Some 70 percent
of North Korean ground forces are within a hundred kilometers of the DMZ
(Demilitarized Zone, the border with the south.) This is the main
threat to South Korea but two decades of money, fuel and food shortages
have greatly reduced North Korean Army capabilities. Two decades of
extreme poverty have done even more damage to the navy and air force.
While the North Korean Navy was never meant to be a major factor, the
air force was meant to be a crucial element in countering, for a few
days at least, the far superior South Korean and American air forces.
The North Koreans have been desperate to maintain and upgrade their air
force but have been unable to do much since the 1990s. The last “new”
aircraft North Korea was able to obtain were 40 MiG-21s secretly
purchased from Kazakhstan in 1999.
Recently South Korea got to see how far gone the North Korean
air forces were. Back in 2010, after North Korea attacked South Korea
twice (sinking a corvette with a torpedo and shelling a town on a South
Korean island near North Korea), there was a period of extremely high
tension on the border. Both Koreas put their armed forces on alert, a
higher alert than had been used for decades. What the South Korean
intel analysts were particularly amazed by was the poor performance of
the North Korean air force during this hasty mobilization as air patrols
were greatly increased. It was known that North Korean pilots had been
getting less and less flying time in the past decade, but when ordered
into the air on a large scale for this hasty mobilization, the results
were amazingly bad. The flying skills of combat pilots were particularly
unimpressive, as was the performance of many aircraft (indicating poor
maintenance). There were several crashes, and many near misses in the
air, and a general sense of confusion among the North Korean Air Force
commanders and troops. American and North Korean radars were able to
record all this and satellite photos showed the aftermath.
While North Korea was apparently trying to impress, and
intimidate South Korea with this display of aerial might, the impact was
just the opposite. With the exception of ten MiG-29s, the North Korean
air force consists of 1,300 Cold War era Russian and Chinese aircraft,
about half of them combat planes. The Chinese aircraft are knockoffs of
older Russian designs, and most of the North Korean fleet consists of
aircraft designs that were getting old in the 1970s. The North Korean
Air Force training exercise merely confirmed what many South Korean and
American intelligence analysts already suspected; that the North Korean
Air Force could barely fly, and hardly fight.
The most modern aircraft the North Koreans have are 40 MiG-29s
they got in the 1980s, when they were still getting freebies from the
Soviet Union. The rest of their combat aircraft are poorly maintained
and infrequently used (because of fuel and spare parts shortages)
antiques. There are 50 MiG-23s, an unreliable 1960s design which few
other countries still use. There are about 190 MiG-21s (40 of them
Chinese copies of the Russian design) and about 90 each of F-6s and F-5s
(Chinese copies of the MiG-19 and MiG-17, both 1950s designs hardly
anyone else uses). They have 160 bombers and ground attack aircraft,
most of them elderly Russian and Chinese designs. The best of this lot
are the 32 Su-25s, which are a decent contemporary of the U.S. A-10 that
has proven itself in Afghanistan and the Caucasus.
The helicopter force is also elderly. The best of them are 20
Russian Mi-24 gunships and 80 American MD-500D smuggled in from Germany
in the 1980s. Perhaps the most dangerous aircraft are 300 AN-2 single
engine bi-plane transports. A sturdy Russian aircraft which, although
designed in the 1940s, was simple, rugged, popular and remained in
production until a decade ago. Able to carry ten passengers, the North
Korean AN-2s have been seen practicing flying low and at night.
Since
each AN-2 can carry ten soldiers, they are believed meant to deliver
commandos in South Korea early in any way. Several thousand of these
troops could cause a lot of confusion as South Korea mobilized for war.
But in the last five years fuel shortages have meant few AN-2s have been
flying. That means the pilots are not really skilled enough to carry
off a night operation, especially flying low (to avoid radar) through
the mountains separating the two Koreas. Using AN-2s now would lead to a
lot of them, if not most of them not making it. Then there are whatever
surprises South Korea and the U.S. have developed to counter this
daring use of AN-2s.
The North Korean generals are aware of their aircraft
deficiencies and have tried to make up for it with a large anti-aircraft
system. But they have mostly very old missiles and lots of
small-caliber anti-aircraft guns. The U.S. is very good at taking out
radars and communications needed to make a nationwide anti-aircraft
system work. It comes down to who is better prepared and equipped. The
North Koreans might have some secret tricks, but they definitely don’t
have the tech or the track record that the U.S. possesses.
To make up for their lack of offensive aircraft North Korea
depends increasingly on ballistic missiles. The main weapon here is the
liquid fuel SCUD, of which North Korea has about 500 in working order.
The big drawback here is that it takes several hours to fuel these
missiles. While this could be done in caves, the North Koreans depend on
being able to keep the location of the caves secret.
Otherwise they
entrances will be bombed early on, leaving the missiles trapped
underground and useless until dug out. The North Koreans believe that if
they can develop compact and reliable nuclear weapons and equip some of
their ballistic missiles with them they will have a reliable weapon to
protect the tyrants who run the country. At the moment, the air force is
certainly not able to do the job.
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