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Analyst: North Korea submarine deployment could mean SLBM test

By Elizabeth Shim
Reports of a possible North Korea submarine deployment into international waters could mean the country is preparing for an SLBM test. File Photo by KCNA
Reports of a possible North Korea submarine deployment into international waters could mean the country is preparing for an SLBM test. File Photo by KCNA

July 21 (UPI) -- North Korea could be preparing for a test of an updated submarine-launched ballistic missile after one of its submarines was engaged in a rare deployment near the eastern coast of the peninsula.

Writing for 38 North, a Johns Hopkins University website dedicated to North Korea issues, analyst Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr. states a recent report of a 65-meter-long North Korean submarine traveling 62 miles out into the East Sea, or the Sea of Japan, could indicate a SLBM test could take place in the near future.

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"While there are several possible explanations, the most likely is preparations for a test in the near future of an updated Pukguksong-1 [KN-11] submarine-launched ballistic missile or a potentially newer system," Bermudez writes.

According to the analyst, commercial satellite imagery from June 30 shows activity at Sinpo South Shipyard, the area near where the North may have test-launched a ballistic missile in April that ended in failure.

The SINPO-class submarine and a submersible test stand barge have been "repositioned" at the shipyard, a possible sign of preparations for the recent submarine voyage, or perhaps for "an upcoming missile test," Bermudez says.

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Any repairs or modifications at the shipyard could also have been completed, which suggests "long-term preparations for a test of the Pukguksong-1, at-sea deployments of one or both craft during late-May, pre-deployment training and routine maintenance or a combination of these" were the reasons for changes.

North Korea has not tested sub-launched missiles since August 2016, and may be far from operational deployment because of the pace of the tests.

"While the test launches of the Pukguksong-2 [from land] are undoubtedly of value to the Pukguksong-1 program, continued testing from a submarine is essential to bring a SLBM into service," the analyst states. "The North will have to conduct additional SLBM tests in the future in order to develop a viable weapon system."

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