How Powerful Is North Korea’s Military?

By The New York Times (World News) | Created at 2024-10-24 11:10:09 | Updated at 2024-10-24 13:26:17 2 hours ago
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The North’s nuclear forces have been the focus of global concern. But its conventional military is vast and politically empowered — even if it is hobbled by shortages, corruption and isolation.

Dozens of uniformed soldiers march in unison, holding what appear to be RPG weapons.
The North Korean military, officially the Korean People’s Army, is the world’s fourth largest. It has 1.3 million active-duty soldiers and another 7.6 million in the reserves.Credit...Ng Han Guan/Associated Press

Choe Sang-Hun

Oct. 24, 2024, 7:04 a.m. ET

For decades, Pyongyang’s growing nuclear arsenal has generated headlines. Now, as thousands of North Korean soldiers pour into Russia to help it fight the war in Ukraine, a much older threat has become relevant again: North Korea’s massive conventional forces, one of the largest in the world.

North Korea is arguably the world’s most militarized country. Its state propaganda calls for “arming the whole population” and defending its leader, Kim Jong-un, as “human rifles and bombs.”

But decades of international sanctions have ravaged the economy in North Korea, which also suffered a famine in the 1990s. As a result, its conventional weapons remain decrepit leftovers from a bygone era when the Soviets helped Pyongyang build up its stocks of artillery shells and rockets. Its pilots seldom fly for a lack of jet fuel. Its army has trouble finding food, gasoline and spare parts.

At the same time, North Korean soldiers are required to serve for eight to 10 years, making them one of the longest serving and most experienced conscripts in the world.

Image

North Korea deployed some of its special operation forces in Russia, according to South Korea. This photo, released by North Korean state media, shows some of those troops training. Credit...Korean Central News Agency, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Like the country itself, North Korea’s military and its fighting capabilities remain a mystery. It has not fought a major conflict since the Korean War seven decades ago. As its troops moved abroad for what could be their first major engagement in an armed conflict abroad, North Korea’s state media carried no news on their departure or any going-away ceremonies.


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