Posted on 03/20/2015 11:49:18 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
In 2013, the U.S. Navys Pacific Fleet hinted at a mysterious and newly discovered threat to American warships. Whatever it was, it was serious and had Americas admirals spooked.
We knew the threat was probably a missile, because the Navys only mention of it was inside a contracting request for a new electronics countermeasures system designed for surface ships.
The Navy awarded a $65-million contract to the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory to develop the system within a critically short time frame.
Military & Aerospace Electronics, which first noticed the request, suggested that the threat was a radar-guided anti-ship missile from a country or terrorist group in the Middle East. We suggested a Chinese anti-ship missile.
More precisely, the threat is probably a North Korean Kh-35 anti-ship cruise missile.
The Navys hurried development of a missile-defense system, begun just a year before the existence of the new North Korean cruise missile became public in the West, is a window into how the Pentagon is keeping tabs on the reclusive, hostile country and how the U.S. responds to new dangers.
Its also a window into the world of open source intelligence, where ordinary people dig through publicly available information for nuggets of information governments dont necessarily want them to know.
The Pentagon didnt specify the exact nature of its new countermeasures system officially designated AN/SLQ-59. But most likely, the device can jam the radars of anti-ship missiles. Almost every modern anti-ship missile has a small radar that guides the weapon and helps detect targets.
If you want to prevent an incoming missile from sinking your ship, the best way is to overwhelm it with electromagnetic interference. Its easier than shooting it down.
The Naval Research Laboratory and defense contractor ITT Excelis had developed a prototype of the electronic warfare system in 2012, and wanted help from industry to field the first system by 2014. The Pacific Fleet needed up to 24 of the systems.
So why does this have anything to do with a North Korean missile? Well, there are several reasons why.
The Kh-35 first attracted attention outside of Western military and intelligence circles in June 2014, when arms control expert Jeffrey Lewis noticed something unusual in a North Korean propaganda video.
North Korean videos typically feature action-packed montages at their very end, sometimes with tantalizingly brief clues showing off new weapons and capabilities.
In the North Korean video below shortly after the 49-minute mark there is a brief, one-second clip of a surface ship firing a cruise missile.
But as far as the West knew when the video debuted, North Korea didnt have any cruise missiles. Only a handful of countries make cruise missiles, and even fewer would sell them to North Korea.
The missile in the video resembles an anti-ship missile, similar to the American Harpoon and French Exocet. The missiles canister launcher is visible, and although it resembles the launcher of the Russian Kh-35 anti-ship missile, it isnt a perfect match.
A number of people myself included volunteered to comb the Internet for clues. A search of anti-ship missile launches on YouTube made it clear it wasnt a Western design. It wasnt Chinese, either.
Plus, the footage was unique. North Korea didnt steal some other video of a missile and fence it off as its own. Pyongyang may bluster and make threats, but it doesnt bluff regarding capabilities.
The missile was indeed a Kh-35. Made by Russian defense contractor Zvezda, the Kh-35 flies at Mach 0.8 at just 10 to 15 meters above the ocean surface. It has a range of 70 miles.
It packs a 320 pound shaped-charge warhead, making it extremely dangerous to destroyer-sized ships.
Now recall that the Navys request for a countermeasures system came from the Pacific Fleet, meaning the threat was a country in the Asia-Pacific region. The only countries even potentially hostile to the U.S. in that region are China and North Korea.
The U.S. and China are nowhere near coming to blows ruling out China as the source of an urgent need.
North Korea, on the other hand, has attacked American and South Korean ships before, including the 1968 seizure of the spy ship USS Pueblo and the 2010 sinking of the South Korean corvette ROKS Cheonan.
Spontaneous acts of violence are part of North Koreas foreign policy. Defending ships of the U.S. Pacific Fleet from the Kh-35 would be an urgent priority indeed. Exactly how and why North Korea got the Kh-35 is a good question. North Korea and Russia have become increasingly close during the Kim Jong Un era, and Pyongyang could have bought the missiles from Moscow.
Another possibility is Myanmar, which has openly purchased the Kh-35 from Russia, and has bought weapons from Pyongyang. North Korean technical advisers have assisted Myanmars ballistic missile program and may have assisted its nuclear weapons program.
Its possible that Pyongyang received anti-ship missiles in return for weapons or nuclear know-how.
The Kh-35 missile connection isnt definitive. Nobody knows for sure how North Korea got its missiles, and its even possible albeit remotely that they might be a totally new design.
With North Korea, its hard to rule out anything. But the announcement of the threat, clues about the threat and the sudden appearance of the Kh-35 is an awfully big coincidence.
Well probably never know how U.S. intelligence found out about North Koreas Kh-35. Still, thanks to open source analysis, we civilians have a pretty good idea theyre there and where they might have come from.
If the big one ever breaks out really no reason to worry about these ship cruise missiles as the Nork Navy will be at the bottom of the Yellow Sea within 12 hours of war.
Or, it may have been a Christmas gift from the Clintons.
The other candidate would be the Iranian copy of the C-802. The IRG gives those to Hezbollah.
They need some way to target the ship.
And they wouldn't sell their best stuff to North Korea. That should give people concern.
I thought they were worried about the Chinese ship-buster ballistic missile. That was news on here several years ago.
“the Nork Navy will be at the bottom of the Yellow Sea within 12 hours of war.”
It’s not the “Nork Navy” that is the worry, imo, it’s how many of these are on hard-to-find truck launchers, on the islands all around NK. With a 70 miles range, that’s a lot of sea-lane interdiction.
Clinton’s sold the Norks the plans to the missile for a 25 million donation to CF.
Thankfully we spend more on our military than Russia, North Korea, and China combined, so there is NO WAY any of those countries could ever be a threat to us.
(or so goes the rationale of some FReepers that want Obama to tweak Putin into a war in his backyard)
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