The Palm Beach Post

Missile’s range a surprise to U.S.

U.S., S. Korea respond to ‘unlawful actions’ with own launches.

- By Joby Warrick Washington Post

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — The North Korean missile that soared high above the Sea of Japan early Monday was hailed by state-run television as a “shining success.” But to U.S. officials, it was a most unwelcome surprise: a weapon with interconti­nental range, delivered years before most Western experts believed such a feat possible.

Hours after the apparently successful test, intelligen­ce agencies continued to run calculatio­ns to determine precisely how the missile, dubbed the Hwasong-14, performed in its maiden flight. But the consensus among missile experts was that North Korea had achieved a long-sought milestone, demonstrat­ing a capability of striking tar-

gets thousands of miles from its coast.

Initial Pentagon assessment­s said North Korea had tested a “land-based, intermedia­te-range” missile that landed in the Sea of Japan just under 600 linear miles from its launch point, Panghyon Airfield, near the Chinese border. Government and independen­t analyses showed the missile traveling in a steep arc that topped out at more than 1,740 vertical miles above the Earth’s surface.

If flown in a more typical trajectory, the missile would have easily traveled 4,000 miles, potentiall­y putting all of Alaska within its range, according to former government officials and independen­t analysts. A missile that exceeds a range of 3,400 miles is classified as an interconti­nental ballistic missile, or ICBM.

“This is a big deal: It’s an ICBM, not a ‘kind of ’ ICBM,” said Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia program at the Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies. “And there’s no reason to think that this is going to be the maximum range.”

David Wright, senior scientist for the Union of Concerned Scientists, calculated in a published analysis that the Hwasong-14’s demonstrat­ed capability exceeded 4,100 linear miles, based on preliminar­y estimates released Monday.

“That range would not be enough to reach the Lower 48 states or the large islands of Hawaii, but would allow it to reach all of Alaska,” Wright said.

The U.S. Army and South Korean military on Tuesday reported making their own missile launches into South Korean territoria­l waters, U.S. Pacific Command said in a statement. The launches were directly in response to “North Korea’s destabiliz­ing and unlawful actions,” Pacific Command said.

The Army used its Army Tactical Missile System and South Korea used its Hyun- moo Missile II, which can be deployed rapidly and provide “deep strike precision capa- bility, Pacific Command said.

The South Korean-U.S. mil- itary alliance “remains committed to peace and prosper- ity on the Korean Peninsula and throughout the Asia-Pacific,” Pacific Command said. “The U.S. commitment to the defense of the (Republic of Korea) in the face of threats is ironclad.”

North Korea’s appar- ent accomplish­ment puts it well ahead of schedule in its years-long quest to develop a true The Hwasong-14 tested Monday could not have reached the U.S. mainland, analysts say, and there’s no evidence to date that North Korea is capable of building a miniaturiz­ed nuclear warhead to fit on one of its lon- ger-range missiles. But there is now little reason to doubt that both are within North Korea’s grasp, weapons experts say.

“In the past five years, we have seen significan­t, and much more rapid-than-ex- pected developmen­t of their ballistic-missiles capability,” said Victor Cha, a former director of Asian affairs for the George W. Bush admin- istration’s National Security Council. “Their capabiliti­es have exceeded our expectatio­ns on a consistent basis.”

While U.S. intelligen­ce offi- cials have sought, with some success, to disrupt North Korea’s progress, Pyong- yang has achieved breakthrou­ghs in multiple areas, such as the developmen­t of solid-fuel rocket engines and mobile-launch capabiliti­es, including rockets that can be fired from submarines. Early analysis suggests that the Hwasong-14 uses a new kind of indigenous­ly built bal- listic-missile engine, one that North Korea unveiled with fanfare on March 18. Nearly all the country’s previous ballistic missiles used engines based on modificati­ons of older, Soviet-era technology.

“It’s not a copy of a crappy Soviet engine, and it’s not a pair of Soviet engines kludged together — it’s the real thing,” Lewis said. “When they first unveiled the engine on March 18, they said that the ‘world would soon see what this means.’ I think we’re now seeing them take that basic engine design and execute it for an ICBM.”

In announcing the test in a special TV broadcast Monday, North Korean officials proclaimed that the country had achieved an ICBM capability that would safeguard the communist government from attacks by the United States and other adversarie­s. According to U.S. analysts, leader Kim Jong Un has long calculated that nuclear-armed ICBMs are the best deterrence against threats to his survival, as any perceived aggression against him could trigger a retaliator­y strike targeting U.S. cities.

“As the dignified nuclear power who possesses the strongest interconti­nental ballistic rocket which is capable of hitting any part of the world along with the nuclear weapons, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea will fundamenta­lly terminate the U.S. nuclear war threats and blackmail and credibly protect the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula and the region,” a government spokeswoma­n said in a bulletin read on state-run television.

The spokeswoma­n added that the missile’s trajectory was deliberate­ly set “at the highest angle” to avoid harming neighborin­g countries.

That claim rang true to U.S. analysts, who agreed that the high arc was likely intended to avoid hitting Japanese territory. Moreover, the rocket’s path would help North Korea secure secrecy. By sending the spent engine splashing into the deep waters of the Sea of Japan, Pyongyang ensured that it would be hard for U.S. and Japanese divers to find and retrieve the parts.

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