Bangkok Post

North Korea ‘tested underwater nuclear drone’

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>>BEIJING: North Korea claimed Friday it had tested an underwater nuclear attack drone able to unleash a “radioactiv­e tsunami”, as it blamed recent US-South Korea exercises for a deteriorat­ing regional security situation.

Pyongyang carried out military drills of its own in response this week, the official Korean Central News Agency said, including test-firing a new nuclear-capable underwater drone.

The weapon’s mission is to “stealthily infiltrate into operationa­l waters and make a superscale radioactiv­e tsunami ... to destroy naval striker groups and major operationa­l ports of the enemy”, it said.

The new weapon called Haeil, which means tsunami in Korean, “can be deployed at any coast and port or towed by a surface ship for operation”, the report said.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un personally oversaw the tests, KCNA reported, and images released by Pyongyang’s Rodong Sinmun newspaper showed a smiling Mr Kim and what appeared to be an underwater explosion.

The agency also said Pyongyang had fired strategic cruise missiles “tipped with a test warhead simulating a nuclear warhead” on Wednesday.

But analysts questioned North Korea’s claims.

The idea that Pyongyang has “a nuclear-capable underwater drone should be met with scepticism”, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.

“Pyongyang’s claims about a new weapons system are not the same as a credible demonstrat­ion of capability,” he added.

In a Twitter post, US-based analyst Ankit Panda said it could not be ruled out that the announceme­nt was “an attempt at deception/psyop”.

Even so, the claim was “shocking,” Cheong Seong-chang of the private Sejong Institute told AFP.

If true, it is hard to see how Seoul “could respond to such a formidable new weapon from North Korea that (it says) can completely destroy the South’s major operationa­l ports”.

The KCNA statement also indicates “Pyongyang is more than ready to use its tactical nuclear weapons at any time,” said An Chan-il, a defector-turned-researcher.

“This obviously further strengthen­s Mr Kim’s justificat­ion for his future nuclear tests.”

Russia has also reportedly developed a similar weapon — nuclear-capable Poseidon torpedoes — but mastering the complex technology required for such weaponry might yet be beyond North Korea, experts said.

“For an unmanned submarine to go deep underwater undetected, it requires advanced technology such as control sensors and radar,” said Choi Gi-il, professor of military studies at Sangji University.

North Korea has not acquired this “to an extent that it can deploy nuclear unmanned sea drones in combat yet”, but its claims about the Haeil drone fit a broader pattern, Prof Choi said.

Pyongyang has moved on from simply stockpilin­g nuclear warheads and is “attempting to further advance and diversify launch mediums”, he said, adding that further testing could yet give Pyongyang “formidable” new ways to deliver a nuclear payload.

 ?? ?? HAEIL FORECAST: The underwater nuclear strategic attack weapon system ‘Haeil’ fires off the coast of North Korea’s South Hamgyong Province on Thursday.
HAEIL FORECAST: The underwater nuclear strategic attack weapon system ‘Haeil’ fires off the coast of North Korea’s South Hamgyong Province on Thursday.
 ?? ?? Kim: ‘Radioactiv­e tsunami’
Kim: ‘Radioactiv­e tsunami’

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