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Thursday 27 April 2017

Dummy diplomacy: North Korean weapons displayed during parade are FAKE and their sunglasses aren't even combat ready


On April 15, North Korea held massive military parade in Pyongyang in a bid to show off its supposed strength

The parade featured 'special operations commandos' bearing RPGs and assault rifles among other weapons 

But a US analyst and former intelligence offier who looked at pictures says that many of the arms are fake

Michael Pregent said: ''This was more about sending a message than being combat effective' 
One example were cylinders that looked like large rifles, but are actually 'faulty' bullet magazines 

He also doubts that the AK-47s are even loaded since North Korea is said to have a shortage of ammo  

By Ariel Zilber For Dailymail.com 





North Korea's soldiers mostly carry fake weapons during their mass-scale parades, a former US intelligence officer has said.

Michael Pregent believes many of the arms flaunted by menacing-looking North Korean troops during the parade are dummies, and claims even their sunglasses wouldn't be fit for combat.

Pregent was asked to look at photographs from an April 15 military parade in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. 

'This was more about sending a message than being combat effective,' Pregent told Fox News, who now serves as an adjunct fellow at the conservative think-tank, the Hudson Institute.



Images from an April 15 military parade in Pyongyang show what appear to be North Korean 'commandos' carrying AK-47 assault rifles with attached grenade-launchers. But they are really 'helical' magazines designed to store bullets in a spiral shape










The soldiers seen above displaying rocket-propelled grenades during the parade were most likely given toy missiles 'because Kim Jong-Un doesn't want them to launch one at the viewing stand,' according to Michael Pregent, a former US Army intelligence officer



Then there are the projectiles that the troops attach to the end of their rifles. Pregent says that these 'weapons' are 'laughable' because 'you can see the plastic is over the muzzle'






Other troops marching appear to be holding silver-plated rifles (like the one held by the soldier standing to the left of Kim Jong-Un), but Pregent believes 'these are most likely painted'






According to Pregent, the sunglasses worn by the 'special ops commandos' are regular, flat-face frames that offer little protection for the eyes. Soldiers in Western countries use specially tailored 'ballistic safety glasses' that wrap around the head

The parade was held to mark the 105th birthday of North Korea's founder, Kim Il-sung, the late grandfather of the country's current ruler, Kim Jong-Un.

Images from the parade show what appear to be North Korean 'commandos' carrying AK-47 assault rifles with attached grenade-launchers.

But Pregent says that the objects seen affixed to the rifles are really 'helical' magazines designed to store bullets in a spiral shape.

Pregent says that these magazines are often faulty since they frequently jam.



The parade was held to mark the 105th birthday of North Korea's founder, Kim Il-sung, the late grandfather of the country's current ruler, Kim Jong-Un



North Korea's large-scale military parades and weapons displays are intended for propaganda purposes since the arms carried by the troops are largely fake, according to a US military expert


A North Korean navy truck carries the 'Pukkuksong' submarine-launched ballistic missile during a military parade in Pyongyang on April 15

He also doubts that the AK-47s are even loaded since North Korea is believed to have serious shortages of domestically produced ammunition.

Pregent says many of the accessories worn by the troops are also far short of military-grade.
The sunglasses worn by the 'special ops commandos' are regular, flat-face frames that offer little protection for the eyes.

Soldiers in Western countries use specially tailored 'ballistic safety glasses' that wrap around the head.
Then there are the projectiles that the troops attach to the end of their rifles.
Pregent says that these 'weapons' are 'laughable' because 'you can see the plastic is over the muzzle.'
Though he concedes that North Korea may have a substantial RPG capability, Pregent says that the soldiers on display during the parade were most likely given toy missiles 'because Kim Jong-Un doesn't want them to launch one at the viewing stand.'

Other troops marching appear to be holding silver-plated rifles, but Pregent believes 'these are most likely painted.'  



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