Sejong Policy Briefs

North Korea's tactical·strategic arms development trends and implications for the evolution of nuclear deterrence principles after the Hanoi summit

Date 2021-03-30 View 1,475 Writer KIM Jungsup

North Korea's tactical·strategic arms development trends and implications for the evolution of nuclear deterrence principles after the Hanoi summit

 

 Kim Jungsup

 

(jungsupkim@sejong.org)

 

Senior Research Fellow,

 

The Sejong Institute 

 

Executive Summary

 

Evaluation of North Korea's tactical·strategic weapons after the Hanoi summit

 

 

New tactical guided weapons (KN-23, 24, etc.) are evaluated as forces of dual use that are capable of mounting both conventional and nuclear warheads with improved surprise attack capability, accuracy, and interception avoidance capability

 

Ultra-large ICBM (Hwasong-16) is estimated to have a multi-warhead carrying capacity (2-3 nuclear warheads) within a range (13,000 km or more) that can hit the eastern U.S.

 

New SLBMs (Pukguksong-3/4/5) and mid-sized submarines (3,000 tons) are expected to be able to hit Guam from North Korea's East Sea, and the development of nuclear submarines is expected to take a considerable time due to technical difficulties such as the construction of small nuclear reactors

 

Atmospheric re-entry and MIRV technology required to strike the U.S. mainland have not reached the reliable level yet

 

 

 

The doctrine of North Korea's nuclear deterrence implied by new tactical·strategic weapons

 

The new weapon makes it clear once again that North Korea is pursuing 'minimum deterrence' against the U.S. mainland

 

There is a focus on maximizing the viability and retaliatory capability of nuclear weapons (SLBM, mobile ICBM, multi-warheads, etc.) in order to secure 'second strike capability' against large U.S. cities

 

The development of new tactical weapons is part of the 'deterrence by denial' strategy that blocks the deployment of U.S. reinforcements by securing tactical nuclear attack capabilities on the Korean Peninsula and Japan

 

North Korea's nuclear readiness implies that it is not just 'assured retaliation' but also 'asymmetric escalation' where early use of tactical nuclear weapons is inevitable (this is similar to Pakistan's nuclear program, which seeks to make up for the inferiority of conventional forces with tactical nuclear weapons)

 

By combining retaliation capabilities against the U.S. mainland (assured retaliation) and rejecting capabilities of South Korea, Japan, and the West Pacific region (asymmetric escalation), maximum deterrence effect is pursued

 

 

 

Implications for the South Korea-U.S. nuclear deterrence strategy

 

If North Korea's nuclear capability approaches hitting the U.S. mainland, the reliability of extended deterrence will be raised, yet excessive pessimism should be avoided

 

The doctrine of North Korea's nuclear deterrence using tactical nuclear weapons has lost much of its meaning due to the U.S. low-power nuclear weapons development program promoted through the NPR in 2018

 

Some raise the need for NATO-style shared nuclear control, but in order to improve the reliability of extended deterrence, it is desirable to continue to deepen policy-level discussions on conditions, procedures, and decision-making of the use of nuclear weapons on the Korean Peninsula

 

Considering the limitations of the cost-effectiveness of missile defense, it is necessary to adjust the priority between interception (deterrence by denial) and strike (deterrence by punishment) and pursue the optimal combination

 

It should be noted that the 'strategic target strike,' which includes the concept of a preemptive strike in the South Korean military's nuclear·WMD response system, has a dangerous and unstable effect (the pressure of use them or lose them) that further lowers the threshold of nuclear use along with the doctrine of North Korea's tactical nuclear use

 

 

In addition to enhancing the reliability of extended deterrence, the South Korean military needs to establish a stance that underlies its deterrence strategy of 'overwhelming response,' deterrence by punishment (this is a conventional deterrence, yet it works in combination with extended deterrence, and can affect North Korea's calculation method) 

 

※ This article is written based on the author’s personal opinions and does not reflect the views of the Sejong Institute.

※ This is a third party's unofficial translation of the original paper which was written in Korean. All references should be made to the original paper.