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The Bulsae ATGM is a family of North Korean (DPRK) anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) systems. History. Bulsae-2. North ...
North Korea: Locally produced copies. [42] ZIL-130 [43] 4×4 truck Soviet Union: ZIL-131 [44] 6×6 truck Sinotruk HOWO: 6×6 truck China: Civilian trucks converted for military use. [45] Taebaeksan 96 Medium truck North Korea: Less than 50 [46] North Korean copy of the KAMAZ-58111, [39] built in cooperation with KAMAZ. [46] ZIL-135: Transporter ...
These were subsequently reverse-engineered under the designation Bulsae-2. [8] It was advertised under designation AT-4MLB by North Korean proxy company GLOCOM, in brochure it was stated that it is controlled by laser beam guidance method, [ 9 ] [ 10 ] which was an upgrade designated Bulsae-3 .
9M111 Fagot (AT-4 Spigot) 9M112 Kobra (AT-8 Songster) – fired through smoothbore tank gun tubes of T-64 and T-72 tanks; 9M113 Konkurs (AT-5 Spandrel) 9K114 Shturm (AT-6 Spiral) – Can be air-launched; 9K115 Metis (AT-7 Saxhorn) 9K115-2 Metis-M (AT-13 Saxhorn-2) 9K116-1 Bastion (AT-10 Stabber) – fired through rifled tank gun tubes of T-55 tank
Japanese tracking data showed the missile turned sharply before landing in the sea, suggesting it was a hypersonic ballistic missile, as North Korea described it. [23] North Korea displayed six Hwasong-12A missiles in a military parade on 25 April 2022. [1]
Anti-tank missiles of North Korea include anti-tank and anti-armor missiles developed by North Korea. Pages in category "Anti-tank guided missiles of North Korea" This category contains only the following page.
It is also believed North Korea acquired three samples of T-80 in early 1990s from Afghanistan. [9] [10] North Korea's interest in the T-90 was demonstrated in August 2001 when Kim Jong-il visited the Omsktransmash defense plant which builds the T-90 during his visit to Russia. However, North Korea failed to acquire T-90 since then, as South ...
North Korea – domestically produced as the Bulsae-5 [35] [97] [98] Pakistan – 52 Kornet-E ATGWs ordered in 2017–2018 and likely to have included hundreds of missiles. [99] Peru – 288 missiles and 24 launchers plus training simulators and technical support. The contract (worth US$24 million) was signed in 2008.