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North Korea’s Military Strategy: Why New Runway Designs at Airports Could Change Everything

Daniel Kim Views  

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North
North Korean runway expansion / Source: News1

North Korea is refurbishing runways at three strategic airfields along the east coast and near the Chinese border.

The regime frames the projects as tourism-related upgrades — pointing to developments such as the Galma coastal resort and Samjiyon — but analysts say the work is likely a dual-purpose effort to sharpen wartime air-force capabilities, given the near absence of civilian air traffic.

Why North Korea ditched 90-degree exits and chose angled taxiways

NK News, using Planet Labs satellite imagery, found recent runway work at Wonsan Galma International Airport, the Uiju airbase near Sinuiju, and Samjiyon Airport. The most conspicuous change at all three sites is the installation or expansion of angled (high-speed) taxiways.

Older North Korean military airfields typically use right-angle (90-degree) exit taxiways. With those exits, landing aircraft must slow to roughly 15 km/h (about 9.3 mph) on the runway before they can turn off.

North
North Korean runway expansion / Source: News1

By contrast, angled — or high-speed — exit taxiways let aircraft vacate the runway immediately after touchdown while maintaining speeds above roughly 80 km/h (about 50 mph). That can reduce runway occupancy time (ROT) by more than 30 percent.

Beyond convenience, these changes have a clear military logic: reducing the time aircraft block a runway increases the number of takeoffs and landings possible in a short period, effectively boosting sortie rates during a conflict.

Runways extended to 3,000m (about 9,843 ft): Opening a major North Korea–Russia logistics route?

The military intent is also evident in runway-extension work.

Construction at the Uiju airbase near Sinuiju began in November, extending the runway from about 2,500 meters to roughly 3,000 meters. Wonsan Galma International Airport is refurbishing intersecting runways of approximately 3,500m and 3,120m, and Samjiyon Airport is adding taxiways to its 3,300m runway.

North
North Korean runway expansion / Source: News1

A 2,500m runway is generally adequate for light fighter operations. But runways exceeding 3,000m change the calculus: they can support medium-to-large bombers taking off with maximum fuel and weapons loads.

Should 3,000m-class runways at bases such as Uiju become fully operational, experts warn, they could safely accommodate heavy transport and bomber aircraft. That includes IL-76–class strategic transports, which have reportedly been used in recent North Korea–Russia arms transfers; unrestricted IL-76 operations would create robust logistics hubs near the border.

Analysts say the upgrades likely form part of broader infrastructure improvements intended to facilitate large-scale military logistics and troop movements between North Korea and Russia, particularly in border regions.

While the projects are publicly pitched as tourism development, defense authorities should closely monitor how these covert runway modifications could expand the North Korean Air Force’s operational reach and increase sortie rates in a future Korean Peninsula contingency.

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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