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NoDong-1 North Korean Medium-Range Ballistic Missile

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Basic Information
Name
NoDong-1 North Korean Medium-Range Ballistic Missile
Designation
Alternate Designation
No Dong, Nodong, Hwasong, Nodong-A, Hwasong-7, Rodong
Equipment Type
Manufacturer
Date of Introduction
1994
Description

The NoDong is a medium-range ballistic missile indigenous to North Korea. The missile has a maximum range of 1250 km, making it capable of striking all of South Korea and Japan. The NoDong is liquid-fueled and can carry a payload of 1,200kg. It is likely capable of carrying nuclear warheads. As a road-mobile system, the missile can be launched from any location and is concealable, making it more resilient to a preemptive strike. Believed to have been developed in the late 1980s as a part of a Soviet technological transfer, the NoDong is an enhanced version of the Soviet Scud-C missile. However, the development of the NoDong was not entirely an independent North Korean effort, but a collaboration of Chinese and Russian assistance. A derivative of the NoDong was used as the first stage of the long-range Taepodong-1 when it was launched in 1998. Although the rocket failed to reach orbit, the NoDong performed successfully as the first stage. The capabilities of the NoDong-1 missile are such that it can only effectively be used against large, soft targets like cities, airports, or harbors. Its range is sufficient to put parts of Japan within striking distance. However, the accuracy is extremely low for modern missiles and likely ineffective against hardened military targets unless it was equipped with a nuclear warhead. In 2006, it was estimated that North Korea’s inventory of NoDong-1 missiles was approximately 200. By 2009, reports indicated that this stockpile may have reached 300 missiles.

Air & Air Defense Specifications
Range 1250.0 km
Variants
Shahab-3 (Iran) The Shahab-3 (Persian: Šahâb 3‎; meaning "meteor") is a medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM) developed by Iran and based on the North Korean Nodong-1. The Shahab-3 has a range of 1,000km, a MRBM variant can now reach 2,000km (can hit targets as far as Israel, Egypt, Romania, Bulgaria and Greece). It was tested from 1998 to 2003 and added to the military arsenal on July 7, 2003, with an official unveiling by Ayatollah Khamenei on July 20. With an accuracy of 140m CEP, the Shahab-3 missile is primarily effective against large, soft targets (like cities). Given the Shahab-3’s payload capacity, it would likely be capable of delivering nuclear warheads. According to the IAEA, Iran, in the early 2000s may have explored various fusing, arming, and firing systems to make the Shahab-3 more capable of reliably delivering a nuclear warhead.
Ghauri (Pakistan) The Ghauri–I (Urdu: غوری-ا‎; official codename: Hatf–5 Ghauri–I) is a land-based surface-to-surface medium-range ballistic missile, in current service with the Pakistan Army's Strategic Forces Command— a subordinate command of Strategic Plans Division. Influenced from the design of Nodong-1 of North Korea, its extensive modification and engineering took place in Kahuta Research Laboratories (KRL) in 1990s with an objective of developing an electronic system that uses a single stage liquid fuel rocket motor to carry a payload of 700kg to a range of 1,500 km. This is enough to reach most, if not all of India. Two variants of the Ghauri were produced under the secretive missile research program started in 1987 and the development of a third variant was cancelled. The Ghauri-II uses increased motor assembly length and improved propellants for an increased range of 2,300km.
System
Alternate Designation No Dong, Nodong, Hwasong, Nodong-A, Hwasong-7, Rodong
Basing Ground
Launch Platform(s) TEL similar to the Russian-made MAZ-543 but with 10 wheels
Proliferation Iran and Pakistan. Estimates are that Pakistan obtained 12-25 NoDong missiles. In regards to Iran, reports indicate that it received 150 NoDong 1/2 missiles. Iraq, Eqypt, Syria, and Libya are all believed to have negotiated to obtain the missile at some point, though there are no confirmed exports to these countries.
Effective Range 900-1,300 km
Circular Error Probability 2,000m (50m is GPS is integrated)
Time Required to go from Travel to Ready to Fire 60 mins
Dimensions
Length 16.2 m
Missile Weight 16,500 kg
Diameter 1.36 m
Fin Span INA
Payload
Warhead Type Single warhead
Warhead Options Nuclear, chemical, HE or sub-munitions
Nuclear Yield Medium yield
Conventional Warhead Weight 700-1,200 kg
Conventional Warheads Available HE, sub-munitions
Multiple Independently targetable Reentry Vehicle (MIRV) Capable INA
Chemical Capable Yes (thickened VX)
Propulsion Characteristics
Engine Single
Propellant Liquid propellant
Speed INA
Fire Control
Guidance System Inertial
Details
Country of Origin North Korea
Category Medium-Range Ballistic Missiles (MRBM) (1,001 km - 3,000 km)
Air > Medium-Range Ballistic Missiles (MRBM) (1,001 km - 3,000 km)
Filter Label
N
Classification
Domain
Air & Air Defense
Equipment Status
Active
Dimensions
Length
16.2 m
Width
1.36 m
Height
Weight
16500 kg
Operators (2)
Russia
North Korea
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