South Korea casts doubts on North Korea's 'hypersonic missile' claims
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[January 07, 2022]
By Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean military
officials cast doubts on Friday on the capabilities of what North Korea
called a "hypersonic missile" test fired this week, saying it appeared
to represent limited progress over Pyongyang's existing ballistic
missiles.
On Wednesday, North Korea launched what its state media said was the
country's second hypersonic missile, which are usually defined as
weapons that reach speeds of at least five times the speed of sound - or
about 6,200 kms per hour (3,850 mph) - and can manoeuvre at relatively
low trajectories, making them much harder to detect and intercept.
While the missile's warhead appeared to reach hypersonic speeds, that
capability is shared by other ballistic missiles and Wednesday's test
did not appear to demonstrate the range and manoeuvrability claimed in
state media reports, a South Korean military official told reporters.
South Korea assessed that it flew for less than the 700 km (435 miles)
claimed by North Korea and showed less than the "lateral"
manoeuvrability reported, the official added.
Wednesday's warhead featured a more conical shape than the first claimed
North Korean hypersonic missile tested in September, which was
glider-like.
"This is neither a hypersonic glide vehicle nor a hypersonic cruise
missile, this is a missile with a mobile warhead," the official said of
the newest missile, which was first unveiled at a Pyongyang defence
exhibition in October.
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People watch a TV broadcasting file footage of a news report on
North Korea firing a ballistic missile off its east coast, in Seoul,
South Korea, January 5, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/
The assessment mirrors that of
international analysts who noted that the test appeared to involve a
liquid-fuel ballistic missile with a Manoeuvrable Reentry Vehicle (MaRV),
a capability previously fielded by other countries including the
United States and South Korea.
"One of my complaints about the 'hypersonic' framing is that it
wrongly emphasizes speed when what we really are discussing is
manoeuvrability and accuracy," Jeffrey Lewis, a missile researcher
at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS), said
on Twitter. "So, yeah, the new (North Korea) glider is hypersonic.
But more importantly, it's a MaRV."
While such missiles don't have the range of North Korea's largest
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), analysts say
manoeuvrable weapons can be used to evade missile defences.
On Friday the United States and Japan issued a joint statement
pledging to increase joint defence, including against hypersonic
weapons.
(Reporting by Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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