Английская Википедия:Hwasong-18

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox weapon

Шаблон:Infobox Korean name

The Hwasong-18 (Шаблон:Korean) is a North Korean three-stage solid-fuelled intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). It is the first solid-fuelled ICBM developed by North Korea, and was first unveiled at the 8 February 2023 parade commemorating the 75th anniversary of the founding of the Korean People's Army.[1] Its maiden flight occurred on 13 April 2023.[2][3]

History

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un first alluded to the development of a solid-fuel ICBM in January 2021 when it was included as part of a five-year arms development plan.[4][5] A static ground test of a large solid-propellant rocket motor was conducted on 15 December 2022 which produced a thrust of 140 metric tons of force.[6] Four 9-axle mobile launchers carrying what appeared to be solid-fuel ICBM models were showcased on the 8 February 2023 parade marking the 75th anniversary of the Korean People's Army. They were carried in canisters to fire the missiles by cold launch to eject them before first-stage ignition to protect the launcher from damage by the exhaust plume. These models were not named in the parade, but they were clearly of a different design than the previous large Pukguksong-5 solid-fueled SLBM.[7][8]

The Hwasong-18 conducted its first flight test on 13 April 2023. The first stage followed a standard trajectory optimized for reaching maximum range, but the second and third stages pulled up into a highly-lofted trajectory; this unusual flight path caused Japan to issue a missile alarm, as during the first stage burn it appeared that the missile could overfly the country. The use of solid fuel makes an ICBM launch more difficult to preempt than previous liquid-fueled missiles, as it does not require hours of fueling and is easier to conceal since it does not require as many accompanying support vehicles.[9][10] A second flight test was conducted on 23 July 2023. North Korean media reported that the missile flew to a range of 1,001.2 km at a maximum altitude of 6,648.4 km for 4,491 seconds (74.85 minutes), giving it the longest flight time and highest apogee of any North Korean ICBM flight to date. Based on these metrics, the Hwasong-18 demonstrated its potential to travel 15,000 km on an operational trajectory, enough to reach anywhere in the continental United States.[11] The third launch occurred on 18 December 2023. A third consecutive successful launch and North Korea's characterization of it as the "launching drill of an ICBM unit" likely indicated that the Hwasong-18 had become operationally deployed.[12]

IRBM

In November 2023, North Korea announced static ground tests of rocket motors for a solid-fueled intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM). On 14 January 2024, a flight test was conducted which South Korea said flew 1,000 km; Japan said its analysis showed it traveled at least 500 km at the maximum altitude of 50 km. The missile uses the first two stages of the Hwasong-18's solid rocket motors. A solid-fuel IRBM would be able to threaten U.S. military bases such as on Guam as far as 3,300 km away from North Korea, while having the same advantages of being easier to move and quicker to launch than the liquid-fueled Hwasong-12 IRBM. North Korean media also claimed the missile was equipped with a hypersonic warhead, which was similar to the conical, finned maneuverable reentry vehicle (MaRV) payload used on the Hypersonic Missile Type 2. Such a payload would complicate ballistic missile defenses due to its lower altitude flight path keeping it below radar coverage longer and ability to perform terminal maneuvers.[13][14][15]

Test launches

Attempt Date Location Pre-launch announcement Outcome Additional notes
1 13 April 2023 07:22 a.m. Pyongyang Standard Time[3] Kangdong County, Pyongyang
Шаблон:Coord[16]
None Шаблон:Success First test flight of the Hwasong-18, with an apogee of around 3000 km and a flight distance of around 1000 km.

Kim Jong Un supervised the launch.[3]

2 12 July 2023 Kangdong County, Pyongyang
Шаблон:Coord
None Шаблон:Success Second test flight of the Hwasong-18, with an apogee of 6648.4 km and a flight distance of 1001.2 km.

Kim Jong Un supervised the launch.[17][18]

3 18 December 2023 Kangdong County, Pyongyang
Шаблон:Coord
None Шаблон:Success Third test flight of Hwasong-18. Flew for 73 minutes, maximum altitude of more than 6,518.2 km, covered ~1,002.3 km ground track.[19]

See also

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:DPRK missiles

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  7. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок onn23feb23 не указан текст
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  11. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок 38north18july23 не указан текст
  12. Ошибка цитирования Неверный тег <ref>; для сносок 38north21dec23 не указан текст
  13. North Korea claims another successful test of its hypersonic glide missile tech. CNN. 15 January 2024.
  14. North Korea launches a suspected intermediate-range ballistic missile that can reach distant US bases. Associated Press. 14 January 2024.
  15. North Korea Tests New Solid IRBM With MaRV Payload. 38 North. 18 January 2024.
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