North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits Korean People's
Army pilots who have completed a tour of battle sites in the area of Mt Paektu.
Photo: Reuters
|
Satellite images taken between January and this month show a
North Korean nuclear reactor that can yield material for atomic bombs may be
operating again at low power or intermittently, U.S. experts said on Wednesday.
A report from David
Albright and Serena Kelleher-Vergantini at Washington's Institute for Science
and International Security said the imagery also suggested that a centrifuge
plant at the Yongbyon nuclear complex had been operated and that North Korea
may be preparing to conduct renovations at this plant.
Reuters reports:
The ISIS think tank said
last year that satellite imagery from late August and late September indicated
the Yongbyon reactor may have been partially or completely shut down.
The latest ISIS analysis
comes at a time of rising concern about North Korea's nuclear and missile
capabilities.
The experts based their
latest assessment on observation of melting snow patterns on the reactor and
turbine buildings at Yongbyon, indicating that the insides of the buildings may
have been hot. They also pointed to signs of warm water being discharged from
the reactor.
North Korea has a uranium
enrichment facility at Yongbyon and the reactor has previously been used for
plutonium production. Both materials can be used to make atomic bombs.
In February, Albright was
among experts at the U.S.-Korea Institute who presented three scenarios for
North Korea's nuclear capability, predicting its stockpile of weapons could
grow to 20, 50 or 100 within five years.
Last week, the Wall
Street Journal newspaper reported that Chinese nuclear experts had warned that
North Korea may already have 20 nuclear warheads and the capability to produce
enough weapons-grade uranium to double its arsenal by next year.
These estimates, relayed
to U.S. nuclear specialists, exceeded most previous U.S. forecasts, which
ranged from 10 to 16 bombs currently, the report said.
Early this month, U.S.
Admiral William Gortney, commander of the U.S. Northern Command and North
American Aerospace Defense Command, said the U.S. military believes North Korea
has the ability to miniaturize a warhead and mount it on a ballistic missile,
although there had been no tests.
North Korea is under an
array of international sanctions for nuclear bomb and ballistic missile tests.
It has conducted three nuclear detonations, the most recent in February 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment