International News

N. Korea completes work at missile sub shipyard: US think tank

SEOUL, (APP/AFP) – Recent satellite images
suggest North Korea has completed the external refurbishment of a shipyard dedicated to building and launching a new class of ballistic missile submarines a US think tank said Wednesday.
While it is unlikely that any such vessel would become operational
before 2020, the North’s efforts to develop a working submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) is clearly “making progress”, according to the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University.
A credible SLBM capability would take North Korea’s nuclear strike
threat to a new level, allowing deployment far beyond the Korean peninsula and the potential to retaliate in the event of a nuclear attack.
Last month, one of the North’s experimental GORAE-class submarines
carried out an SLBM test in the East Sea (Sea of Japan), launching a missile that travelled around 19 miles (30 kilometres).
South Korea deemed the test a failure as the missile appeared to have
exploded, but analysts at the US Korea Institute said it was a success.
“It was probably intended to be limited, focusing upon the
submarine’s launch systems, missile ignition sequence and initial guidance operations rather than a full operational test,” it said, predicting further similar launches this year before a “full-range” flight test.
Satellite pictures dated April 28, five days after the test, showed
post-launch maintenance activity being carried out on the submarine at the
North’s Sinpo South Shipyard.