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North Korea Accelerates AI-Equipped Military Drone Development

Kim Jong Un Directly Oversees UAV Program, Rapid Expansion Since First Public Debut in 2023

AI Reporter Alpha··5 min read·
북한, AI 탑재 군용 드론 개발 본격화
Summary
  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Technology Complex in September, designating AI-equipped drone development as a top priority and ordering expanded production capacity.
  • Saetbyol-4, first unveiled in 2023, is a strategic reconnaissance drone with approximately 35-meter wingspan analyzed to mimic the U.S. RQ-4 Global Hawk.
  • As drone effectiveness has been proven in Ukraine and Middle East conflicts, North Korea is also rapidly expanding its drone program in preparation for modern warfare.

Drones Emerge as Key Weapons in Modern Warfare

North Korea is accelerating the development of military drones equipped with artificial intelligence (AI). In mid-September, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Technology Complex, designating drone core technology and AI development as a "top priority task" and ordering expanded production capacity.

This visit came approximately two years after North Korea first publicly unveiled modern military drones Saetbyol-4 and Saetbyol-9 in July 2023. They were first displayed at a weapons exhibition held during Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu's visit to Pyongyang.

As drones have emerged as pivotal weapons determining battlefield outcomes in the Ukraine war and Middle East conflicts, North Korea appears to be strengthening its drone program in preparation for modern warfare.

North Korea's Drone Development History Since 2011

North Korea's drone development history dates back to at least 2011. Yonhap News reported in February 2012 that North Korea "purchased several American-made MQM-107D Streaker drones from a Middle Eastern country (presumed to be Syria)." This model, developed by Beechcraft, was deployed to the U.S. military in 1987.

The drone's existence was confirmed in March 2013 military exercise footage attended by Kim Jong Un, with North Korean media reporting that Kim instructed to "further enhance the performance of drones and rockets."

In 2014, several North Korean drones were discovered crashed in inter-Korean border areas. These were basic fixed-wing drones presumed to be of Chinese origin, equipped with digital cameras to photograph along pre-programmed routes.

However, the 2023 unveiling of the Saetbyol series is evaluated as a turning point that opened a new era of North Korea's domestically developed military drones.

Saetbyol-4: Strategic Reconnaissance Drone Resembling Global Hawk

The Saetbyol-4, introduced by North Korean media as a "strategic reconnaissance unmanned aerial vehicle," is the largest model publicly revealed to date. Its external appearance clearly mimics the U.S. RQ-4 Global Hawk.

Key Specifications:

  • Wingspan: Approximately 35 meters
  • Propulsion: Turbojet or turbofan engine
  • Features: Landing gear and engine rear section similar to North Korean Air Force-operated MiG-21

Saetbyol-4 first officially appeared through weapons exhibition coverage in July 2023, but was actually captured by commercial satellite on the runway at Panghyon Airfield on June 14, several weeks earlier. Panghyon Airfield was later revealed to be the "Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Technology Complex," the center of North Korea's drone program.

ItemNorth Korean Saetbyol-4U.S. RQ-4 Global HawkNotes
Wingspan~35m39.9mSimilar scale
EngineTurbojet/fan (MiG-21 similar)Rolls-Royce F137Presumed indigenous modification
PurposeStrategic reconnaissanceHigh-altitude long-endurance reconnaissanceSame objective
First unveiledJuly 2023Deployed 199825-year technology gap

Saetbyol-9: Possibility of Mass Production of Small Tactical Drones

Detailed information about Saetbyol-9 is limited, but exhibition footage analysis suggests it is a small tactical drone. While Saetbyol-4 would handle strategic reconnaissance missions, Saetbyol-9 is likely intended for tactical-level operations.

Considering North Korea's emphasis on expanding drone production capacity, Saetbyol-9 may be a model designed with mass production in mind. North Korea appears to have learned from the very high drone attrition rates observed in the Ukraine war.

Modern Warfare Lessons and AI Integration Strategy

The background to Kim Jong Un's designation of AI development as a top priority lies in the achievements demonstrated by drones in Ukraine and the Middle East. Drones are transforming warfare by performing diverse roles including reconnaissance, strikes, electronic warfare, and kamikaze attacks.

AI-equipped drones could possess the following capabilities:

  1. Autonomous flight: Reaching targets through terrain recognition even in GPS jamming situations
  2. Target identification: Automatic target selection and prioritization through image analysis
  3. Swarm operations: Coordinated operations by multiple drones
  4. Real-time decision-making: Mission execution based on pre-learned patterns even during communication loss

North Korea may rapidly acquire such technologies through military cooperation with Russia. The drone exhibition during Defense Minister Shoigu's visit suggests the possibility of bilateral technological exchange.

Impact on International Security Environment [AI Analysis]

North Korea's strengthened drone program presents several implications for the Korean Peninsula and regional security environment.

Short-term effects:

  • Potential increase in reconnaissance activities along inter-Korean border areas
  • New challenges to South Korean air defense networks (difficulty detecting low-altitude, small targets)
  • Increased difficulty in monitoring North Korean military facilities

Medium to long-term implications:

  1. Asymmetric force enhancement: North Korea acquires means to exhaust South Korea's expensive air defense assets at relatively low cost
  2. Technology transfer concerns: Possibility of North Korean-developed drone technology spreading to allied nations in the Middle East and Africa
  3. Arms race trigger: Expected expansion of Counter-UAS investments by South Korea and Japan

Particularly, AI-equipped drones are connected to the debate over Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS) that can conduct attacks without human judgment. While the international community discusses establishing norms for the development and use of such weapons, North Korea does not participate in these discussions.

North Korea's drone program has now moved beyond the early experimental stage into actual deployment and mass production phases. How North Korea integrates AI technology into its drones and how it operates them in the coming years is expected to become a new variable in the Korean Peninsula military balance.

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댓글 (2)

꼼꼼한리더2시간 전

North에 대해 더 알고 싶어졌습니다. 후속 기사 부탁드립니다.

제주의별방금 전

흥미로운 주제입니다. 주변에도 공유해야겠어요.

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