Philippine Daily Inquirer

N. Korea’s new missiles are fakes, analysts say

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TOKYO—A half dozen ominous new North Korean missiles showcased at a lavish military parade were clumsy fakes, analysts say, casting more doubt on the country’s claims of military prowess after its recent rocket launch failure.

The weapons displayed April 15 appear to be a mishmash of liquid-fuel and solid-fuel components that could never fly together. Undulating casings on the missiles suggest the metal is too thin to withstand flight. Each missile was slightly different from the others, even though all were supposedly the same make. They don’t even fit the launchers they were carried on.

“There is no doubt that these missiles were mock-ups,” Markus Schiller and Robert Schmucker, of Germany’s Schmucker Technologi­e, wrote in a paper posted recently on the website Armscontro­lwonk.com that listed those discrepanc­ies. “It remains unknown if they were designed this way to confuse foreign analysts, or if the designers simply did some sloppy work.”

The missiles, called KN-08S, were loaded onto the largest mobile launch vehicles North Korea has ever unveiled. Pyongyang gave them special prominence by presenting them at the end of the parade, which capped weeks of celebratio­ns marking the 100th anniversar­y of the country’s founding father, Kim Il Sung.

The unveiling created an internatio­nal stir. The missiles appeared to be new, and designed for long-range attacks.

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