nuclear strategy so perfectly that it’s likely to be a top priority program. Most discussion of North Korea’s nuclear effort focuses on matters of “can and when”. Can they miniaturise a nuclear weapon? Can they marry it to a missile? Can they build an ICBM that will reach the United States?

Those are obviously important questions. But they don’t cover another fundamental question. What difference would it make if North Korea was to get a hydrogen bomb?

A hydrogen (fusion) bomb is a lot more powerful than a fission weapon of the type the DPRK has tested to date. It’s more complicated to make, too. That complexity adds to the status of the achievement. An H-bomb is a significant technological accomplishment. It took the United States seven years after Hiroshima to achieve it, and it took the efforts of the country’s top scientists, including Edward Teller, Stan Ulam and John von Neumann. That gave it a star quality of national achievement.

It was also a reason China went all out to get an H-bomb too. It took them only three years following their first nuclear test in 1964 to get one. Given that the Soviets had cut them off from technology know-how years before, and the deterioration of Chinese science and technology during the Maoist era, it was an extraordinary achievement with significant domestic and international consequences. Think of how careful and risk averse that made the United States in Vietnam. Big escalation strategies were taken off the table.

What difference would a North Korean H-bomb make? My sense is that it would make a big domestic difference in North Korea, which would become the only country not in the official nuclear club of the NPT ‘haves’ and the Permanent 5 of the United Nations with a hydrogen bomb. It’d be quite an achievement for a small destitute country, and would certainly be touted at home as a sign of national accomplishment. It would provide some badly needed solidification for the regime.

An H-bomb would have big impacts on foreign policy as well. Strategies aimed at North Korea involving sanctions, blockades, financial warfare or cyber-attacks might look quite different with several hydrogen bombs in the mix. When the consequences of an eruption of violence become so stark, they also become crystal clear. With 20–30 fission bombs and a handful of hydrogen bombs, it becomes impossible not to ask the question as to where things might go in the event of escalation. What if sanctions drive North Korea into famine, or if financial attacks bankrupt the elite? What happens next? To a risk averse China, and even more cautious neighbours, bellicose demands by Washington to ’confront evil in Pyongyang’ will look even more dangerous than they do now.

Today North Korea has a nuclear force that’s objectively more powerful than China had in the 1960s. Add an H-bomb to its arsenal and the North’s potential for devastating attacks becomes unambiguous. No one is going to go too far to pressure this regime. Any plan to attack it with conventional precision strikes will always generate the question, ’What if we miss some of the nuclear missiles?’. Now add to that ‘What if we miss one of the H-bombs?’.

An H-bomb will have an especially significant impact on the North’s command and control. They’re now moving to a system of mobile launchers, on land-based missile carriers and submarines. Command and control of a mobile nuclear force is quite complicated. It requires marrying warheads to launchers, assurance that the ‘go’ order gets through, and backup command centres in case the original ones are destroyed. It also means pre-delegated launch authority disseminated in case the high command is destroyed.

There are several problems here. One is the ‘coup risk’, something we know has been a consuming issue for the Kim family for generations. There’s extreme compartmentation and surveillance to prevent it. A rogue group of North Korean officers that gets physical control of a hydrogen bomb would possess the premier symbol of national power. In the unpredictable circumstances of internal disorder it cannot be ruled out that this device might actually be used—or detonated to prevent it from falling into wrong hands.

That leads to a second command and control problem. The lack of experience in handling nuclear arms means that moving them around the country on mobile launchers could produce an accidental firing. It could be an accidental launch at Japan. Or, more likely, it could result in an accident on North Korean soil. Here’s where an H-bomb matters. A ground burst H-bomb would produce far more radioactive fallout than a small, fission bomb. A hydrogen bomb would rain fallout on Japan, South Korea, and, days later, the United States.

With its enormous killing radius, an H-bomb turns what is today a dangerous nuclear threat from North Korea into the powder keg of Northeast Asia. The image of the Balkans in the early 1900s was of a great game of grand strategy played by the big powers. That was replaced by one where the whole region became a keg of TNT, one with convoluted strategy risks that could spark the eruption. The game had changed, fundamentally, as diplomats saw in 1914.

Author
Paul Bracken is professor of Management and Political Science at Yale University. He is the author of The Second Nuclear Age, Strategy, Danger, and the New Power Politics (Macmillan). Image courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-missiles-usa-china-idUSKBN18Q2E4

World News | Tue May 30, 2017 | 3:59pm EDT

U.S., China debating when U.N. should act on North Korea: Haley

By Michelle Nichols | UNITED NATIONS

The United States and China are negotiating when they should push for further United Nations Security Council action on North Korea and could reach a decision this week, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Tuesday.

Haley characterized the discussions between Washington and Beijing as "at what point ... do we say 'OK, now it's time for a resolution?'"

U.N. diplomats, speaking on condition of anonymity, have said it appeared China was still only prepared to act if North Korea conducted a long-range missile launch or a nuclear test and that Beijing does not view the dozens of ballistic missile launches in the past year as warranting further U.N. sanctions.

"(The Chinese) have the lay of the land and so we're going to keep the pressure on China, but we're going to continue to work with them in any way that they think is best, and I think that we'll decide this week on what that looks like," Haley told reporters.

The Security Council first imposed sanctions on Pyongyang in 2006 over its ballistic missile and nuclear programs and has ratcheted up the measures in response to five nuclear tests and two long-range missile launches. North Korea is threatening a sixth nuclear test.

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told the U.N. Security Council on April 28 that the 15-member body needed to act before North Korea does. Just hours after the meeting, chaired by Tillerson, Pyongyang launched yet another ballistic missile.

Within days the United States proposed to China that the Security Council strengthen sanctions on North Korea over its repeated ballistic missile launches. Traditionally, the United States and China have negotiated new sanctions before involving the other 13 council members.

Since then Pyongyang has launched several more ballistic missiles, including a short-range ballistic missile on Monday that landed in the sea off its east coast.

"Nothing is changing North Korea's actions," said Haley, adding that it was time to say: "OK, what are we going to do if this is going to happen every other day? How should we respond in a way that we actually stop these things or slow it down?"

Haley said the United States believes "China is doing back-channel networking with North Korea in a way that's getting them to try and stop the nuclear testing. So we believe that they are being productive."

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by James Dalgleish)
 

Housecarl

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For links see article source.....
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http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2017...ssiles-on-us-china-does-too-lets-wake-up.html

North Korea wants to rain missiles on the US -- China does, too. Let's wake up

By Harry J. Kazianis
Published May 30, 2017
Fox News

Video

North Korea’s latest missile launch, while certainly not the most sophisticated of its recent firings, sends an ominous message: Pyongyang will not be denied the ability to hit any target it desires, including U.S. bases and eventually the homeland. But is Kim Jong Un simply copying the well-worn playbook of its ally, the People’s Republic of China (PRC)?

The evidence is quite telling. While North Korea’s missile arsenal --*now at over 1,000 short, medium and long-range weapons -- is creating nothing short of a slow-moving Cuban Missile Crisis in Northeast Asia, China has also been working to perfect its own missile technology on a much more massive scale, and per some experts, represents the gravest threat to the U.S. military today.

Indeed, since the days of the early Cold War, Beijing has been developing missile platforms to deter the West. China’s efforts picked up rapid speed after the thawing of relations with the United States in the 1970s, allowing for the acquisition of dual-use technologies to aid their efforts. Beijing developed short, medium, and long-range missiles, pairing them with miniaturized nuclear warheads to deter Moscow, at the time its most dangerous adversary.

But as the Cold War ended, China began to craft new missile platforms to take on what it considered its next challenge: the United States. Beijing watched with horror as Washington crushed what was then considered one of the more powerful militaries of the world in Iraq in near lightening fashion in 1991. Chinese leaders would correctly conclude that if war between America and China occurred anytime soon they would lose, and lose royally.

Events closer to home would see China’s worst nightmare almost come true. The 1995-1996 Taiwan Strait Crisis nearly brought Beijing and Washington to blows. The blows, however, would have been all American, as China’s military would soon discover they could not even find American aircraft carriers operating close to their shores, let alone attack them.

The PRC was determined not to suffer that fate. Chinese leaders, even today, know they can’t match America in all aspects of modern warfare. However, missiles give them an asymmetric advantage as they are cheap to build and hard to defend against.

For the last twenty years, Beijing has been on a crash course to ensure it has not only the ability to strike carriers operating in the Pacific with showers of missiles, but also any military bases near China, or any U.S. allies such as Japan or Taiwan for that matter. Beijing can now call upon thousands of ballistic, cruise and in the future, hypersonic missiles to strike across large swaths of Asia. And of most concern, a “carrier-killer” missile that could target and sink naval vessels at ranges as far as 2,500 miles.

North Korea, it seems, is following a slower but similar strategy. Guided by Chinese direct and indirect assistance, the Kim regime is now pursuing missiles of all different ranges, sizes and capabilities—even developing what could end up becoming its very own carrier-killer.

Just like China, North Korea knows it can’t match America’s military might head-on. So instead, Pyongyang is betting the sheer size and scale of its missile arsenal will keep President Trump at bay—and Kim Jong Un in power.

This leaves the United States in a bind as it faces not one, but two nations armed with quickly growing missiles arsenals in a part of the world where Washington’s interests are vital. Missile defenses systems could certainly be deployed across Northeast Asia and the wider Asia-Pacific but are expensive, so expensive that defending against every single missile threat is impossible.

There does seem a simple solution: for Washington to deploy land-based missiles, just like China and North Korea. However, thanks to the Intermediate-Range Forces Treaty (INF) signed by the U.S. and Russia towards the end of the Cold War, Washington is prohibited from developing missiles with ranges of 310-3420 miles, the exact range or weapons America needs.

So how should America respond? With no restriction on sea-based weapons, America could expand dramatically the size of its submarine fleet that can carry cruise missiles to ensure Washington could respond dramatically to any Chinese or North Korean threat. But building more subs takes years, and America and its allies are facing this threat now.

America could also withdraw from the INF treaty, perhaps not upsetting Russia as it has been caught violating it anyway. But unfortunately, it would still take years for America to build new missile platforms and would open the door for Russia to quickly deploy new systems to Europe, potentially gaining a crucial military advantage over NATO.

For the moment, China and now North Korea might have one crucial military advantage over America. One that nations like Iran and others will be all too eager to replicate.

Harry J. Kazianis (@grecianformula) is director of defense studies at the Center for the National Interest, founded by former President Richard M. Nixon. Click here, for more on Mr. Kazianis.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-missiles-kim-idUSKBN18P23J

World News | Tue May 30, 2017 | 11:22am EDT

North Korea warns of 'bigger gift package' for U.S. after latest test

By Ju-min Park and Jack Kim | SEOUL

Image Gallery

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervised the test of a new ballistic missile controlled by a precision guidance system and ordered the development of more powerful strategic weapons, the North's official KCNA news agency reported on Tuesday.

The missile launched on Monday was equipped with an advanced automated pre-launch sequence compared with previous versions of the "Hwasong" rockets, North Korea's name for its Scud-class missiles, KCNA said. That indicated the North had launched a modified Scud-class missile, as South Korea's military has said.

The North's test launch of a short-range ballistic missile landed in the sea off its east coast and was the latest in a fast-paced series of missile tests defying international pressure and threats of more sanctions.

Kim said the reclusive state would develop more powerful weapons in multiple phases in accordance with its timetable to defend North Korea against the United States.

"He expressed the conviction that it would make a greater leap forward in this spirit to send a bigger 'gift package' to the Yankees" in retaliation for American military provocation, KCNA quoted Kim as saying.

South Korea said it had conducted a joint drill with a U.S. supersonic B-1B Lancer bomber on Monday. North Korea's state media earlier accused the United States of staging a drill to practise dropping nuclear bombs on the Korean peninsula.

The U.S. Navy said its aircraft carrier strike group, led by the USS Carl Vinson, also planned a drill with another U.S. nuclear carrier, the USS Ronald Reagan, in waters near the Korean peninsula.

A U.S. Navy spokesman in South Korea did not give specific timing for the strike group's planned drill.

North Korea calls such drills a preparation for war.

Monday's launch followed two successful tests of medium-to-long-range missiles in as many weeks by the North, which has been conducting such tests at an unprecedented pace in an effort to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of hitting the mainland United States.

Such launches, and two nuclear tests since January 2016, have been conducted in defiance of U.S. pressure, U.N. resolutions and the threat of more sanctions.
They also pose one of the greatest security challenges for U.S. President Donald Trump, who portrayed the latest missile test as an affront to China.

"North Korea has shown great disrespect for their neighbor, China, by shooting off yet another ballistic missile ... but China is trying hard!" Trump said on Twitter.

PRECISION GUIDANCE
Japan has also urged China to play a bigger role in restraining North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's top national security adviser, Shotaro Yachi, met China's top diplomat, State Councillor Yang Jiechi, for five hours of talks near Tokyo on Monday after the North's latest test.

Yachi told Yang that North Korea's actions had reached a new level of provocation.

Related Coverage
China's top diplomat wants peaceful resolution over North Korea
Japan urges China to play bigger role in restraining North Korea
South Korea says conducted joint drills with U.S. B-1B strategic bomber

"Japan and China need to work together to strongly urge North Korea to avoid further provocative actions and obey things like United Nations resolutions," Yachi was quoted as telling Yang in a statement by Japan's foreign ministry.

A statement from China's foreign ministry after the meeting made no mention of North Korea.

North Korea has claimed major advances with its rapid series of launches, claims that outside experts and officials believe may be at least partially true but are difficult to verify independently.

A South Korean military official said the North fired one missile on Monday, clarifying an earlier assessment that there may have been more than one launch.

The test was aimed at verifying a new type of precision guidance system and the reliability of a new mobile launch vehicle under different operational conditions, KCNA said.

However, South Korea's military and experts questioned the claim because the North had technical constraints, such as a lack of satellites, to operate a terminal-stage missile guidance system properly.

"Whenever news of our valuable victory is broadcast recently, the Yankees would be very much worried about it and the gangsters of the south Korean puppet army would be dispirited more and more," KCNA cited leader Kim as saying.

(Reporting by Jack Kim and Ju-min Park; Additional reporting by James Pearson in SEOUL, Ben Blanchard in BEIJING, and Elaine Lies in TOKYO; Editing by Dan Grebler and Paul Tait)
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.military.com/daily-news/...epts-ballistic-missile-target-in-pacific.html

US Successfully Intercepts Ballistic Missile Target in Pacific

Military.com | 30 May 2017 | by Richard Sisk
Updated 7:02 p.m. EST

The Defense Department on Tuesday improved a spotty record by destroying a mock intercontinental ballistic missile over the Pacific with a new hit-to-kill vehicle meant to protect the homeland against the growing threat from North Korea.

The launch of a Ground-based Midcourse Defense, or GMD, interceptor missile launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California against an ICBM-class target fired from the Reagan Test Site on Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands resulted in a "direct collision," the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency said in a statement.

"The intercept of a complex, threat-representative ICBM target is an incredible accomplishment for the GMD system and a critical milestone for this program," Vice Adm. Jim Syring, the agency's director, said in a statement. "This system is vitally important to the defense of our homeland, and this test demonstrates that we have a capable, credible deterrent against a very real threat."

Advocates of the system -- which had failed in eight of 17 previous tests -- said the success on Tuesday validated the investments in the program.

"This was a good day for homeland defense and a bad day for Kim Jong-un," said Thomas Karako, a senior fellow for the Missile Defense Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank in Washington, D.C., referring to the North Korean dictator.

The test that MDA estimated at $244 million had long been planned for May 30 but came as North Korea was stepping up its own medium and short-range missile tests and boasting of developing an ICBM with the range to hit the U.S. mainland with a "miniaturized" nuclear warhead that could survive reentry from space.

For the U.S., the intercept marked the first live-fire test against an ICBM-class target for the GMD missile, which is being developed by Boeing Co., according to the Missile Defense Agency.

The test was also the first for the new CE-II Block 1 kill vehicle, which uses newly-designed divert thrusters to correct previous problems with the guidance of the kill vehicle, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C. that opposes nuclear arms proliferation. Divert thrusters are the small motors that make course adjustments when the kill vehicle is homing on its target and can make the difference between a hit and a miss, it said.

Karako of CSIS described it as "the latest configuration of the previous CE-II vehicle."

The hit-to-kill missile was designed to strike and destroy an incoming long-range missile by kinetic force, often compared to hitting a bullet with a bullet.

In previous tests, intercept team leaders knew the general trajectory of the target beforehand.

Chris Johnson, a spokesman for MDA, would not confirm that the trajectory of the target in the Tuesday test was given to the intercept team, but said that Vandenberg had a "general launch window."

Overall, the MDA said in a fact sheet, "Testing to date has given us confidence in the basic design, effectiveness, and operational capability for short, medium, and long-range ballistic missile defense."

Since the integrated defense system was initiated in 2001, MDA said that "75 of 92 hit-to-kill intercept attempts have been successful across all programs." The programs included GMD, the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD), Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD), and PATRIOT Advanced Capability-3.

Nine of 17 GMD tests before May 30 were successful intercepts, MDA said. Of the eight that failed, three were because the interceptor and the booster failed to separate. Another failure was attributed to a kill vehicle guidance error in the final seconds of flight.

Other reasons for failures were cited as kill vehicle's infrared sensor cooling malfunctioned; interceptor failed to launch due to problematic software configuration; interceptor failed to launch after a silo support arm did not retract, triggering an automatic abort; and, simply, kill vehicle and system sensor performance issues.

During the test Tuesday, multiple sensors provided target acquisition and tracking data to the Command, Control, Battle Management and Communication (C2BMC) system. The Sea-Based X-band radar, positioned in the Pacific Ocean, also acquired and tracked the target, MDA said, and the GMD system received the target tracking data and developed a fire control solution to intercept the target.

In recent weeks, President Donald Trump has repeatedly warned of the threat from North Korea developing missiles capable of hitting the U.S. mainland with a nuclear warhead and has pressed China to rein in Kim Jong-un.

North Korea has detonated underground nuclear devices three times in the last five years and has greatly accelerated its testing of ballistic missiles. In its 12th test launch this year, North Korea on Monday fired a missile that flew about 280 miles before landing in the Sea of Japan.

The U.S. has also been concerned about North Korea switching from liquid to solid fuel for its missiles, which would significantly cut the time for launch preparations and limit the time for detection by satellite.

North Korea's actions appeared to have altered the policy initiatives of new South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who had spoken during the campaign of the need for new negotiations with North Korea rather than confrontation and also questioned the placement of the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in South Korea.

In phone talks Tuesday with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Moon said he would press for more sanctions on North Korea before considering new talks, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported.

"I agree with the prime minister's (Abe's) words that now is not time for dialogue with North Korea, but a time to heighten sanctions and pressure," spokesman Park Soo-hyun quoted Moon as saying.

-- Brendan McGarry contributed to this report.
-- Richard Sisk can be reached at richard.sisk@military.com.
 

Bolerpuller

Contributing Member
http://www.express.co.uk/news/world...-news-Kim-Jong-un-Donald-Trump-missile-launch




North Korea v USA LIVE: Updates as North Korea says it is "on brink of war" – latest news

NORTH Korea claims it is "on the brink of war" with the US after Kim Jong-un's regime carried out its third missile test in three weeks. Here are live updates and the latest breaking news on North Korea and the US.

By ALICE FOSTER
PUBLISHED: 16:25, Wed, May 31, 2017 | UPDATED: 16:25, Wed, May 31, 2017



Kim Jong-un's regime has said it is on “the brink of war” after the US and South Korea flew fighter jets close to the hermit kingdom in retaliation for a ballistic missile test.

South Korea confirmed that it carried out a joint drill with a US B-1B Lancer bomber, just hours after Pyongyang tested a short-range ballistic missile on Monday.

North Korea’s news agency and mouthpiece for leader Kim Jong-un accused the US of practicing for a nuclear bomb drop in the “frantic” drill.

The fighter planes approached an area east of Gangneung, a city near the Military Demarcation Line which splits the two Koreas, North Korean state media added.

"He expressed the conviction that it would make a greater leap forward in this spirit to send a bigger 'gift package' to the Yankees" in retaliation for American military provocation, KCNA quoted Kim as saying.

America’s aircraft carrier strike group, led by the USS Carl Vinson, is now planning to carry out a drill with nuclear carrier USS Ronald Reagan in waters near the Korean peninsula.

Here are live updates and the latest breaking news on North Korea and the US.


Wednesday, May 31

4.25pm: The US has carried out a successful test of its anti-missile defence systems, a defence official has confirmed.

Vice Admiral Jim Syring, the director of the Missile Defence Agency, told a press briefing that America can stay ahead of the ICBM threat through 2020.

"I was confident before the test that we had the capability to defeat any threat that they would throw at us. And I'm even more confident today after seeing the intercept test yesterday that we continue to be on that course," Mr Syring said.

2pm: US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis is expected to press for greater cooperation to contain North Korea's nuclear and missile threat at a regional security forum in Singapore later this week.

American officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that Mr Mattis is likely stress the threat posed by North Korea and the importance of countering its weapons programmes.

9am: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told China's top diplomat that he would like to work with China to try to rein in North Korea's nuclear and missile programmes.

"To resolve this problem peacefully, we would like to work with China, which has strong influence (over North Korea)," Abe said at the outset of a meeting with Yang Jiechi.

In return, Yang told Abe that he hoped all parties play a constructive role in resolving the issue.

5am: South Korea's Defence Ministry "intentionally dropped" mentioning that four more launchers had been deployed for America's THAAD anti-missile system in a report to President Moon Jae-in's top aides, his office said on Wednesday.

Mr Moon has ordered a probe at the defence ministry, saying it was "very shocking" the launchers had been brought in without being reported to the new government or to the public, presidential Blue House spokesman Yoon Young-chan said.

4am: Six North Koreans who were rescued on Saturday drifting at sea off the east coast were sent back to the North on Wednesday after Pyongyang did not respond to repeated attempts to communicate, South Korea's Unification Ministry said.
 

Bolerpuller

Contributing Member
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...ew-ballistic-missile-test-state-media-8898464



North Korea prepared for new ballistic missile test: State media


North Korea has carried out 12 missile tests this year in defiance of UN sanctions warnings and US threats of possible military action.
31 May 2017 02:28PM (Updated: 31 May 2017 03:06PM)





SEOUL: North Korea warned Wednesday (May 31) it was prepared to launch intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) at any time, as the US successfully tested a system designed to intercept them.

The fresh sabre-rattling from Pyongyang appeared to up the stakes as the Pentagon announced Tuesday it had intercepted a mock-up of an ICBM in a first-of-its-kind test.

The success of the test is a watershed moment for the US military's effort to establish an effective - though limited - ground-based defence against ICBMs as the North ramps up its threats.

"We're prepared to test-fire ICMBs anywhere and anytime on orders from the supreme commander (Kim Jong-Un)", the Rodong Sinmun paper said in the article entitled: "No one can stop the nuclear power state, rocketry master in the East".

The paper added: "The United States must know our declaration that we can turn the devils' den into ashes with nuclear weapons is not an empty threat."


Concern among the international community over the North's weapons programme was further raised after North Korea test-fired yet another ballistic missile, the latest in a series of launches that have ratcheted up tensions over Pyongyang's quest to develop weapons capable of hitting the United States.

It was the third missile test by the nuclear-armed regime in less than three weeks, defying UN sanctions warnings and US threats of possible military action.

Early this month, it test-fired what appeared to be its longest-range ballistic missile yet tested in a bid to bring the US mainland within reach.

The North has carried out two atomic tests and dozens of missile launches since the beginning of last year in its quest to develop a missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead to the continental United States - something President Donald Trump has vowed "won't happen".

Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said Tuesday's trial was not timed specifically in response to tensions with Pyongyang but that "in a broad sense, North Korea is one of the reasons why we have this capability".

"They continue to conduct test launches, as we saw this weekend, while also using dangerous rhetoric that suggests they would strike the United States homeland," Davis said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...-clings-to-its-nukes/articleshow/58938666.cms

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/balance-terror-why-north-korea-clings-nukes-040700190.html

A new balance of terror: Why North Korea clings to its nukes

By AP | Updated: Jun 01, 2017, 09.19 AM IST
Eric Talmadge, Associated Press
Associated Press May 31, 2017
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PYONGYANG: Early one winter morning, Kim Jong Un stood at a remote observation post overlooking a valley of rice paddies near the Chinese border.

The North Korean leader beamed with delight as he watched four extended range Scud missiles roar off their mobile launchers, comparing the sight to a team of acrobats performing in unison. Minutes later the projectiles splashed into the sea off the Japanese coast, 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) from where he was standing.

It was*an unprecedented event. North Korea had just run its first simulated nuclear attack on an American military base.

This scene from March 6, described in government propaganda, shows how the North's seemingly crazy, suicidal nuclear program is neither crazy nor suicidal. Rather, this is North Korea's very deliberate strategy to ensure the survival of its ruling regime.

Back in the days of Kim Il Sung, North Korea's ``eternal president'' and Kim Jong Un's grandfather, the ruling regime decided it needed two things to survive: reliable, long-range missiles and small, but potent, nuclear warheads. For a small and relatively poor country, that was, indeed, a distant and ambitious goal. But it detonated its first nuclear device on Oct. 9, 2006.

Today, North Korea is testing advanced ballistic missiles faster than ever _ a record 24 last year and three in just the past month. With each missile and each nuclear device, it becomes a better equipped, better trained and better prepared adversary. Some experts believe it might be able to build a missile advanced enough to reach the United States' mainland with a nuclear warhead in two to three years.

So forget, for the moment, how erratic Kim Jong Un and his generals may seem. North Korea conducted two nuclear tests last year; one was of the strongest nuclear device it has ever detonated and the other, Pyongyang claims, of its first H-bomb. The U.S. for its part is also escalating _ in an explicit warning to Pyongyang, it successfully shot a target ICBM launched from a Pacific island out of the sky with a California-based interceptor missile on Tuesday.

The question is this: if war breaks out and North Korea launches a pre-emptive nuclear strike on an American military base in Japan _ for real _ would the U.S. recoil and retreat? Would it strike back, and risk losing Washington DC in a second wave of nuclear attacks?

For Pyongyang, forcing Washington to seriously weigh that calamity is a win. And it may become a real-world possibility on President Donald Trump's watch.

___

RISING FROM THE RICE PADDIES

The 7:36 a.m. launch on March 6 was conducted in North Pyongan Province near North Korea's Sohae Satellite Launching Center. It sent the four Scuds into the ocean 300 to 350 kilometers (185 to 220 miles) from the coast of Japan.

Reporting on it the next day, North Korea's Rodong Sinmun, the ruling party's newspaper, stated it was not a test to see if the missiles would work, but rather a "drill" to train the troops who will "strike the bases of the U.S. imperialist aggressor forces in Japan in a contingency."

To back that up, the North released several photos of Kim in a black overcoat holding a plastic pointer to a map laid out on a wooden table that showed the missiles' flight path and other data. Analyst Jeffrey Lewis and his colleagues at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, California, quickly realized the Scuds were on a trajectory that, with a simple southerly tweak, would have sent them raining down on Marine Corps Air Station, Iwakuni.

Iwakuni, located 50 kilometers (30 miles) southwest of Hiroshima on the southern tip of Japan's main island, is home to some 10,000 U.S. and Japanese personnel. It was used as a staging area during the 1950-53 Korean War, when it was called the "Gateway to Korea" by U.S. and U.N. forces, and continues to be one of the largest and most important U.S. military facilities in Japan.

Such an attack wouldn't need to be nuclear to be effective. The deadly Sarin nerve agent or some other chemical weapon could also cause tremendous casualties. But training a nuclear attack on Iwakuni had a special psychological twist for those who follow the ceaseless military game of cat and mouse in the region. North Korea's media stressed Kim was accompanied at the launch by nuclear weapons specialists.

"Before the Iwakuni simulation strike, U.S. and South Korean forces were conducting joint military drills, which involved F-35s based out of Iwakuni," said analyst David Schmerler, who works with Lewis. "As the U.S. and South Korea were practicing their military drills in the event of a conflict on the peninsula, the North Koreans, in turn, practiced their strike plans."

The U.S.-South Korea drills reportedly included an F-35 stealth fighter "decapitation strike" on Kim Jong Un and his top lieutenants.

Kim, apparently, was practicing how to take them out first.
___

WHY THIS COULD ALL GO NUCLEAR: THREE SCENARIOS

The Cold War concept of "mutually assured destruction" that kept the United States and the Soviet Union from attacking each other requires a "balance of terror" to encourage restraint: Once each side has attained a certain level of destructive power, neither will attack because they are convinced that neither will survive.

North Korea doesn't have that assurance. If a war were to break out now, it could very well be destroyed. That's the way things have been for decades.

But here's where the urgency comes in for the United States and its allies. If North Korea succeeds in building nuclear-tipped ICBMs that can reach the U.S. mainland, the dynamic in a contingency would be highly volatile.

A nuclear-armed North Korea would have a strong incentive to go nuclear quickly and go nuclear first if it believed, correctly or not, that it was about to be attacked. But that also would increase Washington's first-strike incentive, since it doesn't want its strategic advantage taken away by a surprise attack on its own cities or military bases.

So both sides have good reason to be trigger happy.

Bruce Bennett, a leading North Korea expert and senior defense analyst with the RAND Corporation, offers these possible scenarios:

— Consider a case in which North Korea has a stockpile of nuclear warheads and the ability to launch them from submarines or remote, hard-to-detect sites on land. Fearing an attack from the U.S., it launches a pre-emptive nuclear strike on the South Korean port of Busan, then tells the United States that if there is any nuclear retaliation, it will fire nuclear weapons at U.S. cities.

Would Donald Trump, or whoever follows him, back away? Would he risk losing Los Angeles, or Chicago, to defend America's allies?

— Or North Korea tries another ballistic missile launch like the one on March 6. This time, just before the missiles hit the water near Japan, a nuclear weapon on one or more of the missiles detonates, downing a few commercial aircraft or sinking some cargo ships. This would convince the world that Kim Jong Un has a real nuclear arsenal and isn't shy about using it.

Would Trump react with a nuclear attack on North Korea?

— Now, picture war breaking out on the Korean Peninsula. North Korea, to convince the United States not to intervene, launches an ICBM that appears to be coming down short, well west of California. But on the way down it bursts in a nuclear explosion, possibly causing some damage to U.S. territory. Pyongyang then threatens more serious damage to the United States if there is any nuclear retaliation or U.S. intervention in the conflict.

Is the U.S. president going to risk millions of people dead and major cities destroyed?

"With the weight of history on his shoulders, how would a U.S. president respond?" Bennett asks. "How should he respond?"
___

GOOSE-STEPPING TO THE 'FINAL VICTORY'

It's mid-morning on April 15, the "Day of the Sun," the 105th anniversary of Kim Il Sung's birth.

Some 100,000 North Koreans are amassed in Kim Il Sung square waving plastic bouquets and holding up lettered cards to create designs like the ruling party's hammer, sickle and brush logo when seen from the balcony of the Grand People's Study House. That's where Kim Jong Un is standing.

Kim watches as military units from each branch of his million-man armed forces goose-step by in what North Koreans like to call "single-minded unity." He then smiles and applauds at the most varied array of missiles and their transport vehicles the North has ever displayed.

The message of the parade, held before reporters from all over the world, is clear. North Korea is, or is near to being, able to launch a pre-emptive strike against a regional target. It is preparing to withstand a retaliatory follow-up attack if it does, and it is building the arsenal it needs to then launch a second wave of strikes, this time at the U.S. mainland.

Unlike the Soviet Union, North Korea can't annihilate the United States. But if it can clear those three steps, it could conceivably destroy a major U.S. military base in the region or a city on the U.S. mainland.

This vision of a new "balance of terror" built to its crescendo as six submarine-launched "Pukguksong" missiles and their land-based cousin, the "Pukguksong 2," rumbled through the square.

Submarines are the ultimate stealth weapon, mobile and notoriously hard to find. North Korea is believed to have one experimental ballistic missile submarine, and this missile would go in its silos. The Pukguksong 2, meanwhile, represents advances on the ground. It uses solid fuel, which means it can be stored and hidden, is ready for rapid launch and fits on a transport vehicle that can be deployed off-road in rough terrain. Kim Jong Un has ordered it be mass produced.

The big reveal came next.

No one really knew what it was until, in its first flight test a month later on May 14, it was sent an astounding 2,111 kilometers (about 1,240 miles) in altitude — higher than satellites in low Earth orbit. It remained airborne for 30 minutes before plunging to the Pacific. With great fanfare, the North's media declared it the "perfect weapon system" capable of carrying a "large-size heavy nuclear warhead."

Many analysts believe the missile — which the North calls "Hwasong 12" — could be a stepping stone to the ICBM North Korea needs to attack the U.S. mainland. Kim Jong Un was on hand for its early morning launch, too. He hugged his elated rocket scientists and, according to his official media, claimed he can now hit the United States with an "all-powerful means for retaliatory strike."

That is bravado. For now. The missile's estimated striking range is 4,500 kilometers (2,800 miles), give or take.

But, put another way, it's halfway to Chicago.
___

Talmadge has been the AP's Pyongyang bureau chief since 2013. Follow him on Twitter at @EricTalmadge and on Instagram at erictalmadge.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://mwi.usma.edu/tale-tape-north-korea-bring-fight/

Tale of the Tape: What Would North Korea Bring to the Fight?

James King | May 30, 2017

Once again tensions on the Korean Peninsula are extremely high. Rumors of war are spreading like wild fire. North Korea has been conducting nuclear and ballistic missile tests on a regular basis, thumbing its nose at the world. President Donald Trump said there was a risk of “major, major conflict” with North Korea during meetings with Chinese leaders in April. Very few times in the history of the two Koreas have sabers been rattled as hard.

For over sixty years both sides have prepared for the day when their two armies would clash once again. Throughout South Korea you can see pre-dug fighting positions with sector sketches laminated and posted so that any soldier could fall in on the position and be ready to fight. Obstacles which could block any north/south road are just waiting to be emplaced, and preplanned artillery positions are marked down to the meter just waiting for guns to arrive.

So what will American or South Korean soldiers see coming over the horizon as they stand ready in their defensive positions? What will they encounter as they move north? Historically, North Korea is one of the hardest places to get information about. Because of that, numbers of total pieces of military equipment can vary from one expert’s estimate to another’s across the internet. But they all generally agree on what type of equipment is out there. So what exactly would North Korean forces go to war with? And what are the particular advantages and disadvantages of this equipment set?

Maneuver

Armor

From a purely numbers perspective North Korea has a one of the largest armored forces in the world, anywhere from approximately 3,500 to just over 5,000 main battle tanks depending on the source. The 5,000 figure would rank North Korea at number 4 in the world, just behind Russia, China, and the United States. Regardless of where in this range the actual number falls, North Korea’s armored forces appear formidable—until you dig a little deeper.

By taking a good look at the types of main battle tanks fielded by North Korea, the impressiveness of its force begins to fade. Comprised mostly of Soviet-era T-55 and T-62 tanks, along with some more modern T-80s and homemade Chonma-ho and Pokpung-ho tanks sprinkled in, North Korea’s force shows its age quickly. Most of these tanks are comparable in age or even older than the tanks United States and coalition forces went up against and completely decimated during Operation Desert Storm in 1991.

Compared to the M1 Abrams or the South Korean K2 Black Panther, North Korea’s tanks fall short. The T-55s and T-62s are over fifty years old. The Chonma-ho and Pokpung-ho tanks are improvements over the decrepit T-55s and T-62s, but are still generally based on the T-62 and T-72 tank designs that were shown to be greatly inferior to the M1 in combat. There is some speculation, however, that the Pokpung-ho may have some performance characteristics similar to the T-90 Russian main battle tank. If so, this would give it near-peer capabilities against US forces, but there are few in the North Korean inventory.

Aircraft and Air Defense

Aircraft

Not since the last Korean War has a US soldier been killed by an attack from the air. In a conflict with North Korea today this streak will likely hold. Similar to North Korea’s armor forces, its air force numbers look strong, although when you look deeper at what those numbers consist of, the picture is more mixed. Most sources agree that North Korea’s air force consists of approximately 1,300 aircraft.

But many of those planes—the MiG-15, MiG-17, and MiG-19—were designed for combat during the first Korean War over sixty years ago, and the MiG-21 was the main fighter aircraft used by North Vietnam in the 1960s. North Korea does, however, have a small number of more modern aircraft including approximately thirty-five MiG-29 Fulcrums, fifty-six MiG-23 Floggers and thirty-four Su-25 Frogfoots. The Su-25 is a close air support aircraft that might be an issue for ground forces that are organically equipped with little to no air defense capabilities. The MiG-29 is the only fighter in this group that can be considered a near-peer competitor in combat, with capabilities similar to and in some cases superior to the F/A-18 or F-16. Two drawbacks, however, are the limited numbers North Korea can field and poor pilot training, which consists of as few as twenty hours of flying time for each pilot per year.

North Korea does possess a small number of helicopters, including approximately twenty Russian-made Mi-24 HIND attack helicopters, as well as several others that can be fitted for either transport or attack roles. These include the Mi-17 HIP, Mi-2 HOPLITE, and surprisingly, approximately eighty Hughes 500Es, which are also used by US special operations forces and could be fitted for a role as a gunship.

Air Defense

Knowing that their air assets do not match up against their likely adversaries’ air forces, North Korea has, like other countries following the Russian model, put a strong emphasis on air defense. A recent report to Congress on North Korea’s security developments stated: “North Korea possesses a dense, overlapping air defense system of SA-2, SA-3, and SA-5 sites, mobile SA-13 SAMs, mobile and fixed AAA, and numerous man-portable air-defense systems like the SA-7.” The report went on to predict that North Korea will continue to build its air defense capability as its air force ages. The report also indicated that a system similar to the Russian S-300, which is capable of tracking targets out to 300 kilometers and has a missile range of up to 150 kilometers, was spotted at a military parade a few years ago and may be in the North Korean inventory today.

US forces have proven they are capable of dealing with older integrated air defense systems like the SA-2, SA-3, and SA-5 during Operation Desert Storm and in the opening weeks of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The concern, however, is twofold. First, how effective is the S-300 and how close of a replication is the system identified in the military parade? Does it have the same capabilities as the S-300? If so, it will cause a lot of heartache for any air force attempting to bypass it.

The second concern stems from the proliferation of man-portable (MANPAD) systems like the SA-7. These systems are lightweight and easily concealable, making them nearly impossible to remove from the battlefield. North Korea has several thousand of these MANPADs distributed throughout its ground forces. While advanced fighter aircraft should not have much of a problem against these systems, they could pose a significant risk to larger, slower cargo aircraft and helicopters. In the mountainous terrain that is most of North Korea, low-flying helicopters are most at risk to North Korean soldiers operating in the mountains, taking a side or overhead shot as the helicopter flies by, leaving the crew little to no warning.

Indirect Fire

The most potent capability in North Korea’s arsenal comes from its indirect fire assets. With systems consisting of 170-millimeter self-propelled guns and several different sizes of multiple launch rocket systems—including 122-millimeter, 240-millimeter, and 300-millimeter—North Korea could, according to the information analysis group Stratfor, reasonably be able to deliver over 350 metric tons of explosives on Seoul in a single volley.

Their ability to sustain this, however, would slowly diminish for three reasons. First, North Korean artillery and rocket forces have historically had about a 25 percent dud rate with their munitions, which will cause a significant reduction in effective fires. Second, North Korean artillery teams have been notoriously poor performers during exercises and skirmishes with South Korea. And third, once the first volley is fired those systems become vulnerable to counter-fire. Unless North Korean forces target South Korean and US indirect fire positions early and effectively they can expect to be targeted quickly in response.

Navy

North Korea’s navy is easily in the worst shape of all their armed forces. They have no blue water force to speak of, with most of their surface ships consisting of small patrol craft. These patrol craft do have the potential to pack a punch, as many are equipped with anti-ship cruise missiles and torpedoes. They do not, however, have the ability to conduct operations in the open ocean, leaving them vulnerable to standoff fires from larger vessels.

As with other North Korean military capabilities examined here, their submarine fleet looks good on paper, with over seventy submarines total, but again, looking deeper reveals a different story. Their fleet is comprised mostly with vessels that were built in the 1950s, like the Russian Romeo-class diesel-electric submarine, the largest in their fleet. While these Romeo subs have the ability to launch multiple torpedoes and diesel subs have been known to be very quiet when running on battery power only, they are still easily detected by US and South Korean sub hunters.

Special Forces

North Korea has prioritized special operations forces above all else in terms of training and equipping for future combat operations. North Korean SOF are well taken care of and motivated. These forces have trained for multiple missions including limited raids against targets in the South with an emphasis on surprise attacks. These quick-strike missions would focus on soft, high-value targets. SOF are North Korea’s only truly joint force. Both the air force’s helicopters and the navy’s landing craft provide support to SOF missions.

Wild Cards

Nuclear Weapons

Since its first nuclear test in 2006 North Korea has considered itself a nuclear power. According to the 2015 Military and Security Developments Involving the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea Report to Congress, North Korea has created a domestic law stating, “the nuclear weapons of the DPRK can only be used by a final order of the Supreme Commander of the Korean’s People’s Army to repel invasion or attack from hostile nuclear weapons state and make retaliatory strikes.” North Korea, however, has not demonstrated the ability to successfully employ a nuclear warhead on an effective delivery system. This does not mean that during a conflict they could not find an unconventional method of delivery in order to achieve a quick tactical victory by targeting conventional forces or create chaos in the South by targeting a population center.

Chemical and Biological Weapons

While North Korea’s chemical and biological weapons are less talked about than its nuclear program, it is likely they do possess the capabilities. Little is known about these programs, but the 2015 report to Congress states they have the capability to “produce nerve, blister, blood, and choking agents and likely possess a [chemical weapons] stockpile.” Even less is known about their biological weapons but it is believed that they have the ability to employ those types of weapons as well. North Korea soldiers are trained to operate in these types of environments, making it possible for them to fight through a contamination.

Cyber

North Korea has been implicated in many of the more notable recent cyber-attacks, including the attack on Sony pictures in retaliation for the studio’s release of the movie “The Interview.” The “WannaCry” cyber-attack in May that targeted approximately 150 countries has also been linked to North Korea. These attacks have shown that North Korea has put a lot of focus on this capability and may be able to conduct crippling cyber-attacks against South Korean infrastructure and military networks.

China

The biggest question regarding a war on the Korean Peninsula is what China will do. As one of North Korea’s few allies, will they provide military support like they did during the Korean War or will they sit on the sidelines and allow North Korea to fall? China’s involvement in the first Korean War was a game-changer. The injection of Chinese military forces halted United Nations forces’ momentum, resulting in the ultimate stalemate that still holds today. Intervention by China this time could have a similar effect. At a minimum, China’s involvement would draw out the conflict, which would in turn put a heavier toll on both US forces and the South Korean population.

Terrain

Sun Tzu tells us that “if you know the enemy and know yourself, your victory will not stand in doubt; if you know Heaven and know Earth, you may make your victory complete.” To Sun Tzu, knowing the terrain (“the Earth”) is key to a successful combat operation. This is nowhere truer than on the Korean Peninsula. Unlike the wide open, mounted maneuver paradise of the Middle East or the open fields of central Europe, the Korean Peninsula is very canalized. There is a reason many of the famous battles of the Korean War were fights for hills and similar terrain features (Pork Chop Hill, Heartbreak Ridge, Old Baldy, Hill Eerie, and Bloody Ridge, to name a few). The entire peninsula is carved up by hills and rivers which reduces maneuver space and shrinks standoff distances of heavy weapons systems—both of which take away advantages that US ground forces have enjoyed for decades.

Just as with the South, above the 38th parallel North Korea has the home field advantage. It is safe to assume that the North Koreans have done just as much work in preparing their country for combat operations as the South has. Most vital locations can be expected to have been hardened, and many key facilities have likely been taken underground. It is also likely that North Korean forces have adapted their maneuver tactics to exploit the advantages and mitigate the disadvantages created by the local terrain. Unlike US forces, which have to maintain systems and capabilities suited to many different types of terrains and climates, North Korea only has to be able to fight effectively in one. While superior warfighting capabilities can still win the day, it is far from a foregone conclusion, as US forces found in Afghanistan. Home field advantage, properly leveraged, can in many cases swing the fight in favor of a smaller and less modernly equipped force.

Tallying the Balance Sheet

From a raw numbers perspective North Korea’s military looks like a powerful adversary. It’s not until you dig a little deeper that you can see its true colors. Most of North Korea’s key weapons systems are pushing fifty years old. Many of those key systems have been proven to be inferior to those of Western forces during combat operations against countries with similar equipment. The systemic problem of poor training also plagues the bulk of North Korea’s conventional forces, significantly reducing the effectiveness of the few sophisticated weapons systems in their arsenal.

And yet, North Korea is not entirely without effective capabilities it can bring to bear and advantages it can exploit. Special operations forces, cyber capabilities, indirect fire assets, terrain characteristics for which it is uniquely prepared, and the potential to move a nuclear weapon undetected across the peninsula are among the few advantages that North Korea can hope to leverage in a conflict against the US and South Korea. US and South Korean forces still have the preponderance of advantage in their favor, but North Korea has at least enough at its disposal to ensure that the fight will be ugly.
*

Maj. James King is currently serving as the executive officer for a military intelligence battalion in San Antonio, Texas. While serving over twenty years in the National Guard, Army Reserve, and Active Army, including*almost ten years in Stryker brigades, Maj. King has held multiple leadership positions in the military police, infantry, and intelligence fields, as well as deploying three times in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He*holds a BA in Sociology from the University of Washington, where he earned his commission through the ROTC program and a Master’s Degree in Strategic Intelligence from American Military University. The opinions here are the author’s own and do not reflect the policy of the US Army, Department of Defense, or any government agency.
 

Bolerpuller

Contributing Member
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/01/...able-to-stop-a-north-korean-missile.html?_r=0



We May Not Be Able to Stop a North Korean Missile
By JOHN F. TIERNEYJUNE 1, 2017


An interceptor rocket that is part of the United States’ ballistic missile defense program was tested in California on Tuesday. Credit Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
When the collision with the mock intercontinental ballistic missile occurred on Tuesday afternoon, the Pentagon’s Missile Defense Agency was filled with excitement and relief. The first full intercept test in three years of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system was deemed a success. Some proponents of the program have presented the test as proof that the $40 billion system is capable of defending the United States against long-range missiles that could, in the future, be launched by a rogue nation like North Korea.

The larger context, however, tells a very different story. Of the 10 tests of the system since 2004, when the Bush administration prematurely declared it operational, six have failed to destroy the target, including three of the last five tries.

More revealing than the test record are the actual tests themselves. Each is highly scripted to maximize success. The timing and other details are provided in advance, information that no real enemy would provide. The weather and time of day are just right for an intercept. An adversary would use complex countermeasures, such as decoys, alongside the real missile to try to fool the defense system, but only simplistic versions of this trick have been included. Under realistic testing conditions, the program’s success rate would almost certainly be lower.

As a member of Congress, I held leadership positions on the subcommittee that oversaw the missile defense program. During hearings, Pentagon officials repeatedly overstated confidence in the program, understated technical limitations and dismissed concerns from physicists and other experts.


This false sense of security persists today. Multiple senior military officials have recently suggested that a North Korean missile could be shot down with our existing capabilities. One prominent example came from Gen. Lori J. Robinson, the head of the North American Aerospace Defense Command, who told a Senate committee that she is “extremely confident of our capability to defend the United States of America and be able to intercept an ICBM should it reach our homeland.” But with so many test failures in highly scripted environments, how could anyone be confident?


I am not alone in my skepticism. The Pentagon’s chief weapons evaluator said in a report that the program has “a limited capability to defend the U.S. homeland,” and the Government Accountability Office reported last year that the tests have been “insufficient to demonstrate that an operationally useful defense capability exists.”

Outside of government, both the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine and the Union of Concerned Scientists have criticized the program and suggested major changes, with the academies calling for a redesigned set of interceptors and sensors, and the union calling for the system to be subject to the demanding oversight that virtually all other Pentagon programs already face.

Nonetheless, some lawmakers are determined to expand the program without reforming it. Senator Dan Sullivan, a Republican from Alaska, has proposed adding many interceptors, for a total of up to 100 in his state alone. (Forty-four interceptors will already be installed by the end of the year, mostly in Alaska.) The increase may benefit the Alaskan economy, but it will damage the rest of the country. Every dollar spent on enlarging the missile defense program is a dollar not spent on other critical defense and national priorities.

If lawmakers are serious about defending the homeland from rogue states like North Korea, they should prioritize diplomatic action. Even if the system was 100 percent effective (a herculean prospect) and North Korea was intent on striking the United States preemptively (a dubious assessment), Pyongyang could overwhelm our system by building more missiles than we have interceptors, a more cost-effective and simpler task. The offense has the advantage in this type of arms race, a reality that some lawmakers seem to ignore.

There is an adage in defense acquisition: Fly before you buy. In other words, validate the system’s usefulness before purchasing and deploying it. For nearly 15 years, the Pentagon has ignored this rule with regard to homeland missile defense. Congress can fix past mistakes by fully exercising its oversight authority and demanding a more prudent approach. Expanding the program before it is proved to be effective under realistic conditions would mark the height of irresponsibility.

The Missile Defense Agency might be celebrating now, but the latest test is at best a small step forward on a very long journey.

John F. Tierney is the executive director of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. As a Democratic representative from Massachusetts, he was chairman of the National Security and Foreign Affairs Subcommittee of the Government Oversight and Reform Committee from 2006 to 2010.
 

Bolerpuller

Contributing Member
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-northkorea-sanctions-ryabkov-idUSKBN18S63U


Russia says will respond to U.S. sanctions over North Korea:


Russia is preparing retaliatory measures in response to U.S. sanctions on some Russian companies and citizens over alleged connections to North Korea, RIA news agency cited Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying on Thursday.

The U.S. Treasury earlier on Thursday blacklisted nine companies and government institutions, including two Russian firms, and three people for their support of North Korea's weapons program.

Ryabkov said the move would not help efforts to restore relations between Moscow and Washington, RIA reported.

(Reporting by Jack Stubbs; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
OK.

Go back and read King's whole article and read it with the understanding that this is about as full as he can be in terms of the dangers present, if he likes his work.

In other words, ya gotta read 'tween the lines....


Task Force Smith may have done remarkably well, in coming hind sight.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
color me shocked....not

This should be the same two men from a few days ago, or whenever it was.

NorthKoreaRealTime‏ @BuckTurgidson79 35m35 minutes ago

Two North Korean men found dead at the same Moscow hotel had been 'injected with a mystery drug'
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
NorthKoreaRealTime Retweeted
RedZero‏ @Crimson_Rei 3h3 hours ago

RedZero Retweeted NorthKoreaRealTime

Moscow dgaf about NK. It would benefit more from access to SK companies and direct pipeline through the peninsula.


RedZero added,
NorthKoreaRealTime @BuckTurgidson79
Moscow says won't veto UN resolution on North Korea sanctions http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20170602000879


NorthKoreaRealTime Retweeted
RedZero‏ @Crimson_Rei 3h3 hours ago

NK state to confiscate plots of land people need to grow major food source http://bit.ly/2qIFSEZ
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
NorthKoreaRealTime‏ @BuckTurgidson79 2h2 hours ago

Report: U-2 spy planes deployed to Okinawa http://upi.com/6537222t via @upi



posted for fair use and discussion
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-N...ed-to-Okinawa/9971496429224/?spt=su&or=btn_tw

Report: U-2 spy planes deployed to Okinawa
By Elizabeth Shim Contact the Author | June 2, 2017 at 2:52 PM


Four U-2 spy planes are on temporary assignment in Japan. File Photo by EPA


June 2 (UPI) -- A group of U-2 spy planes from U.S. Forces Korea are being temporarily deployed to Okinawa, Japan, according to a Japanese news service.

Jiji Press reported Friday the U.S. reconnaissance aircraft, four in total, are to be deployed in southern Japan for about a month, at Kadena Air Base.

Three of the planes arrived in Japan from Osan Air Base in South Korea on Wednesday, and the fourth aircraft followed Thursday.

The planes were accompanied by about 180 U.S. troops, Japanese and U.S. officials said, according to Jiji.

The Lockheed U-2, nicknamed the "Dragon Lady," is a single-jet engine, ultra-high altitude spy plane used for intelligence gathering.

The aircraft have been actively deployed near the Korean demilitarized zone since 1976 in order to collect data on North Korea military movements.

The spy plane was also involved in reconnaissance flights during the Cold War and has flown over the Soviet Union, China, Vietnam and Cuba.

The deployment of four planes to Japan does not mean spying operations on the peninsula are being suspended.


A U.S. Air Force official who spoke to Jiji on the condition of anonymity said regular flights would continue to support allies in the region.


The United States and Japan have stepped up joint exercises as North Korea continues to launch ballistic missiles into the Sea of Japan.

The USS Ronald Reagan and Carl Vinson conducted drills this week with a convoy from Japan's maritime self-defense forces.

North Korea has stated the joint drills pose threats to the region.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
CivMilAir ✈ ��‏ @CivMilAir 2h2 hours ago

Cobra Ball - Ballistic Missile detection platform about somewhere... No position showing.
���� US Air Force
RC135S 61-2662 pic.twitter.com/mQDB1a7c4f
 
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