Something I had missed in the discussion about North Korea and its ability to wage war, until I heard an expert on Radio National this morning, is that it has
a really large conventional submarine fleet:
A substantial number of these sailors serve in the KPN’s submarine
fleet, which is one of the world’s largest. In 2001, North Korea analyst
Joseph Bermudez estimated that the KPN operated between fifty-two and
sixty-seven diesel electric submarines. These consisted of four
Whiskey-class submarines supplied by the Soviet Union and up to
seventy-seven Romeo-class submarines provided by China. Seven Romeos
were delivered assembled, while the rest were delivered in kit form.
Each Romeo displaced 1,830 tons submerged, had a top speed of thirteen
knots and was operated by a crew of fifty-four. The Romeo submarines
were armed with eight standard-diameter 533-millimeter torpedo tubes,
two facing aft. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was filmed touring and taking a short voyage on a Romeo-class submarine in 2014.
Sure, the article argues, the models are considered obsolete, but they are still capable of sinking an American ship or two, or more. As the article says:
North Korea’s reliance on submarines exposes a harsh reality for the
country: U.S. and South Korean naval and air forces are now so
overwhelmingly superior that the only viable way for Pyongyang’s navy to
survive is to go underwater. While minimally capable versus the
submarine fleets of other countries, North Korea does get a great deal
of use out of them. Although old and obsolete, North Korea’s submarines
have the advantage of numbers and, in peacetime, surprise. Pyongyang’s
history of armed provocations means the world hasn’t seen the last of
her submarine force.
I missed that as well. It is their main threat to the Carl Vinson apparently.
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