Los Angeles Times

How North Korea funds missile tests despite economic hardship

Pyongyang has cheap labor and full control of defense industries, experts note.

- By Hyung-jin Kim and Kim Tong-hyung Hyung-jin Kim and Kim Tong-hyung write for the Associated Press.

SEOUL — North Korea’s recent barrage of missile tests, including Wednesday’s record number of launches, is raising an important question about its weapons program: How does the impoverish­ed country pay for the seemingly endless tests?

Although some experts say each North Korean launch could cost $2 million to $10 million, others say there is no way to estimate accurately given the Pyongyang government’s secretive nature. They say North Korea probably manufactur­es weapons at a much cheaper cost than other countries because of free labor and possible clandestin­e Chinese and Russian support.

Whichever is correct, there are no signs that North Korea’s economic hardships are slowing its weapons tests. Instead, its testing signals that leader Kim Jong Un is determined to show he has the ability to launch nuclear strikes on South Korea and the United States in order to wrest concession­s.

Here is a look at the financial dimensions of North Korea’s missile tests.

How much do tests cost?

North Korea launched at least 23 missiles Wednesday and six more Thursday, adding to its record pace of weapons tests this year. Many were nuclear-capable ballistic missiles designed to destroy South Korean and U.S. targets.

They probably include a developmen­tal Hwasong-17 interconti­nental ballistic missile, surface-to-air missiles and a variety of shortrange ballistic missiles. North Korea had never launched as many missiles in one day as on Wednesday.

Soo Kim, a security analyst at Rand Corp. in Santa Monica, said the cost of a North Korean missile test could range from several million dollars to

$10 million, which would be lower than similar tests in other countries, partly because North Korean labor is cheap.

Bruce Bennet, another expert at the Rand Corp., told Radio Free Asia that the short-range missiles tested Wednesday cost $2 million to $3 million each and the total cost for the day was $50 million to

$75 million. RFA said the maximum estimate is about

the amount that North Korea spent to import rice from China in 2019 to cover grain shortages that year.

Lee Illwoo, an expert with the Korea Defense Network in South Korea, said it’s impossible for outsiders to accurately estimate weapons production costs in North Korea.

“There are no ways for us to find at what cost North Korea produces certain weapons parts,” he said. “They could have manufactur­ed them by themselves, or China might have given them for free or at an extremely cheap price.”

In a report to the office of South Korean lawmaker Shin Won-sik in September, the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul said North Korea was estimated to have spent up to $1.6 billion on its nuclear program since the 1970s.

The report used analyses of nuclear developmen­t programs in other countries. Some observers cautioned against the use of foreign data because the North Korean government doesn’t have to pay for labor or land.

How are they funded?

North Korea’s economic difficulti­es have worsened because of COVID-19, but there have been no reports of substantia­l social unrest or food shortages.

Its weapons developmen­t is being driven by a Soviet-style party-military complex in which the party leadership surroundin­g Kim Jong Un exercises full control over defense industries and faces little budgetary constraint in concentrat­ing national resources on arms developmen­t, said Hong Min, an analyst at Seoul’s Korea

Institute for National Unificatio­n.

In addition to the record number of missile tests this year, there are also signs that North Korea is expanding its munition facilities in a possible attempt to massproduc­e newly developed weapons, Hong said.

Soo Kim, the Rand Corp. analyst, said it is crucial to track how North Korea is financing its weapons programs despite U.S.-led economic sanctions and its own self-imposed isolation.

“This is where sanctionsv­iolating activities, including [North Korea’s] recent foray into cybercrime and cryptocurr­ency hacking, comes into play,” she said. “And of course, having witting partners in Beijing and Moscow aid in sanctions violations also helps the regime’s weapons developmen­t prosper.”

Hong said Russia’s war in Ukraine appears to have opened a new opportunit­y for North Korea amid U.S. accusation­s that the North is covertly shipping a “significan­t” number of artillery shells to Russia. Hong said in return North Korea may seek Russian technology transfers and supplies needed to expand its military capabiliti­es.

What does North Korea gain?

Each of North Korea’s missile and nuclear tests gives its scientists “precious data” on weapons developmen­t and helps cement Kim Jong Un’s leadership while rattling the South Korea-U.S. alliance, said Kim Taewoo, former head of Seoul’s Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n.

“Some people say we should let North Korea keep firing missiles toward the

sea so that they would use up their resources. But I would say that is an extremely naive opinion,” he said.

South Korean media reported that a Hwasong-17 launch Thursday failed because it didn’t follow a normal flight and crashed into the ocean after a stage separation. In a test launch in March, the Hwasong-17 exploded soon after liftoff.

“The missile is under developmen­t. So it’s not the time to call its launch ‘a failure’ and laugh at it,” said Lee, the Korea Defense Network expert.

North Korea has argued its missile tests are meant as a warning against a series of U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises that it views as an invasion rehearsal. Given that, North Korea’s testing activities are likely to continue since Washington and Seoul regularly conduct drills.

North Korea is estimated to have about 1,000 ballistic missiles, more than enough for it to continue its pressure campaign through the 2024 U.S. presidenti­al election to try to win sanctions relief and other concession­s, said Go Myong-hyun, an analyst at Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies.

“What North Korea wants to demonstrat­e before 2024 is that its nuclear weapons arsenal is very advanced, has been completed and represents a much more significan­t threat than before,” Go said. “It’s crucial for them to maintain that threat perception with the United States and they aren’t suddenly going to quiet down.”

 ?? Korean Central News Agency ?? A PHOTO distribute­d by the North Korean government shows what it says was a test launch of the Hwasong-17 interconti­nental ballistic missile on March 24.
Korean Central News Agency A PHOTO distribute­d by the North Korean government shows what it says was a test launch of the Hwasong-17 interconti­nental ballistic missile on March 24.

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