
North Korea: The Foundations for Military Strength -- Update 1995
PREVIOUS
December 1995
North Korea: The Foundations for Military Strength
Update 1995
Contents
CoverPreface
Chapter 1 -- A Post-Kim-Il-song North Korea
Regime Survival/Security
Leadership Succession
Economic Development
National Structure
Party Organization
Military Organization
President Kim Il-song's Foreign Policy Legacy
Chapter 2 -- Increasing Internal Pressures
Chapter 3 -- Strategic Issues
-
Proliferation/Nuclear Weapons Program
Ballistic Missiles
Chemical Weapons
Biological Weapons
Transfer Technology and Acquisition
Organization and Disposition
Weapons and Equipment
Navy
Weapons and Equipment
Air Force
Weapons and Equipment
Air Defense
Ballistic Missile Forces
Special Operations Forces
Reserve Forces
Security Forces
Wartime Employment
Weapon Production
Command, Control, and Communications
Transportation
Logistics
Glossary of Acronyms
Figures
1. Five Largest Militaries in the World2. North Korean Government - Creation of the Korean Workers' Party
3. Korean Workers' Party - The Most Important Institution in North Korea
4. Military Forces Designed To Fulfill Both Defensive and Offensive Missions
5. Orientation Map of Asia
6. North Korean 1994 Economic Sectors
7. Producing and Exporting Arms
8. Main Trading Partners
9. North Korean Trade With Japan
10. Orientation Map of North Korea
11. North Korea's Heavy Artillery Is Capable of Targeting Areas as Far South as Seoul
12. North Korea Army Personnel and Equipment
13. The Largest of the Three Services
14. Limited Navy Coastal Defense
15. North Korea's Three Combat Air Commands
16. SCUD Surface-to-Surface Missile
17. North Korea Ballistic Missile Threat Ranges
18. SCUD Missile Attack on Airfield
19. Rail Support for Most Long-Distance Traffic
20.Terrain Limitations to East-West Movements
PREVIOUS
NEWSLETTER
|
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list |
|
|