Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

New North Korea warships raise sanctions doubts

-

Satellite images have picked out two new North Korean warships -- the largest it has constructed in 25 years and an important "wake-up call" on the effectiveness of sanctions, a US think-tank said on Friday.

Recent commercial satellite pictures showed two new helicopter-carrying frigates separately berthed at shipyards in Nampo in the west and Najin in the far northeast.

Launched sometime in 2011-12, the two vessels were primarily designed to counter what Pyongyang sees as a growing threat from South Korea's acquisition of submarines that began in the early 1990s, the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University said.

But they may also be destined for a role in patrolling regional fishing zones -- with security implications for South Korea, Japan and China, the institute said in an analysis on its website 38 North.

While it might still take several years to fully integrate the frigates into fleet operations, the institute said their introduction suggested an "evolutionary step" in the North's naval strategy to include helicopter anti-submarine operations.

North Korans ride across the West Sea Barrage dividing the Taedong River from the West Sea of Korea ...
North Korans ride across the West Sea Barrage dividing the Taedong River from the West Sea of Korea, in April 2011
-, AFP/File

The analysis also noted that the construction of the two warships and other new naval classes had been achieved during a period of prolonged international economic sanctions.

"North Korea's deployment of new helicopter frigates may be an important wakeup call about the overall effectiveness of sanctions and the need to carefully and realistically reevaluate reports of its conventional military decline," it said.

The development of the North's conventional weaponry has largely been overshadowed by concerns over its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programmes.

Satellite images have picked out two new North Korean warships — the largest it has constructed in 25 years and an important “wake-up call” on the effectiveness of sanctions, a US think-tank said on Friday.

Recent commercial satellite pictures showed two new helicopter-carrying frigates separately berthed at shipyards in Nampo in the west and Najin in the far northeast.

Launched sometime in 2011-12, the two vessels were primarily designed to counter what Pyongyang sees as a growing threat from South Korea’s acquisition of submarines that began in the early 1990s, the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University said.

But they may also be destined for a role in patrolling regional fishing zones — with security implications for South Korea, Japan and China, the institute said in an analysis on its website 38 North.

While it might still take several years to fully integrate the frigates into fleet operations, the institute said their introduction suggested an “evolutionary step” in the North’s naval strategy to include helicopter anti-submarine operations.

North Korans ride across the West Sea Barrage dividing the Taedong River from the West Sea of Korea ...

North Korans ride across the West Sea Barrage dividing the Taedong River from the West Sea of Korea, in April 2011
-, AFP/File

The analysis also noted that the construction of the two warships and other new naval classes had been achieved during a period of prolonged international economic sanctions.

“North Korea’s deployment of new helicopter frigates may be an important wakeup call about the overall effectiveness of sanctions and the need to carefully and realistically reevaluate reports of its conventional military decline,” it said.

The development of the North’s conventional weaponry has largely been overshadowed by concerns over its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programmes.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

Our existing computing systems were never intended to process massive amounts of data or to learn from just a few examples on their own.

Business

The BBC is no stranger to criticism from the right and the left. — © AFP Susannah IrelandMarie HEUCLINAccused of being biased by some,...

Tech & Science

The result is a universal detector capable of flagging a range of forgeries -- from simple facial swaps to complex, fully synthetic videos.

World

Pedestrians pass a closed entrance to London Bridge Underground Station - Copyright AFP Prabin RANABHATBritain will drastically reduce protections for refugees under plans to...