Kuwait Times

Missile Defense 101: N Korea could hit with no warning

How long would it take to hit its primary targets?

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The scenario has become pretty familiar by now. Sometime in the early morning, a missile roars off its launcher in North Korea and flies off to a splash zone somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. But what if Pyongyang wasn’t just testing its hardware or drilling its troops? How long would it take to hit its real-world, primary targets?

Below, two experts talk to The Associated Press about what would happen if North Korea fired at targets near and far. They are David Wright, senior scientist and co-director of the Global Security Program of the Union of Concerned Scientists, and analyst Markus Schiller, of ST Analytics, an independen­t space technology and rocketry consulting company based in Germany. The takeaway: It would get very messy, very fast.

Seoul: From essentiall­y zero to 6 minutes

Well before North Korea had a nuclear program, it realized it could hold the 10 million people of greater Seoul, the capital of South Korea, hostage with the threat of a massive, convention­al artillery strike from its dug-in gun batteries concentrat­ed just north of the Demilitari­zed Zone. If it were to launch such a strike first, the first wave of shells could land with essentiall­y no warning. Estimates vary as to how much damage such an attack could actually wreak - Pyongyang can’t, as it has claimed, reduce Seoul to a sea of ashes before a pulverizin­g counteratt­ack - but it would be considerab­le. Seoul’s defenses are porous. It has Patriot missile-defense batteries, but they are intended to protect against short-range Scud missiles. They would not help against an artillery attack. The much-talked-about, state-of-the-art THAAD missile defense system deployed in South Korea this month also cannot protect Seoul from either artillery or incoming missiles - it isn’t designed to do that from its current site.

To make things uglier, the North could hit the South with chemical or biological warheads. One nuclear scenario that has been raised is an attack on the city of Busan, a major port sometimes used by the US Navy. That’s an option Pyongyang might consider if it believed it was under immediate threat of attack and wanted to make a show of overwhelmi­ng force to keep Washington from committing further.

Tokyo: 10-11 minutes

Japan also has Patriot missiles it deploys, among other places, on the grounds of its Defense Ministry in downtown Tokyo. It helped develop with the US the ship-based Aegis system, which is designed to intercept medium-range missiles and potentiall­y intermedia­te-range ones - that means missiles with a range of less than about 5,000 kilometers.

The Patriots are designed to intercept an incoming missile at its “terminal stage” - just before it hits - if the Aegis’ ship-based SM-3 missiles fail to intercept them farther out and higher up, at mid-course. Schiller has one strong caution at this point: It remains unknown whether Pyongyang actually has a working nuclear warhead, “not just some nuclear device that goes boom in a tunnel, under laboratory conditions.”

But serious questions have been raised over whether this multilayer strategy, even when augmented by the THAAD system, would be a reliable missile shield. One problem is whether it could be overwhelme­d by a “swarm” attack - several incoming missiles at the same time. Recognizin­g the current shield’s weaknesses, some Japanese ruling party lawmakers are pushing for a first-strike plan of Japan’s own, using ballistic or cruise missiles, or F-35 stealth fighters.

San Francisco: 30-34 minutes

To be classified as an ICBM - interconti­nental ballistic missile - the missile must have a minimum range of 5,500 kilometers. North Korea does not at this time have such a missile, as far as the experts can tell. The missile it launched on Sunday came close, flying for 30 minutes on a highly “lofted” trajectory that if flattened out would suggest a range of about 4,500 kilometers.

That’s good enough to get it to Guam, the key US military hub in the Pacific, in about 15 minutes. Beyond that, its capabiliti­es are in doubt. Schiller explains that the time it takes for an ICBM to cover its first 5,500 kilometers is usually a little more than 20 minutes. If you fire at something 10,000 kilometers away, however, he says it will still reach it in less than 30 minutes.

So while Wright suggests 33-34 minutes to San Francisco, Schiller predicts a faster trip to the West Coast - saying a missile could hit Seattle (8,000 kilometers) and Los Angeles (9,000 kilometers) away in less than 30 minutes from launch. But that’s assuming a North Korean launch from within its own territory. To get around the distance problem, and to bolster its stealth, North Korea is already developing submarine-launched ballistic missiles. Experts believe it will take years for the North to have a sub-based missile it could actually use in an attack, but it successful­ly tested its first one - named Polaris, the same name as the first US missile of that kind - last year.

Washington DC: 30-39 minutes

New York and Washington are less than 11,000 kilometers away. That translates to about 30 minutes according to Schiller, or 38-39 minutes by Wright’s estimate. The United States relies in large part on its Ground-based Missile Defense system, with bases in Vandenberg Air Base in California and Fort Greely, Alaska, to intercept incoming ICBMs. According to the US Missile Defense Agency, which estimates that North Korea now “fields hundreds of missiles that can reach US forces forward deployed to the Republic of Korea and Japan,” US missile defense systems like the GMD and THAAD “discourage adversarie­s from believing they can use ballistic missiles to coerce or intimidate the US or its allies.” But critics point out the GMD, which has cost $40 billion, had six out of its nine test intercepts fail between 2002 and 2016. They claim the strategy has “no credible plan for defeating countermea­sures” such as decoys. — AP

 ??  ?? TOKYO: South Korean special presidenti­al envoy Moon Hee-Sang (L) meets with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida (R) at the foreign ministry. — AFP
TOKYO: South Korean special presidenti­al envoy Moon Hee-Sang (L) meets with Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida (R) at the foreign ministry. — AFP

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