Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump inherited cyberwar against N. Korean missiles

- By David E. Sanger and William J. Broad

WASHINGTON — Three years ago, President Barack Obama ordered Pentagon officials to step up their cyber and electronic strikes against North Korea’s missile program in hopes of sabotaging test launches in their opening seconds.

Soon, a large number of the North’s military rockets began to explode, veer off course, disintegra­te in midair and plunge into the sea. Advocates of such efforts say they believe that targeted attacks have given U.S. antimissil­e defenses a new edge and delayed by several years the day when North Korea will be able to threaten U.S. cities with nuclear weapons launched atop interconti­nental ballistic missiles.

But other experts have grown increasing­ly skeptical of the new approach, arguing that manufactur­ing errors, disgruntle­d insiders and sheer incompeten­ce can also send missiles awry. Over the past eight months, they note, the North has managed to successful­ly launch three medium-range rockets. And Kim Jong Un, the North

Korean leader, now claims his country is in “the final stage in preparatio­ns” for the inaugural test of his interconti­nental missiles — perhaps a bluff, perhaps not.

An examinatio­n of the Pentagon’s disruption effort, based on interviews with officials of the Obama and Trump administra­tions as well as a review of extensive but obscure public records, found that the United States still does not have the ability to effectivel­y counter the North Korean nuclear and missile programs. Those threats are far more resilient than many experts thought, The New York Times’ reporting found, and pose such a danger that Obama, as he left office, warned President Donald Trump they were likely to be the most urgent problem he would confront.

Trump has signaled his preference to respond aggressive­ly against the North Korean threat. In a Twitter post after Kim first issued his warning on New Year’s Day, the president wrote, “It won’t happen!” Yet like Obama before him, Trump is quickly discoverin­g he must choose from highly imperfect options.

He could order the escalation of the Pentagon’s cyber and electronic warfare effort, but that carries no guarantees. He could open negotiatio­ns with the North to freeze its nuclear and missile programs, but that would leave a looming threat in place. He could prepare for direct missile strikes on the launch sites, which Obama also considered, but there is little chance of hitting every target. He could press the Chinese to cut off trade and support, but Beijing has always stopped short of steps that could lead to the regime’s collapse.

In two meetings of Trump’s national security deputies in the Situation Room, the most recent on Tuesday, all those options were discussed, along with the possibilit­y of reintroduc­ing nuclear weapons to South Korea as a dramatic warning. Administra­tion officials say those issues will soon go to Trump and his top national security aides.

The decision to intensify the cyber and electronic strikes, in early 2014, came after Obama concluded that the $300 billion spent since the Eisenhower era on traditiona­l antimissil­e systems, often compared to hitting “a bullet with a bullet,” had failed the core purpose of protecting the continenta­l United States. Flight tests of intercepto­rs based in Alaska and California had an overall failure rate of 56 percent, under nearperfec­t conditions. Privately, many experts warned the system would fare worse in real combat.

So the Obama administra­tion searched for a better way to destroy missiles. It reached for techniques the Pentagon had long been experiment­ing with under the rubric of “left of launch,” because the attacks begin before the missiles ever reach the launchpad, or just as they lift off. For years, the Pentagon’s most senior officers and officials have publicly advocated these kinds of sophistica­ted attacks in littlenoti­ced testimony to Congress and at defense conference­s.

The approach taken in targeting the North Korean missiles has distinct echoes of the U.S.- and Israeli-led sabotage of Iran’s nuclear program, the most sophistica­ted known use of a cyberweapo­n meant to cripple a nuclear threat. But even that use of the “Stuxnet” worm in Iran quickly ran into limits. It was effective for several years, until the Iranians figured it out and recovered. And Iran posed a relatively easy target: an undergroun­d nuclear enrichment plant that could be attacked repeatedly.

In North Korea, the target is much more challengin­g. Missiles are fired from multiple launch sites around the country and moved about on mobile launchers in an elaborate shell game meant to deceive adversarie­s. To strike them, timing is critical.

Advocates of the sophistica­ted effort to remotely manipulate data inside North Korea’s missile systems argue the United States has no real alternativ­e because the effort to stop the North from learning the secrets of making nuclear weapons has already failed. The only hope now is stopping the country from developing an interconti­nental missile and demonstrat­ing that destructiv­e threat to the world.

“Disrupting their tests,” William J. Perry, secretary of defense in the Clinton administra­tion, said at a recent presentati­on in Washington, would be “a pretty effective way of stopping their ICBM program.”

Decades in the making

Three generation­s of the Kim family have dreamed that their broken, otherwise failed nation could build its own nuclear weapons, and the missiles to deliver them, as the ultimate survival strategy. With nukes in hand, the Kims have calculated, they need not fear being overrun by South Korea, invaded by the United States or sold out by China.

North Korea began seeking an interconti­nental ballistic missile decades ago: It was the dream of Kim Il Sung, the country’s founder, who bitterly remembered the U.S. threats to use nuclear weapons against the North during the Korean War.

His break came after the collapse of the Soviet Union, when out-of-work Russian rocket scientists began seeking employment in North Korea. Soon, a new generation of North Korean missiles began to appear, all knockoffs of Soviet designs. Though flight tests were sparse, American experts marveled at how the North seemed to avoid the kinds of failures that typically strike new rocket programs, including those of the United States in the late 1950s.

The success was so marked that Timothy McCarthy of the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey wrote in a 2001 analysis that Pyongyang’s record “appears completely unique in the history of missile developmen­t and production.”

In response, President George W. Bush announced in late 2002 the deployment of antimissil­e intercepto­rs in Alaska and California. At the same time, Bush accelerate­d programs to get inside the long supply chain of parts for North Korean missiles, lacing them with defects and weaknesses, a technique also used for years against Iran.

Threat grows in Obama era

By the time Obama took office in January 2009, the North had deployed hundreds of short- and medium-range missiles that used Russian designs and had made billions of dollars selling its Scud missiles to Egypt, Libya, Pakistan, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen. But it aspired to a new generation of missiles that could fire warheads over much longer distances.

In secret cables written in the first year of the Obama administra­tion, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton laid out the emerging threat. Among the most alarming released by WikiLeaks, the cables described a new path the North was taking to reach its long-range goal, based on a missile designed by the Soviets decades ago for their submarines that carried thermonucl­ear warheads.

It was called the R-27. Unlike the North’s lumbering, older rockets and missiles, these would be small enough to hide in caves and move into position by truck. The advantage was clear: This missile would be far harder for the United States to find and destroy.

“North Korea’s next goal may be to develop a mobile ICBM that would be capable of threatenin­g targets around the world,” said an October 2009 cable marked “Secret” and signed by Clinton.

The next year, one of the new missiles showed up in a North Korean military parade, just as the intelligen­ce reports had warned.

By 2013, North Korean rockets thundered with new regularity. And that February, the North set off a nuclear test that woke up Washington: The monitoring data told of an explosion roughly the size of the bomb that leveled Hiroshima.

Days after the explosion, the Pentagon announced an expansion of its force of antimissil­e intercepto­rs in California and Alaska. It also began to unveil its “left of launch” program to disable missiles before liftoff — hoping to bolster its chances of destroying them. Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, announced the program, saying that “cyberwarfa­re, directed energy and electronic attack,” a reference to such things as malware, lasers and signal jamming, were all becoming important new adjuncts to the traditiona­l ways of deflecting enemy strikes.

The North’s missiles soon began to fail at a remarkable pace. Some were destroyed, no doubt, by accident as well as by design. The technology the North was pursuing, using new designs and new engines, involved multistage rockets, introducin­g all kinds of possibilit­ies for catastroph­ic mistakes. But by most accounts, the U.S. program accentuate­d the failures.

The evidence was in the numbers. Most flight tests of an intermedia­te-range missile called the Musudan, the weapon that the North Koreans showed off in public just after Clinton’s warning, ended in flames: Its overall failure rate is 88 percent.

Nonetheles­s, Kim Jong Un has pressed ahead on his main goal: an interconti­nental ballistic missile. Last April, he was photograph­ed standing next to a giant test stand, celebratin­g after engineers successful­ly fired off a matched pair of the potent Russian-designed R-27 engines. The implicatio­n was clear: Strapping two of the engines together at the base of a missile was the secret to building an ICBM that could ultimately hurl warheads at the United States.

In September, he celebrated the most successful test yet of a North Korean nuclear weapon — one that exploded with more than twice the destructiv­e force of the Hiroshima bomb.

His next goal, experts say, is to combine those two technologi­es, shrinking his nuclear warheads to a size that can fit on an interconti­nental missile. Only then can he credibly claim that his isolated country has the know-how to hit a U.S. city thousands of miles away.

Hard decisions for a new president

As a presidenti­al candidate, Trump complained that “we’re so obsolete in cyber,” a line that grated on officials at the U.S. Cyber Command and the National Security Agency, where billions of dollars have been spent to provide the president with new options for intelligen­ce gathering and cyberattac­ks. Now, one of the immediate questions he faces is whether to accelerate or scale back those efforts.

A decision to go after an adversary’s launch ability can have unintended consequenc­es, experts warn. Once the United States uses cyberweapo­ns against nuclear launch systems — even in a threatenin­g state like North Korea — Russia and China may feel free to do the same, targeting fields of U.S. missiles.

Some strategist­s argue that all nuclear systems should be offlimits for cyberattac­k. Otherwise, if a nuclear power thought it could secretly disable an adversary’s atomic controls, it might be more tempted to take the risk of launching a pre-emptive attack.

“I understand the urgent threat,” said Amy Zegart, a Stanford University intelligen­ce and cybersecur­ity expert, who said she had no independen­t knowledge of the U.S. effort. “But 30 years from now, we may decide it was a very, very dangerous thing to do.”

Trump’s aides say everything is on the table. China recently cut off coal imports from the North, but the United States is also looking at ways to freeze the Kim family’s assets, some of which are believed held in Chinese-controlled banks. The Chinese have already opposed the deployment of a high-altitude missile defense system known as THAAD in South Korea; the Trump team may call for even more such systems.

The White House is also looking at pre-emptive military strike options, a senior Trump administra­tion official said, though the challenge is huge given the country’s mountainou­s terrain and deep tunnels and bunkers. Putting U.S. tactical nuclear weapons back in South Korea — they were withdrawn a quarter-century ago — is also under considerat­ion, even if that step could accelerate an arms race with the North.

Trump’s “It won’t happen!” post on Twitter about the North’s ICBM threat suggests a larger confrontat­ion could be looming.

“Regardless of Trump’s actual intentions,” James M. Acton, a nuclear analyst at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace recently noted, “the tweet could come to be seen as a ‘red line’ and hence set up a potential test of his credibilit­y.”

 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kim Jong-un visits a missile test center in North Pyongan Province in April. Analysts say the pair of engines he is standing in front of could power an interconti­nental ballistic missile.
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Kim Jong-un visits a missile test center in North Pyongan Province in April. Analysts say the pair of engines he is standing in front of could power an interconti­nental ballistic missile.
 ?? KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A photo released by the North Korean government in June shows the launch of North Korea’s Musudan missile. The Musudan had an overall failure rate of 88 percent, much higher than the 13 percent failure rate of the Soviet-era missile on which it was...
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A photo released by the North Korean government in June shows the launch of North Korea’s Musudan missile. The Musudan had an overall failure rate of 88 percent, much higher than the 13 percent failure rate of the Soviet-era missile on which it was...

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