North Korea fetes fearsome but fragile army
SEOUL - North Korea celebrated with a grand parade on Wednesday the 75th birthday of its invincible army, which experts say is capable of dealing a quick and devastating blow, but is hollow at the core.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-il reviewed the parade of military hardware, and goose-stepping soldiers through central Pyongyang, waving to the enthusiastically cheering crowds from a balcony, North Koreas KCNA news agency said. Our military and people need to join forces, holding big faith in great leader Kim Jong-il, Kim Kyok-sik, chief of staff for the Korean Peoples Army, standing by Kim Jong-il, said in a statement broadcast on state television.
Columns of rocket units also went past the tribune of honour, demonstrating the invincible might of the KPA equipped with modern offensive and defensive means, KCNA said. It was not clear if those units included the Taepodong 2 rocket.
With nearly 1.2 million soldiers, the secretive communist state today has one of the largest standing forces on the planet. But the crippled economy has left the military short of food for its soldiers as well as lacking fuel and parts for its tanks, planes and ships. The army would not last long in a prolonged conflict with superior forces such as the US military, but it could inflict a lot of damage before falling, experts say. North Korea can provoke a war and has the military power to cause initial damage, but does not have the ability to carry out and win the war, said Baek Seung-joo, a military expert at the Souths Korea Institute for Defence Analyses.
South Koreas defence ministry said the North had amassed more than 13,000 pieces of artillery and multiple rocket launchers, many of them aimed at Seoul. Janes International Defence Review estimates if North Korea launched an all-out barrage, it could achieve an initial fire rate of 300,000 to 500,000 shells an hour into the Seoul area, home to half the countrys 49 million people.
North Korea also has some 800 ballistic missiles behind its artillery array, one of the largest such arsenals in the world.
The average North Korean soldier lives in squalid conditions that reflect the poverty of the country, but may have a few more perks than the average worker.
North Korea admits to economic shortcomings, but says the military will still triumph. A rosy future is in store for the people, who though not fed well, give priority to the development of the defence industry, build their army into a strong one and convert their whole country into an impregnable fortress, KCNA said.
Kims power stems from his position as the chairman of the National Defence Commission. His late father, Kim Il-sung, is the countrys eternal president and his portraits festooned Kim Il Sung Square, where the parade was held, KCNA said. The National Defence Commission has the people who have Kim Jong-ils utmost trust and those he needs, said Jeung Young-tae of the Korea Institute for National Unification.
The old KCNA writer we knew and loved must be no more, this stuff doesn't get a '3' on my scale. |
Posted by: Steve White 2007-04-26 |