Despite virus shutdown, North Korea to stage huge parade
AFP
Eight months into a strict, coronavirus-triggered border shutdown, nuclear-armed North Korea is widely expected to stage an attention-grabbing display of its latest and most advanced weaponry at a mass military parade in Pyongyang on Saturday.
The cavalcade will mark the 75th anniversary of the ruling Workers' Party and satellite imagery on the respected 38North website suggests it could be huge.
"It's very clear they are preparing for a big one," Vincent Brooks, former commander of US Forces Korea (USFK), told an Atlantic Council conference.
Thousands of goose-stepping soldiers will march through Kim Il Sung Square, named for North Korea's founder, under the gaze of his grandson Kim Jong Un, the third member of the family to rule the country.
A procession of progressively larger armored vehicles and tanks will follow, culminating with whatever missiles Pyongyang wants to put on a show.
That will depend on the message it wants to send.
As tensions mounted in April 2017 giant canisters big enough to hold intercontinental ballistic missiles -- which North Korea had yet to test at the time -- rumbled through the square, sending shockwaves through the analyst community.
But in September 2018, with diplomatic processes in full swing among Pyongyang, Washington, and Seoul, the ICBMs were conspicuous by their absence -- a reticence welcomed by US President Donald Trump.
Relations now are more fraught.
Nuclear negotiations between Pyongyang and Washington have been deadlocked since the collapse of the Hanoi summit in February last year.
North Korea is widely believed to have continued to develop its arsenal -- which it says it needs to protect itself from a US invasion -- throughout the discussions.
At the end of December, Kim threatened to demonstrate a "new strategic weapon". Analysts anticipate a new submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) or an ICBM capable of striking the US mainland to be put on show -- maybe even one with multiple re-entry vehicle capabilities -- but say North Korea will tread carefully to avoid jeopardising its chances with Washington.
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