The Korean People’s Army has conducted an artillery fire competition, “inspecting and evaluating” mechanised troops’ performance “in order to increase their mobile artillery combat capabilities,” the Korean Central News Agency reported on Sunday.
The drills, held on Saturday, were said to have been carried out “at a time when enthusiasm to undergo intensive training prevails throughout the [Army] for ushering in a new heyday in strengthening the state defence capabilities under the banner of self-defence.”
The exercises were said to have been presided over by senior Politburo official Pak Jon Chon, and General Rim Kwang Il, Army chief of staff, as well as other commanders.
Unit commanders were said to have been provided with decision-making autonomy to carry out their tasks, and to have personally commanded individual artillery units to destroy targets. “As soon as the firing orders were given by the commanders of the combined units, guns competitively shelled the target to accurately hit and annihilate the enemy,” KCNA reported. Winners of the competition were said to have been awarded master gunner certificates, medals, and badges.
Much of North Korea’s artillery is deployed near the border with South Korea and aimed at cities and military facilities. Pyongyang hopes such a deployment will prevent a US-led invasion of the country. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, before it obtained nuclear weapons, North Korea used its artillery as the centrepiece of its deterrent force.
Most of the country’s artillery, mortar, and rocket artillery formations are armed with Soviet-era gun designs, as well as domestic guns like the M-1978 Koksan and Tokchon self-propelled guns, created by the country’s domestic defence industry. North Korea is also thought to have well over a thousand truck-launched multiple rocket launch system (MLRS) units, ranging from modified BM-21 Grads launching 122 mm rockets to the KN-09, a new homegrown 300 mm guided rocket launcher.
Saturday’s drills came in the wake of the aerial drills between the US and South Korea, which kicked off on Monday and wrapped up on Friday. The annual exercises, which proceeded in spite of objections from Pyongyang, reportedly involved some 200 aircraft. North Korea often ties its exercises and nuclear and missile tests to actions taken by Seoul and Washington, and has regularly accused the countries of plotting aggression. On Saturday, North Korean newspaper Tongil Sinbo called the latest US-South Korean drills a “war rehearsal” that threatened the stability of the Korean Peninsula.
Since it obtained nuclear weapons and the missiles theoretically capable of lobbing them across vast distances – including any point in the continental United States – North Korea’s artillery drills have received less attention from foreign officials and media than they once did.
Last month, the US accused Pyongyang of posing a “threat” to regional peace and security following the testing of a new submarine-launched ballistic missile and held a UN Security Council meeting to discuss the matter. North Korea’s Foreign Ministry responded by urging the US not to “trouble itself” over the DPRK’s activities, suggesting that criticism of its testing of a missile class which the US already possesses constitutes the height of “double standards.”
North Korean, South Korean and US officials recently signalled readiness to improve inter-Korean dialogue amid growing tensions, which escalated after Donald Trump, with whom North Korean leader Kim Jong-un established a personal rapport, left office. Trump’s successor, Joe Biden, didn’t help things by referring to Kim as a “thug” and “tyrant” on the campaign trail, with Pyongyang responding by referring to Biden asan “imbecile” and “rabid dog” that “must be beaten to death with a stick.”