Content Details
The North Korean Ballistic Missile Program
- Branch
- Executive
- Category
- Executive Agency Publications
- SuDoc Class Number
- D 101.146/13:K 84
- Government Author
- Defense Department, Army Department
- Personal Author
- Pinkston, Daniel A.
- Series Title
- Demystifying North Korea ; 6
- Publication Title
- The North Korean Ballistic Missile Program
- Date Issued
- 2008
- Subject
- Ballistic missiles
Military policy
Korea (North)
- Content Origin
- This content was harvested from online sources of the original hosting or authoring agency and may not reflect current policy. As Federal agencies add publications to their websites, or report new publications to GPO per statutory mandate (44 U.S.C. §§ 1710, 1902-1903), GPO ensures long-term preservation of and access to the content.
- Abstract
- North Korea's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs have drawn international attention for years. In the early 1960s, Pyongyang began to pursue the capability to produce advanced weapons systems, including rockets and missiles. However, foreign assistance and technology, particularly from China and the Soviet Union, were instrumental in the acquisition of these capabilities. The ballistic missile inventory now totals about 800 road-mobile missiles, including about 200 Nodong missiles that could strike Japan. In April 2007, North Korea for the first time displayed two new missiles: a short-range tactical missile that poses a threat to Seoul and U.S. Forces in South Korea, and an intermediate-range missile that could potentially strike Guam. Although North Korea has not demonstrated the ability to produce a nuclear warhead package for its missiles, its missiles are believed to be capable of delivering chemical and possibly biological munitions. North Korean media and government officials claim the country needs a nuclear deterrent to cope with the "hostile policy of the United States," but Pyongyang has never officially abandoned its objective of "completing the revolution in the south." Little is known about North Korean military doctrine and the role of its ballistic missiles, but National Defense Commission Chairman Kim Cho?ng-il has ultimate authority over their disposition.