• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Analysis-S.Korea blazes new path with ‘most potent’ conventional missile submarine

September 8, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 8, 2021

By Josh Smith

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s development of a conventional submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) is a ground-breaking move, analysts said, with implications for North Korea, the U.S. alliance, and even the prospect of nuclear weapons in South Korea.

Last week, South Korea conducted ejection tests of the SLBM https://ift.tt/3tmZTBX from its recently launched Dosan Ahn Chang-ho KSS-III submarine, Yonhap news agency reported, showcasing a unique capability. It is the only nation to field such weapons without nuclear warheads.

Seoul says the conventionally armed missile is designed to help counter any attack by North Korea. Analysts say the unusual weapon also checks many other boxes, including reducing South Korea’s reliance on the United States and providing a foundation if it ever decided to pursue a nuclear arsenal.

South Korea’s ministry of defence declined to confirm the tests, but said it is pursuing upgraded missile systems to counter North Korea.

South Korea’s sub-launched missile, believed to be a variant of the country’s ground-based Hyunmoo-2B ballistic missile, with a flight range of about 500 kilometres (311 miles), is smaller than the nuclear-tipped SLBMs developed by the North.

H.I. Sutton, a specialist in military submarines, said the South’s technology is more advanced, however, and called the combination of an SLBM with the submarine’s quiet Air Independent Propulsion system a potential “game changer.”

“In these respects it is the most potent conventionally powered and armed submarine in the world,” he wrote in a report for Naval News.

South Korea’s SLBM is one of a wide range of conventional missiles that the country is developing to augment its “Overwhelming Response” doctrine, said Ankit Panda, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. The doctrine is an operational plan for strikes to pre-empt a North Korean attack or incapacitate its leadership in a major conflict.

“The SLBM is nominally justified in these terms, granting South Korean planners a highly survivable conventional second strike option in the face of North Korean attack; these missile systems would punish North Korea’s leadership in the case of an attack on the south,” he said.

Although submarine-launched ballistic missiles are usually associated with nuclear weapons, that does not mean South Korea has them or is pursuing them, he said.

“However, should the alliance with the United States fray in the future or South Korea’s national defences needs drastically shift, these SLBMs would provide an immediately available foundation for a limited, survivable nuclear force,” he added.

A POLITICAL ISSUE

For now it is just an academic debate, but one that has made its way into the current South Korean presidential campaign, with some conservative candidates arguing that the country should seek a nuclear deterrent either on its own or by hosting American weapons, as some NATO allies do.

The United States removed its battlefield nuclear weapons from South Korea in 1991, but has continued to protect its ally under a “nuclear umbrella.”

But recent years were tumultuous for the U.S.-South Korea alliance, with then-U.S. President Donald Trump pressing Seoul to pay more for the American military presence there, and even suggesting that countries, including South Korea and Japan, may need to develop their own nuclear weapons.

“It is unrealistic to prevent us from our own nuclear armament when North Korea has not given up its nuclear weapons yet,” presidential candidate Yoo Seung-min said last month.

The SLBM programme doesn’t appear to be part of elaborate plan to hedge toward nuclear weapons, said Joshua Pollack, a researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies who co-wrote a report last year warning that advances in conventional missiles in both Koreas have helped create a new pathway for a crisis.

“It simply looks like South Korea is trying to catch up with North Korea https://ift.tt/3hffBKv; he said. “For decades, each side has been determined to show that it is more advanced and capable.”

In July 2019 North Korean state media showed leader Kim Jong Un inspecting a large, newly built submarine. While North Korea did not describe the submarine’s weapons, analysts said the apparent size of the vessel indicated it was designed to carry ballistic missiles.

Later that year, North Korea said it had successfully test-fired a new SLBM from the sea, and in January it showcased a new SLBM design https://ift.tt/39tghr2 during a military parade in Pyongyang.

One Western diplomatic source said it was likely that other countries would follow South Korea’s lead.

So far the test launch has not elicited public responses from officials in North Korea, Japan, China or other nearby countries, but South Korea’s neighbours are bound to ask tough questions, Pollack said.

“The loser here is the entire region, in the throes of a multi-sided missile race https://ift.tt/3hbK78i; he said.

(Reporting by Josh Smith. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

Source Link Analysis-S.Korea blazes new path with ‘most potent’ conventional missile submarine

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Qualcomm says it will supply chip for new Renault electric vehicle
  2. China’s Liu He says support for private business has not changed
  3. Standard Chartered arranges $1.1 billion financing for Angola water project
  4. Phone blackout imposed on Nigerian state amid crackdown on kidnappers

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Earliest Evidence Of Making Fire Has Been Discovered, X-Rays Of 3I/ATLAS Reveal Signature Unseen In Other Interstellar Objects, And Much More This Week
  • Could This Weirdly Moving Comet Have Been The Real “Star Of Bethlehem”?
  • How Monogamous Are Humans Vs. Other Mammals? Somewhere Between Beavers And Meerkats, Apparently
  • A 4,900-Year-Old Tree Called Prometheus Was Once The World’s Oldest. Then, A Scientist Cut It Down
  • Descartes Thought The Pineal Gland Was “The Seat Of The Soul” – And Some People Still Do
  • Want To Know What The Last 2 Minutes Before Being Swallowed By A Volcanic Eruption Look Like? Now You Can
  • The Three Norths Are Moving On: A Once-In-A-Lifetime Alignment Shifts This Weekend
  • Spectacular Photo Captures Two Rare Atmospheric Phenomena At The Same Time
  • How America’s Aerospace Defense Came To Track Santa Claus For 70 Years
  • 3200 Phaethon: Parent Body Of Geminids Meteor Shower Is One Of The Strangest Objects We Know Of
  • Does Sleeping On A Problem Actually Help? Yes – It’s Science-Approved
  • Scientists Find A “Unique Group” Of Polar Bears Evolving To Survive The Modern World
  • Politics May Have Just Killed Our Chances To See A Tom Cruise Movie Actually Shot In Space
  • Why Is The Head On Beer Often White, When Beer Itself Isn’t?
  • Fabric Painted With Dye Made From Bacteria Could Protect Astronauts From Radiation On Moon
  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • The First Wheelchair User To Travel To Space Is About To Make History
  • “It Was Bigger Than A Killer Whale”: 66 Million-Year-Old Tooth Suggests Mosasaurs Were Hunting In Rivers, Not Just Seas
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version