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The 2020 Cheonma-2 MBT prototype has the Bulsae-3 as secondary armament. It is said to be reversed engineered Soviet/Russian 9K111 Fagot or 9M133 Kornet missiles. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] However, the diameter of the ATGM launchers appears to be 150 mm like the 9M133, rather than 120 mm of the 9K111 and may thus have a higher penetration.
Bulsae-2 [58] North Korean copy of the 9K111 Fagot, it uses a laser guidance system. [30] 9M133 Kornet: Produced locally as the Bulsae. [30] Recoilless rifles B-10 recoilless rifle [3] 1,700 [24] Self-propelled anti-tank guided missiles 9P122: Armed with 9M14 Malyutka missiles. [24] M-2010 ATGM [24] 8-tube launcher mounted on a M-2010 6×6 APC ...
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
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 .
A Bulsae-4 anti-tank missile vehicle was reportedly spotted by a Ukrainian drone in Kharkiv Oblast, suggesting that Russia is using North Korean-made armoured vehicles. [2] Exiled Russian politician Ilya Ponomarev was injured in a drone attack on his residence near Kyiv. [3]
Bulsae ATGM This page was last edited on 30 July 2024, at 20:17 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
North Korea has developed a clone of the Kornet known as the Bulsae-3 (English: Firebird-3), which was first revealed on 27 February 2016 publicly during a demo test. [11] [12] The 9M133F-1 Kornet variant with a thermobaric warhead was expected to enter serial production in 2019, according to a company report. [13]
In July 2024, a DPRK weapons system which includes the Bulsae-4 ATGM was seen to destroy a British-supplied AS-90 self-propelled artillery system in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine. According to at least one observer, "the identification of the first North Korean vehicle in Ukraine marked a turning point in Pyongyang's involvement in the conflict."