Explainer-What weapons could North Korea send to Russia?
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[September 07, 2022]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - Russia could be about to
buy millions of artillery shells and rockets from old Cold-War ally
North Korea, the White House said, an allegation immediately dismissed
as "fake" by Russia's ambassador to the United Nations.
North Korea has a long history of exporting weapons - many of which are
based on Soviet or Russian designs - and could provide Russia with a
range of conventional small arms, experts said.
Here is what is known about North Korea's weapons industry, its
stockpiles of conventional ammunition, and its defence exports.
WHAT WEAPONS COULD NORTH KOREA PROVIDE?
North Korea has a huge stockpile of "dumb" artillery shells and rockets
of Soviet-era munitions that date back to the 1950s, said Hugh
Griffiths, a former coordinator for a U.N. panel of experts that
monitors sanctions on North Korea, and now an independent sanctions
consultant.
"The North Koreans do have tremendous stockpiles of relatively primitive
artillery and rocket systems some of which are of a similar type and
caliber used by the Russians to shell Ukrainian cities and towns," he
said.
Among the most likely weapons could be 107mm Katyusha rockets, 122mm
rocket launchers, 155mm or 122mm artillery shells, or other small arms
ammunition for machine guns or automatic rifles, said Bruce Bechtol, a
professor at Angelo State University in Texas, who has done research on
North Korea's arms sales.
"Everything North Korea makes is basically a copy of old Soviet
systems," he said.
Bechtol said even with sanctions, it did not make sense that Russia
would be unable to produce such weapons itself.
If Russia was bypassing all of its other supply chain sources to go all
the way to North Korea, then either the situation was far worse for the
Russian military than anyone thought, or it was preparing for a major
offensive that required extra supplies, he said.
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State flags of Russia and North Korea
fly in a street near a church during the visit of North Korea's
leader Kim Jong Un to Vladivostok, Russia April 25, 2019.
REUTERS/Yuri Maltsev
HISTORY OF WEAPONS SALES
The potential deal described by American officials on Tuesday would
be a large one for North Korea but would not be unprecedented,
Bechtol said.
"They sold an awful lot of ammunition to both Syria and Iran and to
Hezbollah during the Syrian civil war," he said.
In recent years, the panel of experts has accused North Korea of
dodging sanctions to supply weapons to Syria and Myanmar, including
chemical weapon supplies, ballistic missile components, and
conventional weapons such as multiple rocket launchers and
surface-to-air missiles.
"Time and time again one may witness the desperation of the North
Koreans to raise foreign currency revenue or obtain sanctioned
commodities such oil," Griffiths said.
HOW MIGHT IT HAPPEN?
A deal with Russia could be larger than many of those previous
shipments, yet easier from a logistics standpoint, experts said.
Because the deal would be a sanctions violation and therefore ships
could be subject to seizure while at sea, North Korea would likely
send any arms to Russia by rail across their common border, Bechtol
said.
Griffiths noted it would be much less risky for the North Koreans to
smuggle munitions illegally into Russia than it is for them to send
military equipment or munitions via sea or air to Myanmar or Syria,
for example.
"The North Koreans would not be hesitant to deplete their stockpiles
for such an important and unusual client," he said.
(Reporting by Josh Smith; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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