North Korea conducts test of rocket engine that could power an ICBM
Rodong Sinmun
North Korea tested three similar motors in March, which could benefit its space programs or efforts to threaten the US mainland.
Engine tests have been a particular concern for observers of North Korea, as the engine previously employed in missiles, the Musudan, had a terrible track record and several recorded failures.
Mike Elleman, the senior fellow for missile defense at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, said that North Korea may have started to domestically produce a rocket engine it better understands and can more quickly integrate into weapons.
"If they have this new engine, they can design an ICBM around it in a pretty straightforward fashion," Elleman told Business Insider in May. "That doesn't mean it will happen tomorrow, but they'll be able to test [an ICBM] sooner than I had thought previously possible."
The test also coincides with intelligence reports that North Korea would test a nuclear device. But a US official conceded to Fox News that although spy satellites have spotted increased activity around the test site, "nobody knows what that means."
The US has recently tested a missile defense system meant to counter launches from North Korea, but in reality, it's woefully unprepared for a serious missile attack.
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