Voice of America:
SEOUL — North Korea’s submarine-launched ballistic missile test on Wednesday is prompting analysts in Seoul to speculate about what might have motivated Pyongyang to conduct it.
The missile flew 500 kilometers, an apparent leap forward for Pyongyang’s technical efforts to achieve SLBM capability, which it has been pursuing since early 2015.
Kim Jin-moo, a senior research fellow at the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, said the North’s SLBM program might be more advanced than previously thought, and that Pyongyang could be SLBM-capable within a year. The analyst cautioned, however, that whether the North will be able to mount a nuclear warhead on the missile remained to be seen.
Moon Sung-muk of the Korea Research Institute for Strategy in Seoul said Pyongyang’s lack of large submarines meant the regime might be years away from acquiring full SLBM capability.
Wednesday’s launch came two days after U.S.-South Korean annual military drills kicked off.
Chang Yong-seok of Seoul National University’s Institute for Peace and Unification Studies perceived Wednesday’s test as Pyongyang’s attempt to dismiss speculation about regime stability following a series of high-profile defections by North Korean officials…