رد: كـــوريا الشماليه في حالة تأهب لقصف القواعد الامريكه
سٍلاح الغواصات الكوري الشمالي حطير جدا 
SSG Golf Class
 In January 1994 Russia signed a deal with North Korea to sell a total  of 12 [initially reported as 10] Foxtrot-class (Project 641)  conventional attack submarines and Golf II-class (Project 629) ballistic  missile submarines. The basic design of the Golf submarine is based on  the 641 Foxtrot, and the Foxtrot's electromechanical installation for  surface and underwater navigation, the hydroacoustic system, the radar  facilities and the radio communication systems were incorporated into  the Golf without change.  
The deal had been arranged by the Japanese trading company Toen  Shioji. The submarines had been decommissioned from the Russian Navy in  1990. The Russian Navy insisted that the submarine's missile launch  tubes were inactivated under Russian military observation.  
In February 1994 pressure from the international community led  Russia to halted the delivery of these submarines to North Korea. In  April 2004 the Japanese Ministry of International Trade and Industry  [MITI] ask Russia send a special representative to North Korea to  monitor the scrapping of the submarines.  
As of May 1994 only one has been delivered to North Korea, by  which time the issue faded from the headlines. At that time there were  still conflicting reports as to whether the weapon systems had been  removed from the submarines. It was not clear when North Korea took  possession of all the submarines, though the deal seems to have been  completed by the late 1990s. 
The 12 submarines in question were reportedly rust-eaten and  semi-submerged. But the submarines still had significant elements of  missile system, including launch tubes and stabilization sub-systems.   North Korea could nonetheless cannibalize the submarines for parts and  insights to improve its own submarine and missile launch technology. 
The the SS-N-4 Sark was the first Soviet submarine launched  ballistic missile SLBM, a Scud-derivative originally deployed on the  Golf submarines. At 15.5 meters in length, the Nodong-1 is one meter  longer than the SS-N-4, and would not fit in an unmodified Golf launch  tube. The modification may be a shortening of the missile, which would  also shorten the range of the missile. It is not unreasonable to assume  that North Korea may have had access to SLBM technology as the precursor  to the SS-N-4, the R-11FM, was transferred to China in December 1959.  China still uses the Golf-class submarine as an SLBM training and test  platform. Additionally, it should be noted that the Russian scientists  recruited in late 1992 were from the Makeyev Design Bureau, which is  responsible for the design of all modern Russian SLBMs.  
As of 2004 there were no reports of either Foxtrot or Golf submarines in North Korean service.