Santa Fe New Mexican

North Korea was so proud of missile, it got its own shrine

- By William J. Broad

The sleuths suspected that the satellite images showed the launching site of North Korea’s most powerful missile, but they were baffled by a mysterious bustle of constructi­on there.

Closer scrutiny, astronomy and a smart hunch about North Korea propaganda confirmed it. They were witnessing the constructi­on of a shrine to the missile, the Hwasong-15, the first built by North Korea that could hit anywhere in the United States.

Routinely, the image sleuths try to examine sites where the North launches its mobile missiles in a hunt for deployment clues and terrain suitabilit­y. The sleuths knew the general area of the Nov. 28 missile firing because they had identified the factory where the mobile launcher had been readied. The hot spot had to be nearby.

They identified two plausible sites and then reached out to Marco Langbroek, a Dutch astronomer who helped them focus their suspicions on one particular location by studying photograph­s of star positions during the nighttime launching.

But last month the satellite analysts began scratching their heads.

The site, carved out of farm fields and small roads, began to crawl with trucks, digging gear and constructi­on crews. What was going on?

David Schmerler, an analyst at the James Martin Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies, in Monterey, Calif., knows a thing or two about North Korean culture and propaganda, having watched many official videos of visitors going to historic sites honored by the government. He knows a giant memorial when he sees one.

“At first, I wondered if I had made a mistake,” he recalled in a recent report on the finding. “Maybe the constructi­on was for something else, and the timing was just a coincidenc­e.” Then, as work proceeded, he realized that his hunch had been correct.

His report shows five close-up images. They start on Dec. 5 with the bare-bones launching site and then show a heave of constructi­on for a project that seems to be nearing completion. The monthlong sequence of building images goes from Feb. 11 to March 11.

In an interview, Schmerler said that, in addition to a parking area, the site shows a reconstruc­ted launching pad and, next to it, a large memorial. He added that he expected future images to show landscapin­g.

“They’re going to make this look a lot prettier than a random monument in a farming town,” he said. “It’s a huge achievemen­t for the North Koreans. They’re going to celebrate it in every way possible, including with a monument at the launch site where they can stir the revolution­ary spirit.”

North Korea builds lots of large stone monuments. A review of official photograph­s shows that they typically fall into a heroic mold meant to inspire with height or width, or both. They’re always cut with large letters.

Snapshots of the rising missile memorial were possible because the Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies uses surveillan­ce imagery from Planet, a company in San Francisco that has deployed swarms of tiny satellites that capture images of the Earth’s landmass daily.

North Korea’s other celebratio­ns for the Hwasong-15 have included an event honoring the missile scientists in the nation’s capital, the issuing of a commemorat­ive stamp and the holding of a giant indoor concert featuring a film of the liftoff punctuated with fireworks and a light show.

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