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North Korean Special
Operations Forces
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North
Korean Special Operations Forces Overview
and
North
Korean SOF and the Second Front
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Combating
North Korean Maritime Special Operations Forces
In the News
South
Korea captures North Korean sub - June 22, 1998
North
Korea apologizes for submarine intrusion - December
29, 1996
5
killed in shoot-out between South Korean troops, infiltrators
- November 5, 1996
Two
more North Korean intruders killed in manhunt
- September 21, 1996
South
Korean forces trade fire with infiltrators - September
20, 1996
7
more North Koreans shot dead in South, Manhunt for
others from submarine continues - September 19,
1998
Organization
Peoples Forces
Reconnaissance Agency
-> Land : Four (4) Recon Brigades, Five (5) Patrol
Battalions
-> Sea : 448th Unit (Nagwon)
: 907th Unit (Wonsan)
: 22th Sqd ( Nampo ) -> Infiltrated S.Korea in
'96.8
( Light Infantry Agency ) <---- '80 era : 8th
Spcl Forces Corps
-> Army : Five (5) Airborne Infantry Brigades,
Nine (9) Light Infantry Brigades, Three (3) Ranger
Brigades
-> Navy : Two (2) Seaborne Brigades ( may be Amphibious
)
-> A/F : Three (3) A/F Special Force Brigades
( Inf Div )
-> Thirty-five (35) Light Infantry Battalions:
like S.Korea Army Recon Bn of Inf Div
( Forward Area Corps : close to S.Korea )
-> (?) Ranger Bde : like S.Korea Army Spcl Aslt
Regt ( 12 )
-> Five (5) Ranger/Light Infantry Brigades
Communist Party
( Unification Dept )
-> Direct Infiltration Det
( Intelligence/Surveilance Dept )
-> Short Period Operations Det , Intelligence
Det
( Operation Dept ) : real Counter S.Korean Intell
Mission : DA
-> Kim Jung Il Political University
-> Land Ops Det
-> Sea Ops Det -> 313rd Unit : 98.6.22 , 98.7.12
infiltrated
( Social / Culture Dept )
-> Spy , Intelligence , Terrorism
( Nation Security Dept )
-> Internal Intell , Border Guard
(may have more than 20 "Special Mission Teams")
Notes on North Korean SOF
In the early 1990s, the army was made up of a mixture
of conventional and unconventional warfare forces.
By any consideration, however, North Korea has one
of the world's largest special operations forces.
Estimates of the size of the army's special operations
forces ranged from 60,000 persons to over 100,000
persons. The uncertainty over the number derives from
both the lack of information and the varying definitions
of special operations forces. Organized into twenty-two
brigades and at least seven independent battalions,
the special operations forces are believed to be the
best trained and to have the highest morale of all
North Korean ground forces.
Special operations forces were developed to meet
three basic requirements: to breach the flankless
fixed defense of South Korea; to create a "second
front" in the enemy's rear area, disrupting in-depth
South Korean or United States reinforcements and logistical
support during a conflict; and to conduct battlefield
and strategic reconnaissance. The ultimate goal was
to create strategic dislocation. The additional missions
of countering opposing forces and internal security
were added over time.
The Ministry of the People's Armed Forces controls
the bulk of the special operations forces through
one of two commands, the Reconnaissance Bureau and
the Light Infantry Training Guidance Bureau. The Reconnaissance
Bureau is the primary organization within the Ministry
of People's Armed Forces for the collection of strategic
and tactical intelligence. It also exercises operational
control over agents engaged in collecting military
intelligence and in the training and dispatch of unconventional
warfare teams. The Light Infantry Training Guidance
Bureau is directly subordinate to the General Staff
Department. The party directly controls approximately
1,500 agents.
Operations are categorized on the basis of the echelon
supported. Strategic special operations forces support
national or Ministry of People's Armed Forces objectives,
operational supported corps operations, and tactical-supported
maneuver divisions and brigades. Strategic missions
of special operations forces in support of national
and Ministry of People's Armed Forces objectives involve
reconnaissance, sniper, and agent operations, but
not light infantry operations, which primarily are
tactical operations. The main objectives of these
units are to secure information that cannot be achieved
by other means, neutralize targets, and disrupt rear
areas. In executing these operations, special operations
troops may be disguised either as South Korean military
personnel or as civilians.
Strategic missions require deep insertions either
in advance of hostilities or in the initial stages
by naval or air platforms. Based on available insertion
platforms, North Korea has a one-time lift capability
of 12,000 persons by sea and 6,000 persons by air.
Most North Korea special operations forces infiltrate
overland and are dedicated to operational and tactical
missions, that is, reconnaissance and combat operations
in concert with conventional operations in the forward
corps. Although it is unknown how forces will be allocated,
limits on North Korea's insertion capabilities constrain
operational flexibility and determine the allocation
of strategic, operational, and tactical missions.
North Korean army special operations forces units
are broken down into three categories based on mission
and mode of operation: agent operations, reconnaissance,
and light infantry and sniper. The Reconnaissance
Bureau has four sniper brigades and at least seven
independent reconnaissance battalions. The Light Infantry
Training Guidance Bureau controls fourteen light infantry/sniper
brigades: six "straight-leg" brigades, six
airborne brigades, and two amphibious brigades. Four
light infantry brigades of unknown subordination are
under the operational control of the forward corps.
In addition, each regular infantry division and mechanized
brigade has an special operations forces battalion.
Reconnaissance units are employed in rear area, strategic
intelligence collection, and target information acquisition.
Light infantry units operate in company- or battalion-sized
units against military, political, or economic targets.
Sniper units are distinguished from light infantry
units in that their basic operational unit is the
team, rather than the larger company or battalion
of the light infantry unit.
A reconnaissance brigade consists of between 3,600
and 4,200 personnel. It is organized into a headquarters,
rear support units, a communications company, and
ten reconnaissance battalions. The basic unit of operation
is the reconnaissance team, which has from two to
ten men. A light infantry brigade has between 3,300
and 3,600 personnel organized into between five and
ten battalions. The brigade can fight as a unit or
disperse its battalions for independent operations.
A sniper brigade's organization parallels that of
the light infantry brigade. The unique special operations
forces dedicated to strategic operations are the two
amphibious light infantry/sniper brigades subordinate
to the Light Infantry Guidance Bureau. These brigades
are believed deployed to Wnsan on the east coast and
Namp'o and Tasa-ri on the west coast. In organization
and manpower, they are reduced versions of the regular
light infantry brigades. The two brigades have a total
strength of approximately 5,000 men in ten battalions.
Each battalion has about 400 men organized into five
companies each. Some amphibious brigade personnel
are trained as frogmen.
In the 1970s, in support of overland insertion, North
Korea began clandestine tunneling operations along
the entire DMZ, with two tunnels per forward division.
By 1990 four tunnels dug on historical invasion routes
from the north had been discovered by South Korean
and United States tunnel neutralization teams: three
in the mid-1970s and the fourth in March 1990. The
South Koreans suspect there were as many as twenty-five
tunnels in the early 1990s, but the level of ongoing
tunneling is unknown.
At the operational and tactical level, infiltration
tactics are designed for the leading special operations
forces brigades to probe and penetrate the weak points
of the defense; disrupt the command, control, and
communications nodes; and threaten lines of communication
and supply. To achieve its goal of nearterm distraction
and dislocation of the defender, at least one special
operations forces brigade is assigned to each of the
four regular army corps deployed along the DMZ.
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