North Korea 'Releases' Footage of ICBM Launch (A Fake?)

North Korea 'Releases' Footage of ICBM Launch (A Fake?)

But don't panic just yet. 

 

North Korean state media recently aired footage of what appears to be a North Korean launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). State TV displayed the video while reporting on a concert that was thrown as part of a multiday military event held in North Korea’s capital Pyongyang. However, the footage was likely doctored. The launch featured in the video revealed inconsistencies with North Korea’s only confirmed launch of the ICBM weapon system highlighted in the footage.

ICBM Launch Video

 

North Korean state media’s airing of the ICBM launch accompanied the media coverage of a concert that was thrown as part of a multiday military workshop in Pyongyang. Held in the capital from July 24-27, the workshop featured an “intensive training course” for commanders and political officers of the Korean People’s Army and was described by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as having provided “a new landmark in modernizing” the North Korean military. The workshop coincided with other military events in Pyongyang and elsewhere across the country celebrating the 68th anniversary of the armistice agreement that brought an end to the fighting during the Korean War.

The footage shows what appears to be a North Korean Hwasong-15 ICBM being fired directly from a transporter erector launcher (TEL). The only confirmed test of the Hwasong-15 took place in November 2017, which remains North Korea’s most recent test of an intercontinental ballistic missile. North Korea has to date conducted a total of three successful ICBM flight tests, with the other two taking place earlier in 2017 involving the Hwasong-14 missile. North Korea has since unveiled a new ICBM model—dubbed the Hwasong-16—but has yet to test the weapon.

During the Hwasong-15’s test launch in November 2017, the missile was fired from a launch platform that separated from the transporter erector vehicle that delivered it to the firing location. The recently revealed video showed the Hwasong-15 being fired directly from a TEL. And because it is unlikely that a North Korean ICBM test went unnoticed by U.S. and South Korean military and intelligence agencies, the footage aired by North Korean state media has most likely been doctored.

Tests Could be Coming

While North Korea has refrained from further ICBM testing since 2017, it has continued to test a host of other, shorter-range ballistic missile systems. Most recently, North Korea in March tested what it described as a “new-type tactical guided projectile,” and which appeared to have been a modified variant of North Korea’s KN-23 short-range ballistic missile (SRBM). Analysts have suggested that North Korea is likely to gradually ramp up the scale and intensity of its weapons testing, with a possible next step involving the test of a new submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM).

In recent months North Korea has unveiled two new variants of its Pukguksong-series of SLBMs, neither of which it has tested so far. Satellite imagery analysis of North Korea’s Sinpo South Shipyard revealed activity involving the submersible missile test stand barge located at the facility, which has been used for SLBM testing in the past. Movement of the submersible test barge may indicate that the platform is undergoing some form of maintenance and repair or that it is being outfitted with new equipment, but could also suggest preparations for an SLBM test launch at some point in the future. U.S. and South Korean intelligence officials have also reported that North Korea has likely finished construction of a new ballistic missile submarine and that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) is now waiting for the most opportune time to officially reveal the new vessel.

While the recently released footage of an ICBM launch may have been heavily manipulated, North Korea is likely to continue its efforts to improve its strategic weapons capabilities in the future.

Eli Fuhrman is a contributing writer for The National Interest.

Image: Reuters