Müs wrote:
So... can Norks put nuke on missile, y/n, plzkthx?
I guess you'll just have to wait and see.
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I know there are issues besides just strapping a warhead bus onto the nose of an ICBM and hitting something on the other side of the world. Targeting is a big one, especially with MIRVs right?
In the sense that you or I, or even Coro, can't design one that would actually work with just some library books, Google searches and Windows calculators, yes there are issues, such as the design of the re-entry vehicle.
However, NK has engineers and scientists that work on this stuff all day, every day (and probably face the threat of execution for repeated failure). It might be fun to denigrate them, but they are in fact capable of solving these problems - NK does build missiles and other things that work, even if they are laughably primitive. Our 1950s and 1960s technology would be laughable today, but the people that designed it were competent.
Furthermore, NK can look at existing designs and glean a lot of information that puts them near a solution just from a starting point. A trained person can look at a picture of a re-entry vehicle and get a lot of information about its properties just from its size and shape that is not obvious to a layman. MIRVs are somewhat more complicated than the re-entry vehicle; that complication coming from the energy budget of the warhead bus and the precision required rather than the actual targeting. However, MRVs (MIRVs without the ability to target independently; essentially using several smaller devices instead of one large one, like a cluster bomb) are much simpler.
I have some pictures that will illustrate the MIRV stuff better that I can post later on this evening.
As to the targeting, that isn't really particularly hard for NK purposes. NK is going to target large, and relatively soft things such as power plants, factories, naval or air bases perhaps, not ICBM silos or specific targets within military bases such as runways. It is not hard to get the locations of targets with basic cartographic and geographic information that's readily available to essentially everyone. You can see individual ICBM silos on Google Earth; targeting Seattle or Honolulu is orders of magnitude less difficult.
The math involved is fundamentally no different than any other artillery calculation. The mechanics of the missile itself are different and more complex, but its flight path is, at its core, a ballistic arc. Accuracy is a matter of refining the technology, not of understanding the principles better.
It's important to understand that NK has rather different goals with its weapons than the US or Russia; attempting to strike military targets or hard targets is not something they are concerned with. The UK, France, or China, with their small arsenals might still want to do so as a "warning"; for example the UK might, in a confrontation with Russia, strike a major naval base and warn the Russians "back down or the next one goes at Moscow."
NK has rather different goals. They want to be able to threaten o do something crazy, much like some whacko with a hostage. They want to hold US targets at risk the same way they hold Seoul at risk. Then, they feel they will be able to make demands from behind the shield of deterrence.
Several years ago, NK sank a SK naval vessel with a torpedo attack. Normally, this would be justification for war - an unprovoked surprise attack on a naval vessel is unquestionably cause for war in retaliation, but SK did not go to war because Seoul. NK wants to be able to do the same thing - they want to be able to demand things, with the threat of a nuclear strike behind it. The idea is "Give us this or we vaporize four of your cities. Yeah, you'll slaughter us, but who cares? We're already starving so it hardly matters, but you will have lost four cities."