Updated April 2019
With Donald Trump touting his success at the U.S. - North Korea summit and the appearance that Kim Jong-un will take the required steps to denuclearize his nation, it is important to keep in mind that North Korea is still a relatively strong regional military power. An analysis by the U.S. Department of Defense helps shed some light on the hermit kingdom's military capabilities.
With Donald Trump touting his success at the U.S. - North Korea summit and the appearance that Kim Jong-un will take the required steps to denuclearize his nation, it is important to keep in mind that North Korea is still a relatively strong regional military power. An analysis by the U.S. Department of Defense helps shed some light on the hermit kingdom's military capabilities.
By
way of introduction, out of 133 nations considered to be military powers,
Global Firepower puts North
Korea in 23rd place globally with the following manpower potential:
1.)
Ground Forces:
Let's
open with this map showing the locations and types of North Korea's ground
forces:
The
Korean People's Army (KPA) ground forces consist primarily of regular and light
infantry units are located in forward-deployed and fortified facilities,
thousands of which are underground. These forces are supported by armour
and heavy artillery and have both long-range cannons and rocket artillery that
can reach South Korea's capital, Seoul.
The
KPA's artillery force includes 170-mm guns and 240-mm multiple rocket launchers
(MRLs), many of which are located along the demilitarized zone which separates
North and South Korea. Here is a video showing
North Korea's latest installations of multiple rocket launchers located on an
island in the West Sea region located along the west coast of the Korean
Peninsula:
Here is a video from North Korean
television from 2016 showing the nation's artillery and rocket capabilities:
In
October 2015, North Korea unveiled the latest iteration of its multiple rocket
launcher, a large calibre MRL that has eight rocket tubes on a wheeled chassis,
showing that, despite its grinding poverty and limited funding, the DPRK still has the ability to
produce and upgrade its ground forces.
2.)
Air Forces:
Here is summary of North Korea's air power
capabilities:
Here
is a map showing the locations of North Korea's air force bases:
The
North Korean Air Force (NKAF) has an estimated fleet of more than 1,300
aircraft, most of which are Soviet-era models. Since much of its current
air fleet is technologically less capable than its adversaries, North
Korea relies heavily on both surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft
artillery to protect its airspace. Its most capable combat aircraft are
MiG-29s that it acquired from the Soviet Union in the late 1980s as well as its
MiG-23s and SU-25 ground-attack aircraft. The NKAF also has a fleet of
several hundred helicopters (contradicts the numbers used by Global Firepower)
which could be used for both ground attacks and troop transportation; the fleet
even has some U.S. manufactured MD-500 helicopters.
The
NKAF is also developing a series of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), a program
that has been in place since the late1980s when North Korea acquired its first
UAV from China. The nation's largest
drone is said to be derived
from a U.S.-made Beechcraft MQM-107D Streaker which was likely acquired from
Syria or Egypt. Here is another North Korean drone that crashed on the
island of Baengnyeon-do, 201 kilometres northwest of Seoul, which resembles a
miniature aircraft:
This
UAV was equipped with onboard GPS and was autonomous, programmed to return to
the North Korean airfield from which it was launched. It flew at an
altitude of 3000 metres, above the effective range of South Korea's Vulcan air
defense weapons. It eventually crashed due to engine failure after a
flight of 105 kilometres.
Here
is a photograph of a North Korean UAV taken during a July 2013 military parade:
3.)
Navy:
Here
is a map showing the locations of North Korea's naval bases:
The
North Korean Navy (NKN) is the smallest of North Korea's armed services and is
divided into two fleets, one for each of the east and west coasts. The
NKN has one of the world's largest fleets of submarines with a total of roughly
70 attack-, coastal-, and midget-submarines. Here is a brief video showing North Korea's
submarine capabilities:
The
NKN also has a coastal force that is made up of small patrol craft armed with a
variety of anti-ship cruise missiles and torpedoes. It also has a fleet
of hovercraft and conventional landing craft that could be used to support an
invasion.
4.)
Special Forces:
North
Korea's Special Operations Forces (SOF) are among the most highly trained and
motivated forces in the Korean People's Army. Given the relative
capability gap of the KPA when compared to the United States, it appears that
North Korea regards the SOF as vital since they are capable of launching rapid
defensive operations against foreign attacks or as a force to attack South
Korea's vulnerable targets. Special Operations Forces are moved by air,
navy and by foot and can also travel through the network of tunnels that cross
the demilitarized zone. Here is a video showing the North Korean
tunnel (3rd Infiltration Tunnel) which would have been used to infiltrate South
Korea:
As
you can see, while North Korea may not have the military might to defeat a
coalition of forces led by the United States, it is apparent that their current military strength could lead to a long war of
attrition would be very costly in terms of men and materiel for both sides of
any conflict. But then again, it's war that keeps the the global
military-industrial complex swimming in profits.
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