North Korea News Podcast by NK News - North Korea’s new missile, fighting in Kursk and the end of the Juche calendar
Episode Date: November 5, 2024Editor’s note: Starting Nov. 21, our full-length episodes with special guests will only be available to NK News subscribers. This shift allows us to invest in bringing you top-quality interviews, ex...clusive insights and a more comprehensive NK News experience. Listeners who sign up before Nov. 30 pay just $1 for their first month, then get […]
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I'm your host, Jack Hoes-Wetzel, and this episode was recorded on Tuesday, the 5th of
November, 2024.
I'm sitting here with Brian Betts, the Managing Director of NK News.
Welcome, Brian. Thank you. Today, well, we're in Tuesday Korea time. It's still Monday America time,
but when America wakes up to Tuesday, it'll be election day. So happy election day. And perhaps
by the next short episode next Tuesday, we may actually know who won the presidential race and how that'll affect
things on the Korean Peninsula. Yeah, probably by the end of this week, most likely. Okay. But,
you know, it depends on how the election goes and how close some of these calls are on the states.
Yep, and whether there are challenges and whatnot. Yeah. What's clear is a lot could
potentially change depending on who wins. Right. So let's just have to wait and see how that goes.
Yep.
Okay. So this morning we woke up to news of an ICBM launch or a missile launch from North Korea.
We don't know too much about that yet, right?
Yeah. So there's a missile launch this morning. I think it was about 730 short-range missiles,
multiple from Sarawak, south of Pyongyang.
Beyond that, I don't think we know anything else right now.
So it's into the sea between North Korea's west coast and China, right?
Right, into the East Sea, Sea of Japan.
Oh, so they flew over the peninsula and landed in the East Sea of Japan?
I believe so.
Okay, because Sarawak is close to the west coast then?
Yeah, I believe so.
Okay. Check nknews.org for more details later on. in the East Sea of Japan? I believe so. Okay, because the tiny one's close to the west coast then? Yeah, I believe so.
Okay.
Check nknews.org for more details later on.
I have not reviewed all of our coverage from this morning yet.
Right, but the biggest story is the, or at least so far, it was the bigger ICM that was
tested a few days ago.
Right.
So last week on Wednesday, Seoul's Defense Intelligence Agency said,
North Korea is preparing to conduct nuke test
or ICBM test around the US election.
And they said this before the launch.
They said this before the launch.
And we were a little bit skeptical of some of this,
especially the nuke test claim.
Right, good, we've gone through this dance many times
in the last year or two. Yeah, it's been two and a half
years now since they said they had finished preparations.
Right, they said that there's tunneling going on in Pungeri, etc., etc.
They finished preparations.
Okay, go on.
So, we were a little bit skeptical, but sure enough, the next morning, Thursday morning,
bright and early, we got news of a launch, and it quickly became apparent as the minutes
ticked by and we didn't get any notice of
it landing that this was a big one.
This was a big one.
And in fact, it took some 86 minutes for it to land, which was a record.
Was this, first of all, what kind of missile was this?
So, of course, initially we only knew it was some sort of long range missile.
The next day, state media identified it as a new solid fuel ICBM, that's intercontinental
ballistic missile, that they have dubbed the Hwasong 19.
Okay, so this is the first time we've seen a 19?
Yes, this is a brand new missile.
Yeah, because we've talked about the 15 and maybe the 17.
Anyway, the 19, that's new.
Yeah, so you've got the Hwasong 17, which is their biggest liquid fuel, the Hwasong 18, which was their first solid fuel ICBM,
and now we have the Hwasong 19,
which is also solid fuel and even bigger.
And solid fuel, of course,
for our listeners who may not know or may have forgotten,
it's good because it takes time
to fill a rocket with liquid fuel.
So a solid fuel means you can take it out of storage
and launch it much faster.
Correct.
And move it around while it's loaded.
You don't want to load a, or rather, roll around the countryside on rocky roads with
a liquid-fueled missile.
Exactly.
So it gives North Korea much greater agility in terms of its missile forces, allows them
to launch before the US or South Korea could attempt to preempt.
That's the idea
anyway.
Right. Now when you're using an intercontinental ballistic missile in war, you send it on a
regular trajectory. So it's kind of a, it's not a very steep arc, but it comes, you know,
like an airplane almost. And then if you're doing it for a test, you put it in a lofted
trajectory. So it's like an upside down U shape.
Yeah, like that parabolic shape. Yeah.
Gravity's rainbow as Thomas Pynchon would tell us.
Ah, okay. Now, this WASM-19, what kind of trajectory did it follow?
Well, it was a lofted trajectory.
Okay, so it was a parabolic.
Which is what is as, well, it would always be parabolic,
but instead of a flattened out trajectory that would maximize its range,
Well, it would always be parabolic, but instead of a flattened out trajectory that would maximize its range, they're launching it a specified distance.
In this case, it was around 600 miles, 1,000 kilometers into the East Sea, Sea of Japan.
And they're doing it on a lofted trajectory.
So basically just shooting it straight up into space.
It's going many times above the International Space Station in terms of its actual height. Oh, wow coming straight down. Okay, so this is why you're getting this long flight time
Yeah, 86 minutes 86. Yeah, and a max altitude of some almost 4,800 miles above the earth
And North Korea is basically the only country that does this kind of a lofted launch
So it's it was a record not only for North
Korea but probably in world history in terms of ballistic missiles.
Wow, that's a feat for North Korea. Now I remember in 2017 when I happened to be in Tokyo for a
conference and another, I think it was an ICBM, flew over Japan and that caused a lot of consternation
there. This particular missile, it went a long way.
Did it go over Japan or did it land near Japan
or north of Japan?
It did not overflight Japan.
It landed in waters to the west of Hokkaido.
Okay, all right.
So kind of between, roughly right in the middle
between Japanese and Japan and Russia.
Aha, wow. Yeah, okay, and
Is there any indication that North Korea did that as a?
November surprise. Yes, very helpful late October because it was Wednesday last week. Okay, right, right? Yeah
This was October 31st. If it was Wednesday was the 30th the the test happened on Thursday
Oh, sorry, the South Korean announcement was on Wednesday. Got it, right.
It was a Halloween launch.
Okay.
Immediately inspiring a lot of
last minute costumes.
So they launched it in the morning
and usually North Korea
waits until the next day until they give us the full report.
Right.
They did that again this time, but they also released a
statement just hours after around noon on Thursday.
Super fast.
That's not, not like their usual modus operandi.
Yep.
And it was, uh, and it quoted, uh, Kim Jong-un directly and basically said, uh,
that the purpose of the launch was to communicate, uh, our resolve to our
adversaries
About the way the US and RK are reinforcing their nuclear alliance and trying to send a message to them blaming them
for you know provocations and
threatening the nation's security and sovereignty
The the usual defenses for the for the North Korean nuclear program
Except that it was coming straight from Kim Jong-un and it was delivered the same day as the test.
Right, and so instead of saying, you know,
we did this because we got some new tech
and we wanted to test it, I mean, it's very clear.
We're sending a message to you, United States,
just a week before your election.
Doesn't mention the election, but I mean that's...
Yeah, and they didn't even mention the U.S.
directly in the statement, but I mean,
the subtext is clear, our adversaries are building up this alliance, right?
Okay, this is a message to them. Yeah gosh. Hmm. Okay reactions from the US and South Korea
Well before I get to that I want to mention a little bit about the missile itself
Which is that it is on the one hand. It's very similar to the hosong 18
Which is the the other solid fuel missile.
And so in terms of the strategic importance and everything we mentioned
about being able to fire it faster, that's all pretty much the same.
The Hwasong 18, the thing is it was already able to reach basically
anywhere in the continental US.
So making a bigger missile doesn't increase the number of cities you can strike. strike right so which was the question of why do you need the bigger missile?
What's the value added and what the experts have been assessing is that not confirmed but quite possible that this new?
ICBM is part of North Korea's efforts to develop
What's known as a MervV capability. Multiple Independent Reentry Vehicle.
Yes. Exactly.
A bunch of warheads sitting on top of the missile
that can go to different cities all at once.
Right. So firing multiple warheads at the same time,
one missile, multiple warheads,
it increases exponentially the difficulty
of intercepting those missiles.
Right.
North Korea has already been demonstrating that it has the capacity to sort of overwhelm
US missile defenses or attempting to demonstrate that capacity.
If they can develop a MIRV capability, that would be another step in that direction.
Of course, a MIRV, that means multiple warheads, that means a heavier weapon that they have to deliver.
Right. So a bigger missile can deliver this bigger warhead payload to a similar distance as the
Hwasong 18 would have been able to.
Huh, okay, yes. So what has been the response?
Yeah, so anyway, all that to say, that's clearly a message to the US.
Yeah.
It's clearly saying something like, we're not going to denuclearize.
Right.
And I guess not only would you be swapping San Francisco for Seoul, you might be swapping
San Francisco, Seattle, and Salem for Seoul, and a few other cities that I can't think
of right now.
Springfield.
Yeah.
So I think it's saying whoever is going to be the next year's president, we don't know
yet, but you might want to rethink your North Korea policy, right? That's the message from North Korea
Yeah, now this was the first ICBM test since December 2023. Hmm
And of course, these are the tests that get the strongest reaction immediately
We saw us in South Korea issuing statements of condemnation
Seoul the same day as the test
Korea issuing statements of condemnation.
Seoul the same day as the test released some new export controls,
announcing new export controls that were attempting to limit North Korea's ability to acquire the parts that it needs for solid fuel weapons.
Next day, it introduced some more sanctions on North Korean entities that are accused
of, you know, funneling, doing various economic activities to funnel
money to the regime yesterday in New York, we had a, uh, UN security council meeting in which, you know, it is the usual stuff in terms of, you know,
statements of combination by both sides, Russia and North Korea on the other
side, defending their North Korea's right to do these kinds of tests and doesn't
lead into any kind of sanctions or anything because well, Russia's not going to support them.
Over the weekend, we had a trilateral air drill, US, RK and Japan using a B-15 strategic
bomber.
And then we saw lots of North Korean statements responding to the condemnation.
So it's been a lot of back and forth.
Where did they fly that bomber?
They flew it. Oversea? It's between the a lot of back and forth. Where did they fly that bomber?
They flew it...over the sea?
It's between the airspace of Japan and South Korea.
I guess it was maybe south of Jeju Island, something like that.
Okay, so not in an area visible to North Korea by the naked eye.
Right, yeah, they're not flying it over the DMZ or something.
Okay, well, alright, that is some big news. But now we have to run out
of time. Almost. We've got to run off quickly to the Ukraine-Russia front lines. We have
been seeing on social media a lot of little clips, a little photographs and supposed evidence
of North Korean soldiers already on the front lines being injured, being captured. What's
going on? What do we know? What can we can we verify right so there have been lots of videos
floating around as you said in most cases we have not been able to verify
those in some cases we have been able to get pretty good evidence that they're
not true what would be the motivation for putting out non true well we don't
know who's doing it okay it. It's hard to say.
Zelensky though had already denied
some of these reports last week,
denied reports that North Koreans
had already been killed on the battlefield,
that there had been some like,
basically huge victory over North Korean forces.
These were some of the claims
that were floating around online.
He dismissed them, he said there hadn't been any fighting yet.
That was last week.
Yesterday, a Ukraine official said in a very short statement on his personal
telegram channel that the first DPRK troops have already come under fire in Kursk.
Which is that part of Russia that Ukraine has a, uh, the incursion.
So that was, there's no other details details you don't know how many troops were involved
right you know exactly where it was but anyway we have the first Ukraine's first
confirmation of a clash with North Korean soldiers okay on Russian soil on
Russian soil right okay there's been some other details, according to the US as of today, they say there are
up to 12,000 North Korean soldiers in Russia and some 10,000 in Kursk now, and that they
could join combat in the coming days, according to...
And 10,000 is a lot, and 12,000 is even more.
So it's more than you might expect if they were just doing, I don't know, engineering
or support logistical tasks, right? I mean, it seems like the kind of numbers, certainly
given the numbers of casualties that Russia's been facing lately, that this is the kind
of number you'd be putting into maybe replace some of those casualties.
Right. And yeah, from what I understand, Russia has been having trouble with recruitment,
and, you know, but is also hesitant to do a full scale
sort of mobilization and other, you know, draft
to be due to fields of the domestic opposition.
North Korea is a great way, you know,
bring them in to fight in Kursk.
It avoids some of the trouble that might be involved
if North Korean troops were actually going to Ukraine proper.
Not to say that that might not
still happen, but at least right now it appears that they're in Kursk and that gives Russia the
freedom to deploy the troops they do have elsewhere. Yeah. Now, so we are obviously at NK News
keeping an eye on the different videos and pieces of evidence that are coming in and looking to
verify something that, you know, when it comes to hand. But as is often the case in the first days, the first things that come out are difficult to
verify. So we've got to be patient and thorough and rigorous in trying to verify all this, right?
Yeah, there's been some conflicting claims. There's been a lot of, you know, sort of like
you mentioned, videos floating around online. So we've been pretty circumspect in terms of how we approach our coverage.
Right.
We are not the sensationalist mainstream media here, folks.
We're doing it the rigorous and proper way at NK News, NK Pro.
But there's a lot to monitor.
And for a lot of this, we're going to be reliant not only on the governments
of the countries involved but also
you know some of these open source sleuths who've been working on ukraine issues for a while
great and you know trying to work with them to identify things and confirm things once we start
hopefully seeing more concrete evidence of north korean troops on the battlefields yeah and we and
if south korea does send over some of those intelligence officials to debrief
and interrogate captured North Korean troops, then that also will be quite a story when
that happens, if and when that happens.
Yeah, that's, yeah.
Yeah.
A lot going on still with that.
If's doing a lot of work in that sense.
Okay, so last story.
We've got about a minute to just kind of mention this flaget for our listeners.
North Korea has for the last few decades been using its own year count the Juche year based on the year that Kim Il-sung was
Born in 1912 right and believe that's right 1912. I always get my 1911-1912
I know it's the same day as the Titanic sunk. So it's either 1911 1912 forgive me listeners. Anyway, they
In North Korea lately have been removing the Juche year count from things like plaques and statues, apparently.
That's quite a big step to happen.
Yeah, so this Juche year system, I believe, is introduced around 97 by Kim Jong-il as a way of, you know...
Right, after the death of Kim Il-sung and around the time of the, or perhaps even during or at the tail end of the big famine, the IJUS march. Right. And so this has often appeared in state media on, on plaques, like you mentioned.
And every book published and every newspaper, you've got the, the Jucha
year and then in brackets, you know, or, or other way, other way around.
Yeah.
For what I understand, sometimes the usage was a little bit inconsistent.
Sometimes it would appear with the Gregorian year, sometimes without, sometimes I think they would only use the Gregorian year. In any case, what we've been seeing now is
a lot of places where it was being used, for example, at the top of some of the state newspapers,
identifying the date of issue. That has been removed starting from maybe a little middle of last month. Wow. And now we've been seeing subsequent signs that, yeah, plaques honoring Kim Jong-un,
Kim Jong-il, whoever visited such and such site on this date.
On this date, yeah.
Those are slowly being changed as well.
Yeah.
Which is one of those things that if they're doing it consistently nationwide, that is a lot of work.
It's a lot of investment of time and resources and money to do that.
Yeah. I mean, think of how many places the leaders have been.
These are hundreds and thousands of plaques and signs and whatnot to replace.
So there's some time consuming, it comes at significant cost.
So what then is the point?
Right. What could it mean, Brian?
I mean, it seems to be part of a trend of Kim Jong-un
point. Right. What could it mean, Brian? I mean, it seems to be part of a trend of Kim Jong-un sort of
slowly kind of downplaying the cult of personality of his predecessors, his grandfather and father, and sort of upgrading his own personality cult. Right. We've seen this with him, for example,
debuting these mosaic murals at certain locations that they used to only depict his grandfather
and father and now they show him.
It's included the portraits of his predecessors that hang in the walls of every house.
Recently we saw him hang his own portrait next to those at one of the party cadre schools.
So this has been, you know, it's been, they've, they've changed the language
in various, uh, in, in the constitution and other documents to de-emphasize.
You know, ideologies of Kim Yo-sung is, um, Kim Jong-il ism and, you know,
promote Kim Jong-un himself more.
So it's not, it's not an all at once thing.
It's sort of a gradual process as he, you know, he probably feels some blowback,
needs to build some sort of support for it within the party.
But this is a long running trend and this appears this new Juche year
abandonment appears to be part of it.
Interesting. Okay. Well, something to keep an eye on there. Thank you very much,
Brian Betts, for coming on the NK News podcast this week.
Yeah, pleasure.
See you again soon.
A reminder that starting from November 20th, our full-length episodes with special guests
will be exclusively available to NK News subscribers. This shift will allow us to invest more in bringing you top quality interviews, cutting
edge analysis and a more comprehensive NK News experience across our website and podcast
platforms.
So don't miss out.
Subscribe now to stay fully informed and support our mission to raise the bar in North Korea
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Ladies and gentlemen, that brings us to the end
of our podcast episode for today.
Our thanks go to Brian Betts and Alana Hill
for facilitating this episode,
and to our post-recording producer genius, Gabby Magnuson, who cuts out all the extraneous noises, awkward
silences, bodily functions, and fixes the audio levels.
Thank you, and listen again next time.