Latest North Korean missile sparks new debate over possible Russian role
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[August 18, 2023]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea's latest Hwasong-18 intercontinental
ballistic missile - its first ICBM to use solid rocket fuel - has
ignited new debate over a possible Russian role in the nuclear-armed
state's dramatic missile development.
In a report published on Thursday by the Washington-based Center for
Strategic and International Studies, Theodore Postol, professor emeritus
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, argued that the Hwasong-18
ICBM is likely the result of technical cooperation sourced to Russia.
The Hwasong-18 has been tested twice, including on July 12 in what was
the longest flight time ever for a North Korean missile test.
It is the North's first ICBM to use solid propellants, which can enable
faster and easier deployment of missiles during war. The missile was
first flown in April.
"The sudden appearance of these advanced capabilities is difficult to
explain without cooperation from the Russian government and its
scientists," Postol wrote, saying visual similarities suggest Russia may
have decided to transfer an "advanced 50-ton solid propellant ICBM, the
Topol-M, also known as the SS-27", to North Korea.
Russia and North Korea have recently called for closer military ties but
North Korea has denied having any "arms dealings" with Russia.
Russia's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to the new report.
In response to recent allegations from a UN Panel of Experts that
entities in Russia were procuring items for North Korea's missile
programme, Russia denied any knowledge or information on transactions
that would breach sanctions on North Korea.
Other analysts questioned Postol's report.
Researchers at California's James Martin Center for Nonproliferation
Studies (CNS) noted in a draft report, shared with Reuters, factual
inaccuracies, including mistaking the Russian Topol-M and Yars ICBMs,
and misidentifying a spent Hwasong-18 rocket stage as a “decoy canister”
designed to defeat anti-missile systems.
Postol did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Hwasong-18 clearly takes some design inspiration from Russian
missiles, in this case Topol-M and Yars, just as many other North Korean
missiles do, the CNS researchers said.
"We do not rule out the possibility that Russian entities may have
assisted North Korea in its development of this system," the CNS
researchers said in their report.
However, a close examination of images, videos and the performance of
the missile shows clear differences that exclude the possibility that
Russia transferred a complete ICBM system, they concluded, citing major
differences in the guidance systems and the missiles' third stages.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
and Russia's Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu visit an exhibition of
armed equipment on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the
Korean War armistice in this image released by North Korea's Korean
Central News Agency on July 27, 2023. KCNA via REUTERS/File Photo
Some of the Hwasong-18's systems, in fact, more closely resemble
Chinese weapons, and the North has been publicly developing
solid-fuel missiles since at least 2017, the researchers added.
"There is nothing sudden or surprising about North Korea’s continued
development of large solid propellant rocket motors," they said.
RUSSIAN ROOTS
Markus Schiller, a Europe-based missile expert who has long argued
that North Korea’s success in testing suggests it has had external
support, agreed that the CSIS report "gets many issues blatantly
wrong."
However, he said, those mistakes should not overshadow the signs
that point to possible Russian involvement, including similar motor
diameters and missile configuration, as well as the 100% test
success rate, suggesting the missile used well-established
technology as North Korea fired it on a trajectory that - had it
failed - could have dropped debris on Japan.
"You simply don’t take such a risk with an untested missile," he
said.
North Korea’s missile programme has its roots in assistance it got
from the Soviet Union, and later Russia, analysts say, and the
boosters involved in propelling the warheads are similar to Soviet
designs.
However, there is debate over how much that assistance has continued
since the 1990s, and North Korea has many ways of gathering
information about other countries' technology.
For example, a group of North Korean hackers secretly breached
computer networks at a major Russian missile developer for at least
five months last year, according to technical evidence reviewed by
Reuters and analysis by security researchers.
Russia's defence minister Sergei Shoigu accompanied Kim to a North
Korean defence exhibition and military parade last month that
featured North Korea's banned ballistic missiles as the neighbours
pledged to boost military ties.
The United States and South Korea have accused North Korea of
providing military aid to Russia for the war in Ukraine, something
both Moscow and Pyongyang deny.
South Korea's spy agency is closely watching for any Russian
transfer of nuclear missile technology to the North, lawmaker Yoo
Sang-bum told reporters in Seoul on Thursday.
(Reporting by Josh Smith; additional reporting by David Brunnstrom
in Washington; editing by Robert Birsel and Hugh Lawson)
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