Exclusive: Possible early North Korean
nuclear site found - report
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[July 22, 2016]
By Jonathan Landay
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. policy
institute said it may have located a secret facility used by North Korea
in the early stages of building its program to enrich uranium for
nuclear weapons, which if confirmed would be critical to the success of
any future nuclear deal, according to a report seen by Reuters on
Thursday.
The report by the Institute for Science and International Security said
there has always been doubt about whether North Korea has disclosed all
of its nuclear facilities. Confirming their location would be critical
to the success of any future agreement to freeze and dismantle North
Korea's nuclear weapons program, it said.
The site, 27 miles (43 km) from the nuclear complex at Yongbyon, may
have played a key role in development of centrifuges that refine uranium
hexafluoride gas into low-enriched and highly enriched uranium, the
report said.
"It is necessary to identify where North Korea enriches uranium and part
of that is understanding where it has done it in the past," said David
Albright, the institute's president.
What may once have been the early centrifuge research and development
facility is believed to have been inside an aircraft part factory inside
a mountain next to Panghyon Air Base. It was located using commercial
satellite imagery, the report said.
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It was unclear whether the aircraft part factory was still operational
but information from defectors indicates there may be three
production-scale centrifuge manufacturing plants operating in the
country although their locations have not been confirmed, said Albright.
Tensions have been escalating between North Korea and South Korea, the
United States and Japan over Pyongyang's fourth underground nuclear test
in January and a series of missile launches.
North Korea's nuclear program is based on highly enriched uranium and
plutonium separated from spent reactor fuel rods.
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A missile is carried by a military vehicle during a parade to
commemorate the 60th anniversary of the signing of a truce in the
1950-1953 Korean War, at Kim Il-sung Square in Pyongyang in this
July 27, 2013 file photo. REUTERS/Jason Lee
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The reclusive government, which for more than a decade denied having
a gas centrifuge program, in November 2010 revealed the existence of
a production-scale gas centrifuge plant at Yongbyon but insisted it
had no other such facilities.
In June 2000 a Japanese newspaper quoted Chinese sources as saying a
facility was located inside Mount Chonma, the report said.
Information recently obtained from "knowledgeable government
officials" suggested the undeclared facility was associated with an
underground aircraft parts factory, it said.
Working with Allsource Analysis, which interprets satellite imagery,
the institute determined it most likely was Panghyon Aircraft Plant,
which made parts for Soviet-supplied fighters.
The report quoted an unidentified official as saying the site could
have held between 200 and 300 centrifuges.
(Reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and James
Dalgleish)
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