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		North Korean leader furious over failed destroyer launch, vows to arrest 
		those responsible
		[May 23, 2025]  
		By HYUNG-JIN KIM and KIM TONG-HYUNG 
		SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea is seeking to arrest those 
		responsible for the failed launch of its second naval destroyer, as it 
		denied the warship suffered major damage — a claim quickly met with 
		outside skepticism.
 A statement from North Korea on its handling of the botched launch came 
		after leader Kim Jong Un expressed fury over the incident that he said 
		was caused by criminal negligence. The main military committee said 
		Friday that those responsible would be held accountable for their 
		“unpardonable criminal act.”
 
 Satellite imagery on the site showed the vessel lying on its side and 
		draped in blue covers, with parts of it submerged. North Korea says it 
		will take about 10 days to repair the damage, but outside observers 
		question that timeframe because damage to the ship appeared much worse 
		than what North Korea claims.
 
 Here is what you need to know about the failed ship launch:
 
 How much damage was there to the ship?
 
 North Korea's state media said Friday the severity of the damage to the 
		5,000-ton-class destroyer was “not serious" as it canceled an earlier 
		assessment that the bottom of the hull had been left with holes.
 
 It said the hull on the starboard side was scratched and some seawater 
		had flowed into the stern section. It said it needs a total of 10 days 
		to pump out the seawater, set the ship upright and fix the scratches.
 
 It's almost impossible to verify the assessment because of the extremely 
		secretive nature of North Korea. It has a history of manipulating or 
		covering up military-related setbacks, policy fiascoes and other 
		mishaps, though it has periodically acknowledged some in recent years.
 
		
		 
		Lee Illwoo, an expert with the Korea Defense Network in South Korea, 
		said the North Korean warship likely suffered much worse damage, 
		including the flooding of its engine room located in the stern section, 
		and holes in the starboard. He said North Korea could simply set the 
		ship upright, paint it over and claim the ship has been launched, but 
		that repairs could take more than a year as the replacement of an engine 
		requires cutting the hull.
 Why the ship's launch failed
 
 According to the North Korean account, the destroyer was damaged when a 
		transport cradle on the ship's stern detached early during a launch 
		ceremony at the northeastern port of Chongjin on Wednesday.
 
 Moon Keun-sik, a navy expert who teaches at Seoul’s Hanyang University, 
		said North Korean workers are probably not familiar with launching a 
		5,000-ton-class warship, which is a few times heavier than its existing 
		main navy ships.
 
		
		 
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            This satellite image from Planet Labs PBC shows a blue tarp covering 
			a North Korean destroyer after it suffered a failed launch while it 
			was being put to sea in Chongjin, North Korea, Friday, May 23, 2025. 
			(Planet Labs PBC via AP) 
            
			
			
			 
            Observers say North Korea tried to launch the destroyer sideways, a 
			method it has never used for warships, although it has previously 
			employed it with big cargo and passenger ships.
 Compared with those non-military vessels, Lee sad it would be more 
			difficult to maintain balance with the destroyer because it's 
			equipped with heavy weapons systems. He suspected North Korean 
			scientists and officials likely did not factor that in.
 
 How Kim has reacted
 
 The damaged ship is assessed as the same class as North Korea’s 
			first destroyer, launched with great fanfare last month with a 
			floating dry dock at a western shipyard. It is North Korea's biggest 
			and most advanced warship to date, and Kim called its construction 
			“a breakthrough” in modernizing North Korea’s naval forces to cope 
			with what he calls U.S.-led security threats.
 
 Subsequently, a failure to launch the second destroyer was an 
			embarrassment for Kim. But by disclosing the failure both internally 
			and externally, Kim could be trying to show his resolve in building 
			greater naval forces and boosting discipline at home. He ordered 
			officials to repair the warship before a ruling Workers’ Party 
			meeting in late June.
 
 The official Korean Central News Agency said Friday that a team of 
			prosecutors and experts began steps to arrest and investigate those 
			responsible as part of their full-scale investigation into the case. 
			KCNA said that Hong Kil Ho, manager of the Chongjin shipyard, has 
			been summoned for questioning.
 
 "No matter how good the state of the warship is, the fact that the 
			accident is an unpardonable criminal act remains unchanged, and 
			those responsible for it can never evade their responsibility for 
			the crime,” the North's Central Military Commission said in an 
			instruction to the investigation team, according to KCNA.
 
 Kim Dong-yub, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies 
			in Seoul, said North Korea appears to be using the failed launch as 
			a chance to strengthen the ruling party's control over science and 
			technological sectors.
 
 Lee Choon Geun, an honorary research fellow at South Korea’s Science 
			and Technology Policy Institute, said that North Korea’s handling of 
			the damaged warship could have long-term consequences for its 
			defense science sector.
 
 “If scientists are held severely accountable, I would say the future 
			of North Korea’s defense science doesn’t look very bright, as it 
			would be a sign that political responsibility is being prioritized 
			over technical accountability,” Lee wrote on Facebook.
 
			
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