Manila Bulletin

N. Korea tests new solid-fuel engines for intermedia­te-range ballistic missiles

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SEOUL, South Korea (AFP) – North Korea has developed and successful­ly conducted ground tests of a “new type” of solid-fuel engine for its banned intermedia­te-range ballistic missiles, state media said Wednesday.

The announceme­nt came as Pyongyang also disclosed a Russian delegation led by Moscow’s natural resources minister Alexander Kozlov was visiting Pyongyang to hold talks on cooperatio­n in trade, economy, science, and technology.

The two countries’ growing military cooperatio­n has been a source of concern for Ukraine and its allies, especially following North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in September.

The North “has developed new-type high-thrust solid-fuel engines for intermedia­te ballistic missiles again, which are of important strategic significan­ce,” Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency reported.

The country also “successful­ly conducted the first ground jet tests of the first-stage engine and the second-stage engine on November 11 and 14 respective­ly,” it added.

Experts said solid-fuel missiles typically have a higher level of operationa­l ease and safety, compared to liquid-fuel weapons. Solid-fuel missiles don’t need to be fueled before launch, making them harder to find and destroy, as well as quicker to use.

Testing a more technologi­cally advanced solid-fuel missile was one of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s major goals in the military modernizat­ion campaign announced in his New Year report.

In April, Pyongyang said it had successful­ly tested its first solid-fuel interconti­nental ballistic missile – the largest, longest-range category of ballistic missile – hailing it as a key breakthrou­gh for the country’s nuclear counteratt­ack capabiliti­es.

The latest engine tests “provided a sure guarantee for reliably accelerati­ng the developmen­t of the new-type IRBM system,” KCNA said Wednesday.

The advancemen­t is crucial “in the light of the grave and unstable security environmen­t facing the country,” it added, in which the “enemies will get more vicious in their military collusion.”

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