North Korea may show new missiles at weekend military parade

For months, North Korea has been relatively
uncombative, as leader Kim Jong Un grapples with the coronavirus pandemic,
natural disasters and the deepening economic pain under years of tough U.S.-led
sanctions.
But ahead of the 75th founding anniversary of his
ruling party this weekend, speculation has risen that Kim may hold a massive
military parade and unveil newly developed, powerful missiles. The goal,
experts say, would be to bolster internal unity and draw U.S. attention amid
deadlocked nuclear diplomacy between the countries.
“His people are considerably wearied and his economy
is in trouble ... so Kim Jong Un would want to mobilize his people and stress a
self-reliant policy to quell their complaints and draw their loyalty,” Nam
Sung-wook, a professor at Korea University in South Korea. “To do so, he would
need new weapons, powerful weapons that would send a message to the entire
world.”
Recent satellite images showed thousands of troops
assembling in formation along with vehicles in an apparent rehearsal at an
airfield on the outskirts of Pyongyang, where the North Koreans have practiced
past parades. South Korean Defense Minister Suh Wook told lawmakers Wednesday
that North Korea is expected to unveil unspecified “strategic weapons” during a
military parade marking the Oct. 10 anniversary.
North Korea typically celebrates major state
anniversaries with big military parades during years that end in zero and five.
But it has sometimes made those parades less provocative when it was seeking
better relations with the outside world.
During a parade marking the 70th birthday of its
socialist government in September 2018, Kim didn’t speak and avoided displaying
any of his long-range missiles, as the event came three months after he held
his first summit with President Donald Trump in Singapore on the future of his
nuclear arsenal. In celebrations marking his late grandfather’s birthday in
2012 and 2017, Kim still paraded his intercontinental ballistic missiles in a
display of military might as he raised the stakes in the standoff with the
United States.
Kim met Trump two more times, but their nuclear
diplomacy has been stalled for more than a year because of disputes over
exchanging sanctions relief and disarmament steps.
Kim entered 2020 declaring his intent to strengthen
his nuclear deterrent and achieve a “frontal breakthrough” against U.S.-led
economic pressure. But the North’s broken economy was further ravaged by border
closures amid the coronavirus pandemic, which significantly reduced its trade
with China, its major ally and economic lifeline. The heavy floods and strong
typhoons that battered the North’s major farming regions this summer will
certainly worsen the country’s chronic food shortages, outside observers say.
“It’s clear that the North is running out of foreign
currency and the country could be approaching a point where it leads to
instability in exchange rates and market prices, which would make people’s
everyday lives harder and thus create a political burden for Kim,” Lim Soo-ho,
an analyst at Seoul’s Institute for National Security Strategy, said.
The National Assembly Budget Office in Seoul, a
South Korean parliamentary research arm, said in a recent report that North
Korea’s imports from China declined by nearly 67 % and its exports to China
about 72 % during the first half of this year. The report said China accounted
for more than 95 % of North Korea’s external trade last year.
North Korea has steadfastly argued it hasn’t had a
single coronavirus case, a claim widely disputed by foreign experts. The South
Korean and U.S. militaries said Kim ordered troops to shoot smugglers and
others illegally crossing its border as part of anti-virus measures. Last
month, North Korean soldiers fatally shot a South Korean found in its waters,
an incident that prompted Kim to apologize to Seoul.
“Kim has nothing show to his people on the 75th
anniversary. Can he say his economy is doing well, his people are being fed
well or his government is overcoming the coronavirus?” said Kim Yeol Soo, an
analyst with South Korea’s Korea Institute for Military Affairs. “So he will
stage a parade to unite his people who are demoralized.”
The new weapons systems that North Korea could
unveil this weekend could be a new solid-fueled intercontinental ballistic
missile, a missile with multiple warheads, an upgraded submarine-launched
ballistic missile or a sophisticated missile launcher, Kim Yeol Soo said.
It’s unclear whether Kim would make a public speech
during the event at Pyongyang’s Kim Il Sung Square. If he does, there won’t be
much for Kim to say other than calling for his people to stay united and
resilient in the fight to overcome national hardship.
“Kim is trying to manage relations with the United
States so that they don’t get worse, but he isn’t in an ideal position to do
more than that and issue a new external message toward rivals right now,” said
Moon Seong Mook, a retired South Korean army brigadier general who participated
in inter-Korean military talks.
Moon said North Korea may conduct a mid-range SLBM
test around the anniversary as such a missile won’t pose a direct threat to the
U.S. homeland. But other experts say North Korea will likely perform major
weapons tests after the U.S. presidential election in November to boost its
leverage in possible new negotiations with the U.S., whoever wins the election.
“They would think firing a missile now won’t benefit
them because they want Trump to be reelected,” Nam said. “But after the
election, whether it’s Trump or (Democratic candidate Joe) Biden, they’d want
to send a message: ‘Don’t forget me. We need your sincere attention and a
summit.’”