WASHINGTON: North Korea is committed to striking the United States with a nuclear-armed missile, but it can’t do so without outside help, due to shortfalls in its own technology, the Pentagon said.
The report to Congress was written prior to a fourth nuclear test conducted by Pyongyang last month and the launch of a satellite-bearing rocket earlier this month.
North Korea’s KN-08 intercontinental ballistic missile “likely would be capable” of striking the continental US if successfully designed and developed, said the report.
However, North Korea has not been able to conduct flight tests on the highly complex system, and its “current reliability as a weapon system would be low.”
“The pace of its progress will also depend, in part, on how much technology and other aid it can acquire from other countries,” it said.
Pyongyang is testing a separate type of technology to strike the US with intercontinental ballistic missiles launched into space but lacks a re-entry vehicle, the report added.
A test to launch a ballistic missile from a submarine in November ended in failure.
The report, which is required by law, made note of North Korea’s Special Operations Forces, saying they are “among the most highly trained, well-equipped, best-fed and highly motivated forces” in the country’s military.
Strategic SOF units “appear designed for rapid offensive operations, internal defense against foreign attacks or limited attacks against vulnerable targets in the ROK (South Korea) as part of a coercive diplomacy effort,” it added.
“They operate in specialized units, including reconnaissance, airborne and seaborne insertion, commandos, and other specialties.”
The international community has for years tried to rein in North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, but the country shocked the world last month when it announced it had successfully tested a hydrogen bomb.
The US Congress earlier adopted tougher sanctions against Kim Jong-Un’s regime, following unilateral measures from Japan days earlier. The US also is leading a push for tougher UN sanctions against Pyongyang.
The Obama administration said it wouldn’t oppose the bill, but officials declined to say whether or when Obama would sign it. The expanded sanctions from Congress come at the same time the US and China are in delicate negotiations over a UN Security Council resolution on new sanctions, with China raising concerns about measures that could devastate North Korea’s economy.
And South Korean firms have abandoned a joint industrial park that helped fund Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.
N. Korea lacks technology for anti-US nuclear strike: Pentagon
N. Korea lacks technology for anti-US nuclear strike: Pentagon










