Back to Country Index COUNTRY PROFILE
Nuclear Biological Chemical Missile
Access Newswire
Country Information
 
Missile Facilities

As the North Korean political leadership began issuing directives for the procurement and development of missiles in the 1960s, North Korea began to establish the educational institutions to train engineers and technicians to sustain a missile development program. The Soviet Union and China initially provided basic technical and training assistance, as well as deliveries of rockets and anti-ship missiles. North Korean engineers have also gone abroad, especially to China, for training in basic aerospace engineering.

According to North Korean defectors, the Korea National Defense College in Kanggye, Chagang Province, has a "Rocket Engine Department" and the college provides instruction on the "production, operation procedures, and launching of missiles."[1] North Korea's top universities such as Kim Il Sung University, Kim Chaek University of Technology, and the P'yŏngsŏng College of Science have programs in science and engineering that would have applications to rocket and missile development. The Science and Education Department under the Korean Workers Party Central Committee exercises overall supervision of science curricula, but the Department of Higher Education in the Ministry of Education manages the administrative affairs of colleges and universities.[2]

The "Number Seven Factory" under the Second Natural Science Academy does design and development work before it produces missile prototypes. This facility is probably the same facility known as the "San'ŭm-dong Factory" or "San'ŭm-dong Missile Research Center." The Second Natural Science Academy is the research and development organization in charge of all weapons development in North Korea. The academy probably draws upon human resources from other scientific institutions under the Academy of Sciences, but the extent of this collaboration is unknown.

Missiles require a tremendous number of components and materials, including steel, semiconductors, and chemicals. North Korea has an industrial base and precision machine tool industry to support missile production. In recent years, North Korea has made efforts to modernize its steel plants and machine tool factories in order to increase production, efficiency and precision. North Korea has been known to import components for its weapons systems, but the level of self-sufficiency in the production of missile components and materials is uncertain. The Second Economic Committee under the National Defense Commission is responsible for all weapons production in North Korea, and the committee's Fourth Machine Industry Bureau, which is also known as the "Fourth General Bureau" or the "Missile Bureau," manages overall missile production.[3] Many of these production facilities are located underground in Chagang Province near the Chinese border.

The Missile Division under the Ministry of the People's Armed Forces commands at least 18 ballistic missile bases in North Korea. Many of these bases are likely to have a number of alternative launch pads near the missile storage site, which effectively increases the number of locations to launch missiles from their mobile transporter-erector launchers (TELs). Chiha-ri Missile Base in Chiha-ri, P'an'gyo-kun, Kangwŏn Province, is a support base for the Hwasŏng-5/6 and is probably also a launch site. A number of surface-to-ship missiles have been deployed to the Mayang Island Missile Base, which is co-located with a large base for submarine production and repairs.[4]

The National Defense Commission has ultimate command and control of the North Korean missile inventory, but little is known about Pyongyang's missile doctrine or the Missile Division's operating procedures. The National Defense Commission also has ultimate control over North Korea's missile exports, which represent a significant source of foreign exchange. The Yong'aksan Trading Company under the Second Economic Committee's External Economic Bureau handles missile exports, and the Ch'anggwang Credit Bank receives payment from buyers.[5] The foreign exchange earnings from missile exports have enabled Pyongyang to continue or expand its procurement of components and technology from abroad in order to continue the missile development program. Unfortunately, there is no reliable open source information about North Korea's internal budget or expenditures on ballistic missiles.


[1] Interview with North Korean defector "Kenki Aoyama" by Mari Sudo, research associate, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, 20 October 2002, Chiba Prefecture, Japan; Pak Hong Gi and Kim Chae Sun, "Kwisun Pukhan'oe'gyo'gwan Ko Yŏng Hwan Ssi 1 Mun 1 Tap," Taehan Maeil, 14 September 1991, p. 3, in KINDS, <http://www.kinds.or.kr>.
[2] South Korea Ministry of Unification, Pukhan Kaeyo 2000 (Seoul: ROK Ministry of Unification, 1999), p. 488.
[3] Ha T'ae Wŏn, "Puk Kunsusan'ŏp Hyŏnjuso/Mugi Taebubun Tŏkchasaengsan," Donga Ilbo, 5 February 2001, p. 3, in KINDS, <http://www.kinds.or.kr/>; Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr., The Armed Forces of North Korea (New York: I. B. Tauris, 2001), pp. 45-54.
[4] Interview with North Korean defector Im Yŏng Sŏn by Daniel A. Pinkston, senior research associate, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, 14 December 2001, Seoul.
[5] Lee Kyo Kwan, "[NK Report] Pukhan Missile Such'ul Ŏddŏhke Hana?" Chosun Ilbo, 5 March 2002, <http://www.chosun.com>; Yi Kyo-kwan, "How Does North Korea Export Missiles?" Chosun Ilbo, 5 March 2002, in "DPRK Said to Export Body, Main Parts of Missiles Separately," FBIS Document ID KPP20020305000112.



 

Updated April 2003



Research and Development
Production and Assembly
Component Production
Missile Bases
Test Sites
View all facilities alphabetically
View facilities on maps


North Korea Maps
Korean Transliteration
The Second NPT PrepCom for the 2005 Review Conference
North Korea's 11th Supreme People's Assembly Elections
Vinalon, the DPRK, and Chemical Weapons Precursors
Theater Missile Defense (TMD) and Northeast Asian Security
Related Links and Publications
Treaties and Organizations
Korean Transliteration, Geographic Units, and Proper Names
CRS Report for Congress: North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons: How Soon an Arsenal?
CRS Report for Congress: North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons Program (2006)
NBR: North Korea's Nuclear Weapons (2006)
FAS: Nuclear Weapons Program (2006)
The North Korean Plutonium Stock Mid-2006
The Impact of North Korea’s Nuclear Test on Iran Crisis



Search for:


Enter query terms separated by spaces.
Match:
Search in: Select any one of the following databases and archives or search any combination.
Click here for more details.
Entire Web Site
Global Security Newswire
Country Profiles
WMD 411
Issue Briefs & Analysis
Securing the Bomb
NTI Press Room
Source Documents
HEU Reduction and Elimination Database
Submarine Proliferation Database
Russian Language Resources
NIS Nuclear and Missile Database
NIS Nuclear Trafficking Database

Country Information
Argentina
Belarus
Brazil
China
Cuba
Egypt
France
India
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Japan
Kazakhstan
Libya
North Korea
Pakistan
Russia
South Africa
South Korea
Syria
United Kingdom
United States
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
Yugoslavia
Other


Research Library
Country Information Glossary
Issues & Analysis Source Documents
Databases Warheads & Materials
 

back to top

About This Section   

CNSThis material is produced independently for NTI by the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of and has not been independently verified by NTI or its directors, officers, employees, agents. Copyright © 2007 by MIIS.

HOME   | CONTACT US   | GET INVOLVED   | SITE MAP