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China-Japan-Koreas
North Korea's new ICBM likely broke up upon re-entry, US official says
2017-12-03
[CNN] An intercontinental ballistic missile that North Korea said could reach the "whole" mainland of the United States likely broke up upon re-entry into the earth's atmosphere, a US official said Saturday.

North Korea on Tuesday broke a two-month lull in weapons testing. It launched an advanced intercontinental ballistic missile, the Hwasong-15, that state-controlled media described as the "most powerful ICBM" carrying a "super-large heavy warhead" to unprecedented heights of almost 4,500 kilometers (2,800 miles).

Technical analysis of the missile flight is still ongoing but the US official said "the North Koreans had problems with re-entry. "

Coupled with the rogue regime's need to master missile guidance and targeting, the re-entry failure underscores the challenges facing the country's weapons program, according to the official.

Still, the ability of the new missile to fly higher and longer than others in the past signals the program's intent to develop weapons capable of attacking the US.

While some US military officials have referred to the missile launched Tuesday as a "KN 22" -- a designation signaling the launch involves a new type of ICBM -- other officials urge caution in categorizing the missile.

Posted by:Fred

#6  Too many variables. Programmed to hit altitude, not distance which can disintegrate payload structure design.

And what was the payload? And the rocket?
Posted by: newc   2017-12-03 17:42  

#5  
Posted by: Bubba the Great4743   2017-12-03 17:18  

#4  An intercontinental ballistic missile that North Korea said could reach the "whole" mainland of the United States likely broke up upon re-entry into the earth's atmosphere

MIRV practice
Posted by: Skidmark   2017-12-03 11:00  

#3  It would be a shame if successful 'reentry' were found to have been somehow, interfered with.
Posted by: Besoeker   2017-12-03 07:08  

#2  Its the payload not the delivery system that has to survive reentry.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2017-12-03 07:05  

#1  1) Call it a rumor, but someone* said the Nork missiles contained explosives designed to break them up to keep the Japanese from recovering them.

2) An EMP weapon doesn't need to do much in the way of re-entry and is less fussy about guidance.

* don't have a reference handy. sorry.
Posted by: SteveS   2017-12-03 00:52  

00:00