logo
How North Korea Botched the Launch of a Warship

How North Korea Botched the Launch of a Warship

New York Times27-05-2025

North Korea's leader, Kim Jong-un, watched the country's newest 5,000-ton destroyer capsize during its launch last week in an embarrassing military failure. Experts say a technique used to maneuver the ship into the water sideways was part of the problem.
It was the first time analysts had observed North Korea using the sideways launch for warships and pointed to a lack of experience, as well as political pressure from Mr. Kim for quick results, for the mishap. Three shipyard officials, including the chief shipyard engineer, and a senior munitions official have been arrested, the official Korean Central News Agency reported, after Mr. Kim called the capsizing a criminal act.
Satellite imagery from three days before the accident showed the 470-foot-long vessel, the biggest class of warships Pyongyang has ever built, on top of a launch ramp. About 40 meters from the ship, a structure that appeared to be a viewing area and likely where Mr. Kim was stationed during the incident, was under construction.
The destroyer was assembled in Chongjin, a port city on North Korea's northeastern coast, which is known for producing smaller vessels, such as cargo ships and fishing boats. In a report published by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a research institute in Washington, analysts said the shipyard 'undoubtedly' lacked expertise in manufacturing and launching large warships.
The ill-fated warship was assessed by analysts to be the same size and configuration as the Choe Hyon guided missile destroyer, the North's first destroyer and the most powerful surface ship the country has ever built. That vessel is the pride of Mr. Kim's ambitious plan to modernize and expand his Soviet-era naval fleet, and was the centerpiece of a grand christening ceremony last month in Nampo, a west coast port near Pyongyang.
State media footage showed an elaborate event with confetti and fireworks that was attended by Mr. Kim and his daughter, Kim Ju-ae. A large viewing platform was set up near the Choe Hyun, which was already afloat in the water.
That launch went smoothly, according to state media. Engineers used a technique common for large and heavy vessels. They appear to have built the Choe Hyun inside a roofed construction hall in Nampo, brought it out on a floating dry dock and then set it afloat by letting water into the dry dock, said Choi Il, a retired South Korean Navy captain.
But the shipyard in Chongjin didn't have a dry dock large enough to build a Choe Hyun-class destroyer nor an incline to slide the ship stern first into the water. Engineers built the ship on the quay under a netting. When it was completed, they had to launch it sideways off the platform.
When properly executed, the vessel glides down the slipway lengthwise and briefly plunges into the water, like this 3,500-ton USS Cleveland warship did in Wisconsin in 2023.
Often a tugboat is stationed nearby to assist after the launch.
But when engineers tried to push the North Korean destroyer into the water, it lost its balance, state media said. Satellite imagery taken two days after the accident showed the ship covered in blue tarp and lying on its right side. The bow was stuck on the ramp as the stern jutted into the harbor. The viewing platform had been removed.
Launching big ships sideways requires delicate balancing work, said Mr. Choi, the retired South Korean Navy captain. The heavy weapons mounted on the destroyer could have made the task even more difficult, he added.
A few days after the first Choe Hyun-class destroyer was launched last month, Mr. Kim proudly watched it test-fire various missiles. He has visited shipyards to exhort engineers to meet his timetable for naval expansion and appears to have planned to launch the second destroyer with similar fanfare and weapons tests.
Engineers at Chongjin, who worked with less developed facilities than their peers in Nampo, must have felt enormous pressure after the successful launch in Nampo, South Korean analysts said. That might have led them to cut corners, they said.
North Korea has said that it can restore the ship's balance by pumping out the seawater. In another 10 days or so, it could repair the ship's side damaged in the accident, according to state media.
But the damage looked worse than the country claimed, said Yang Uk, an expert on the North Korean military at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul. The accident may be due not only to a defective sideways launching system but also to the ship's structural imbalance, he said.
'The ship looks a bit twisted after the accident,' he said. 'It doesn't appear to have been built with the structural strength required for a warship.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

North Korea Celebrates Triplets Amid Birth Rate Crisis
North Korea Celebrates Triplets Amid Birth Rate Crisis

Newsweek

time34 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

North Korea Celebrates Triplets Amid Birth Rate Crisis

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. North Korean state media has released a special report hailing the birth of three triplets —a rare moment of positivity amid what analysts believe to be a steady demographic decline in the reclusive country. Newsweek reached out to the North Korean embassy in China via email with a request for comment. Why It Matters The North Korean authorities don't regularly publish population figures. United Nations estimates based on records released in past decades put the country's fertility rate at 1.78 births per woman last year—below the 2.1 threshold needed to sustain a population. This is higher than fertility rates of South Korea, Japan, and China, which are already scrambling to adapt to their aging populations. However, international sanctions over the Kim Jong Un regime's nuclear weapons program have deprived the country of 26 million of many types of advanced automated machinery and left it more reliant on manual labor than its East Asian neighbors. What To Know The three boys were born in February to Kim Hyang Mi, a resident of Tokchon City, whose husband, Kim Nam Il, works at a local coal mine, according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency. After learning she was pregnant with triplets, Kim was transferred to Pyongyang Maternity Hospital, where she reportedly received the best care available. Children play picking toys game as the 75th Joint Friendship Meeting is held at the Taesongsan Pleasure Park to mark the International Children's Day in Pyongyang, North Korea, Sunday, June 1, 2025. Children play picking toys game as the 75th Joint Friendship Meeting is held at the Taesongsan Pleasure Park to mark the International Children's Day in Pyongyang, North Korea, Sunday, June 1, 2025. Jon Chol Jin/Associated Press The weight of one of the newborns was only 1.18 kg (4 pounds)—a cause for concern. All three now weigh over 4 kg (8.8 pounds) and are considered healthy, according to the report. They were discharged from the hospital on Monday. The extent of medical attention given to Kim and the triplets signals the seriousness with which the authorities are taking the declining birthrate. The announcement follows a September report by Radio Free Asia that authorities had punished doctors for performing secret abortions and cracked down on marketplace vendors selling contraceptives. While the government has in recent years made some efforts to improve the health of its youngest citizens—such as mandating free dairy products—human rights groups citing local sources have detailed harsh punishments meted out to children, including lengthy prison camp terms for offenses committed by family members. On Saturday, the regime published images of a celebratory event marking International Children's Day, which critics saw as an attempt to whitewash its image amid international condemnation over its human rights record. What People Are Saying Young-Jin Choi, a professor at South Korea's Yonsei University, wrote in a March report for North Korea-focused outlet 38 North: "North Korea is expected to enter into an aging society, with more than 14 percent of its population being 65 or older by 2025. "If these trends continue, North Korea will likely face a vicious cycle in which the low birth rate and an aging population will cause a further decline in economic vitality, which in turn will further aggravate the low birth rate and aging population problems." What's Next This trend is also likely to worry Kim as his military, the fourth-largest in the world, with roughly 30 percent of the population serving in active or reserve roles, amid ongoing tensions with the U.S.-allied South.

US labels South Korea election fair, but Trump allies target new president: ‘This is terrible'
US labels South Korea election fair, but Trump allies target new president: ‘This is terrible'

News24

time4 hours ago

  • News24

US labels South Korea election fair, but Trump allies target new president: ‘This is terrible'

Pedro Pardo/AFP The US labelled South Korea's election as fair. Liberal party candidate Lee Jae-myung won the presidency. US President Donald Trump's right-wing allies have taken aim at Lee. The White House said on Tuesday that South Korea's election, which saw liberal party candidate Lee Jae-myung win the presidency, was fair, but it expressed concern about Chinese interference. 'The US-ROK Alliance remains ironclad. While South Korea had a free and fair election, the United States remains concerned and opposed to Chinese interference and influence in democracies around the world,' a White House official said in an emailed response to a Reuters request for comment made at an earlier White House briefing. 'ROK' refers to the Republic of Korea. The official did not elaborate on the reference to alleged Chinese interference or connect it directly to the South Korean election. However, US President Donald Trump's right-wing allies have taken aim at Lee, who has spoken of the need to balance Seoul's relations with China and the US. Laura Loomer, a far-right activist who has jockeyed her way up from online agitator to self-appointed Trump adviser, posted 'RIP South Korea' on X on Tuesday after Lee's victory became clear. 'The communists have taken over Korea and won the Presidential election today,' she wrote. This is terrible. Laura Loomer Loomer has shown herself to be highly influential: Several high-ranking White House officials were fired this year after she presented Trump with a list of national security staffers she perceived to be disloyal. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a statement congratulating Lee, and like the White House, spoke about the two countries' 'ironclad' alliance. He made no mention of concerns about China. 'The United States and the Republic of Korea share an ironclad commitment to the Alliance grounded in our Mutual Defence Treaty, shared values, and deep economic ties,' Rubio said. 'We are also modernising the Alliance to meet the demands of today's strategic environment and address new economic challenges.' Anthony Wallace/AFP Rubio also said the US would continue to deepen trilateral cooperation with South Korea and Japan, 'to bolster regional security, enhance economic resilience, and defend our shared democratic principles'. As South Korea's ousted former president, Yoon Suk Yeol, fought for his political life earlier this year, he raised unsubstantiated claims about possible fraud in South Korea's elections as one reason for his announcement of a martial law decree that had prompted his ouster. His backers adopted 'Stop the Steal' slogans and expressed hopes that Trump would intervene to help, but that never came. Yonhap/AFP 'Most of the 'election fraud' allegations I've seen reek of conspiracy theories and paranoia,' said Evans Revere, former US Deputy Ambassador for East Asian Affairs. 'It's unfortunate that a White House spokesperson would allude to these, especially since Lee's margin of victory was substantial and his conservative opponent quickly and unhesitatingly conceded his loss.' Last week, without providing evidence, Trump ally Mike Flynn, a retired general who briefly served as the president's national security adviser during his first term, referred in a post on X to 'signs of fraud' in the South Korea election, and said a fraudulent outcome would only benefit the Chinese Communist Party. Another Trump ally, Steve Bannon, explored a similar theme of Chinese election interference on his WarRoom channel last week. Lee's past comments about China, including his statement that a conflict over Taiwan would have nothing to do with South Korea, have provided fodder for those in the US government inclined to mistrust him, said Revere. His policy approach on China, Taiwan, Russia, Japan, and alliance- and trade-related concerns will be under close scrutiny in Washington and could lead to 'differences' between the two allies, he added. 'In that context, the White House spokesperson's comments could have been intended as a cautionary message to Korea's new president.'

Top Players Profiled in New 2025 Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market Report: Byrna Technologies, General Dynamics, Moog, Raytheon Technologies, Rheinmetall, Textron, and Combined Systems
Top Players Profiled in New 2025 Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market Report: Byrna Technologies, General Dynamics, Moog, Raytheon Technologies, Rheinmetall, Textron, and Combined Systems

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Top Players Profiled in New 2025 Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market Report: Byrna Technologies, General Dynamics, Moog, Raytheon Technologies, Rheinmetall, Textron, and Combined Systems

Significant growth is seen in China, India, and Japan. Regulatory challenges and training issues are hurdles to adoption, yet innovations like directed energy weapons highlight its expanding application. Key players in the market include Byrna Technologies Inc., Raytheon, and Rheinmetall AG. Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market Dublin, June 04, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market Size and Growth Trends 2025-2033" has been added to offering. The Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market is expected to reach US$ 5.35 billion by 2033 from US$ 3.31 billion in 2024, with a CAGR of 5.48% from 2025 to 2033. Urbanization, technological development, and government spending on defense modernization - which aims to increase security, control civil disturbance, and promote public safety - are the main factors propelling the expansion of the Asia-Pacific non-lethal weapons market. As law enforcement and military organizations in the Asia-Pacific area increasingly use non-lethal options for crowd control, public safety, and military operations, the market for non-lethal weaponry is expanding quickly. The necessity for efficient crowd control techniques has been brought to light by the increasing frequency of civil disturbance, open protests, and large-scale demonstrations in densely populated metropolitan areas. Tasers, rubber bullets, tear gas, and directed energy systems are examples of non-lethal weapons that are safer than conventional guns and give law enforcement a means of upholding public order while reducing the number of fatalities and injuries. The need for these technologies is anticipated to grow as population density and urbanization continue to rise. The Asia-Pacific non-lethal weapons industry is expanding due in large part to technological improvements. More accurate, flexible, and efficient non-lethal solutions have been developed as a result of ongoing research and development. Non-lethal weapons are becoming more capable and adaptable to a wider range of tactical situations because to advancements in directed energy weapons, acoustic systems, and smart ammo. In addition to improving non-lethal systems' efficacy, these technical advancements also make them safer to employ in intricate and dangerous scenarios. As a result, security personnel in the area have been more inclined to embrace cutting-edge non-lethal methods. Government spending on modernizing the military is another important driver propelling the market's expansion. Asia-Pacific nations are investing more in defense, strengthening their law enforcement capacities, and modernizing their military equipment. In order to manage civil disturbance, improve public safety, and solve security issues, this investment includes funds for the research and development of non-lethal weaponry. Non-lethal weapons are viewed as a crucial part of contemporary security tactics, encouraging a more efficient and compassionate approach to military operations and law enforcement as governments attempt to strike a compromise between security requirements and human rights safeguards. Effective crowd control methods will become more necessary as the region's metropolitan population is expected to increase by 50% by 2050, according to the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). Between 2020 and 2023, Japan's National Police Agency reported spending on non-lethal crowd control equipment increased by 35%, with around JPY 2.8 billion allocated specifically for advanced non-lethal technology. The Australian Federal Police claim that compared to more conventional methods of crowd control, the use of non-lethal weapons decreased injuries by 45%. The purchase of non-lethal weapons has increased significantly in India, according to the Ministry of Home Affairs, with state police receiving a 65% increase in funding for crowd control gear in 2023 over 2020. According to Chinese law enforcement officials, employing non-lethal crowd control techniques preserved efficient crowd management skills while lowering civilian casualties during major events by 58%. Key Attributes Report Attribute Details No. of Pages 200 Forecast Period 2024-2033 Estimated Market Value (USD) in 2024 $3.31 Billion Forecasted Market Value (USD) by 2033 $5.35 Billion Compound Annual Growth Rate 5.4% Regions Covered Asia-Pacific Key Topics Covered1. Introduction2. Research & Methodology2.1 Data Source2.1.1 Primary Sources2.1.2 Secondary Sources2.2 Research Approach2.2.1 Top-Down Approach2.2.2 Bottom-Up Approach2.3 Forecast Projection Methodology3. Executive Summary4. Market Dynamics4.1 Growth Drivers4.2 Challenges5. Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market5.1 Historical Market Trends5.2 Market Forecast6. Market Share Analysis6.1 Product Type6.2 Technology6.3 End Use6.4 Country7. Product Type7.1 Gases and sprays7.2 Grenades7.3 Bullets7.4 Taser Guns7.5 Others8. Technology8.1 Chemical8.2 Electroshock8.3 Mechanical and Kinetic8.4 Acoustic/Light8.5 Others9. End Use9.1 Law Enforcement9.2 Military9.3 Others10. Country10.1 China10.2 Japan10.3 India10.4 Australia10.5 South Korea10.6 Thailand10.7 Malaysia10.8 Indonesia10.9 New Zealand11. Porter's Five Analysis11.1 Bargaining Power of Buyers11.2 Bargaining Power of Suppliers11.3 Degree of Rivalry11.4 Threat of New Entrants11.5 Threat of Substitutes12. SWOT Analysis12.1 Strength12.2 Weakness12.3 Opportunity12.4 Threat13. Company Analysis13.1 Byrna Technologies Inc.13.2 General Dynamics Corporation13.3 Moog Inc.13.4 Raytheon Technologies Corporation13.5 Rheinmetall AG13.6 Textron Inc.13.7 Combined Systems more information about this report visit About is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends. Attachment Asia-Pacific Non-Lethal Weapons Market CONTACT: CONTACT: Laura Wood,Senior Press Manager press@ For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./ CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store