South Korea launches submarine command to counter North Korea threat

South Korea launched its submarine force command on Sunday, Feb 1, 2015, to better cope with evolving maritime security challenges including those from North Korea, and potentially from outside the peninsula.-- PHOTO: KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK&n
South Korea launched its submarine force command on Sunday, Feb 1, 2015, to better cope with evolving maritime security challenges including those from North Korea, and potentially from outside the peninsula.-- PHOTO: KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK 

SEOUL (Korea Herald/Asia News Network) - South Korea launched its submarine force command on Sunday to better cope with evolving maritime security challenges including those from North Korea, and potentially from outside the peninsula.

Incorporating its functions of underwater operations, training and education, and maintenance into the new command, the Navy seeks to conduct more integrated, efficient and stable submarine operations, Navy officials explained.

With the launch, the South has become the world's sixth country to have a submarine command. Traditional maritime powers such as the US, Japan, France, Britain and India have run submarine commands.

"The launch of the submarine force command is a clear display of our will to perfectly defend our East, West and South Seas through the enhanced quality and quantity of our submarine capabilities," the Navy said in a press release.

"With the command, we have secured capabilities to more proactively deter North Korean threats by effectively controlling and managing our submarine forces - strategic weapons systems that could stealthily strike the heart of enemy forces."

Rear Admiral Upper Half Youn Jeong Sang, a former deputy naval operations commander, will head the new command tasked with maintaining deterrence against the North, conducting wartime missions to strike strategic enemy targets, and protecting sea lines of communication.

Calls for strengthening South Korea's submarine forces and other anti-submarine capabilities have persisted since a North Korean midget submarine torpedoed the South Korean corvette Cheonan in 2010, killing 46 sailors.

The South Korean Navy currently has a total of 13 submarines: nine 1,200-tonne 209-class submarines and four 1,800-tonne 214-class submarines. By 2019, the Navy will have a total of 18 submarines with the addition of five 214-class submarines.

In the 2020s, the Navy plans to add nine 3,000-tonne submarines equipped with vertical launchers for submarine-to-ground missiles. The 209-class submarines, first introduced in 1992, will be decommissioned in the 2020s with the addition of the new submarines.

According to South Korea's 2014 defence white paper, North Korea has some 70 submarines including midget submarines, but many of them are old and small-scale.

The US has 72 including 58 strategic nuclear-powered submarines, while China has 70 including four nuclear submarines. Japan has 18 submarines, and Russia has 64 including 11 nuclear-powered ones.

The ceremony to mark the launch of the command is to be held Monday in Jinhae, South Gyeongsang Province.

It will be attended by Defence Minister Han Min Koo, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Hwang Ki Chul and Hwang Jin Ha, chairman of the National Assembly's committee on national defence. US Pacific Fleet Submarine Force Commander Phillip G. Sawyer is also to join the ceremony.

South Korea's efforts to secure submarine forces began in 1984 with the introduction of a midget submarine, named Dolgorae. In 1990, the Navy established the 57th Submarine Squadron headed by a Navy captain. It acquired its first 209-class Changbogo submarine in 1992 from Germany. Three years later, it founded the 9th Submarine Flotilla.

In its decades-long submarine operations, the Navy has reported no accidents.

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