U.S. detects new activity at North Korea
factory that built ICBMs: source
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[July 31, 2018]
By David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. spy satellites
have detected renewed activity at the North Korean factory that produced
the country’s first intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of
reaching the United States, a senior U.S. official said on Monday, in
the midst of talks to compel Pyongyang to give up its nuclear arms.
Photos and infrared imaging indicate vehicles moving in and out of the
facility at Sanumdong, but do not show how advanced any missile
construction might be, the official told Reuters on condition of
anonymity because the intelligence is classified.
The Washington Post reported on Monday that North Korea appeared to be
building one or two new liquid-fueled intercontinental ballistic
missiles at the large research facility on the outskirts of Pyongyang,
citing unidentified officials familiar with intelligence reporting.
According to the U.S. official who spoke to Reuters, one photo showed a
truck and covered trailer similar to those the North has used to move
its ICBMs. Since the trailer was covered, it was not possible to know
what, if anything, it was carrying.
The White House said it did not comment on intelligence. A senior
official at South Korea's presidential office said U.S. and South Korean
intelligence agencies are closely looking into various North Korean
movements, declining specific comment.
The evidence obtained this month is the latest to suggest ongoing
activity in North Korea's nuclear and missile facilities despite talks
with the United States and a June summit between North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump.
Trump declared soon afterward that North Korea no longer posed a nuclear
threat. Kim committed in a broad summit statement to work toward
denuclearization, but Pyongyang has offered no details as to how it
might go about that and subsequent talks have not gone smoothly.
It was not the first time U.S. intelligence clashed with the president's
optimism.
In late June, U.S. officials told U.S. media outlets that intelligence
agencies believed North Korea had increased production of fuel for
nuclear weapons and that it did not intend to fully give up its nuclear
arsenal.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the U.S. Senate Foreign
Relations Committee last week that North Korea was continuing to produce
fuel for nuclear bombs despite its pledge to denuclearize. But he
insisted the Trump administration was still making progress in its talks
with Pyongyang.
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A satellite image shows the Sanumdong missile production site in
North Korea on July 29, 2018. Planet Labs Inc/Handout via REUTERS
Joel Wit, a former State Department negotiator and founder of 38
North, a North Korea monitoring project, said it was unrealistic to
expect North Korea to stop its programs "until the ink is dry on an
agreement."
That was the case with U.S. negotiations with the Soviet Union
during the Cold War, and more recently with Iran, "which continued
to build more centrifuges capable of producing nuclear material even
as it negotiated with the United States to limit those
capabilities," Wit said.
The Sanumdong factory produced two Hwasong-15 ICBMs, North Korea’s
longest-range missiles, but the U.S. official noted that Pyongyang
still had not tested a reliable re-entry vehicle capable of
surviving a high-velocity trip through the Earth’s atmosphere and
delivering a nuclear warhead.
It is possible, the official said, that any new missiles the North
is building may be for further testing of such vehicles and of more
accurate guidance systems.
“They seem to have figured out the engines, but not all the
higher-tech stuff, and that might be what this is about,” the
official said.
“What’s more, a liquid-fueled ICBM doesn’t pose nearly the threat
that a solid-fueled one would because they take so long to fuel, and
that’s something we almost certainly could see in time to abort a
launch, given our assets in the vicinity.”
(Additional reporting by David Alexander and Joyce Lee; Writing by
Mary Milliken; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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