The Korea Times

NK’s recent silence indicates depleted weapons inventorie­s: experts

- By Kwak Yeon-soo yeons.kwak@koreatimes.co.kr

North Korea has notably refrained from military provocatio­ns following a string of displays of force in recent weeks, prompting analysts to speculate that this relative silence could be linked to the reclusive nation’s prioritiza­tion of shipments of weapons and munitions to Russia, potentiall­y leading to shortages domestical­ly.

At the beginning of this year, North Korea’s aggressive posturing was evident through a series of provocativ­e actions. These included test-firings of a new hypersonic solid-fuel intermedia­te-range missile equipped with a warhead, trials of its Haeil-5-23 underwater nuclear weapon system and multiple rounds of cruise missile launches. The military aggression is in line with leader Kim Jong-un’s declaratio­n that he would abandon the existentia­l goal of reconcilin­g with rival South Korea.

However, the North has suspended military provocatio­ns since Feb. 14 when it fired multiple cruise missiles off the eastern coastal city of Wonsan.

Yang Uk, a military expert at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, said North Korea may be short of feasible weapons because many of them were sent to Russia.

“North Korea is using all available means to export its weapons and artillery shells because it’s beneficial to them,” he said.

North Korea has been focusing on deepening military cooperatio­n with Russia and developing internal solidarity. Kim met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Russia last September and allegedly discussed the exchanges of weapons — for Moscow — and military technology — for Pyongyang.

Shin Jong-woo, a senior researcher at the Korea Defense and Security Forum, a think tank, said North Korea is looking to benefit both economical­ly and diplomatic­ally by providing weapons to Russia for its fight in Ukraine.

“It’s been reported that North Korea is offering a range of weapons to Russia, including artillery shells, multiple rocket launchers and short-range ballistic missiles. I believe North Korean scientists and engineers have also been dispatched to Russia, collecting operationa­l data,” Shin said.

According to South Korean Defense Minister Shin Won-sik, Pyongyang is estimated to have sent some 6,700 containers to Moscow apparently containing 3 million rounds of 152-millimeter shells.

North Korea has strongly responded to the annual combined military exercise between South Korea and the U.S. by staging military provocatio­ns, as it denounces the joint drill as a rehearsal for an invasion. This year’s edition began Monday, but the

North has yet to react with any military provocatio­ns.

Despite North Korea’s recent silence lasting for weeks, experts forecast that the country is likely to resume missile tests or take other provocativ­e actions in the near future.

“I believe it will resume military provocatio­ns during or at the end of the combined military drills. If the U.S. sends its strategic military assets to the Korean Peninsula, the North Korean regime could use it as a pretext for military provocatio­n,” Yang said.

Shin added, “The intensity of provocativ­e rhetoric has decreased, but North Korea may stage retaliator­y actions.”

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