North Korea has enough uranium to build a 'double-digit' number of
bombs, Seoul's spy agency says
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[September 26, 2024]
By KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea has likely enriched enough uranium
to build a “double-digit” number of bombs and is making progress in its
efforts to develop more powerful and accurate missiles targeting rival
South Korea, Seoul’s spy agency told lawmakers on Thursday.
The closed-door parliamentary briefing by the National Intelligence
Service came after North Korea offered a rare glimpse into a secretive
facility to produce weapons-grade uranium earlier this month as leader
Kim Jong Un reiterated his goal to “exponentially” increase his stock of
nuclear weapons.
The South Korean agency assessed that Kim’s disclosure of the facility
was likely a statement of defiance toward Washington ahead of the U.S.
presidential election and meant to domestically showcase his military
accomplishments amid deepening economic struggles, according to Lee
Seong-kweun, one of the lawmakers who attended the briefing.
When asked about North Korea’s bomb fuel capacity, the agency said North
Korea likely has about 70 kilograms (154 pounds) of plutonium and an
unspecified but considerable amount of weapons-grade uranium that would
be enough to build “at least a double-digit number” of weapons, Lee
said.
While North Korean state media did not disclose the location of the
uranium enrichment facility that Kim visited on Sept. 13, the South
Korean agency said it was likely to be a site in Kangson, near the North
Korean capital of Pyongyang, said Park Sun-won, another lawmaker who
attended the briefing.
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Along with the North’s main nuclear complex in the town of Yongbyon,
the Kangson plant is one of two known sites in North Korea that has
been linked to uranium enrichment activities. Some analysts say
North Korea likely has other hidden sites for enriching uranium.
Kim’s visit to the uranium enrichment site was followed by a North
Korean missile test days later, as the country continues to flaunt
its weapons capabilities in the face of deepening confrontations
with Washington and Seoul.
North Korean state media said the test launches on Sept. 18 involved
two types of new missiles — one designed to deliver “super-large”
conventional warheads and the other a “strategic” cruise missile, a
term that implies it was developed for nuclear strikes.
North Korean state media reports on the tests suggested that North
Korea was improving the capabilities of the weapons, which are
designed for delivering precision strikes on South Korean targets,
the lawmakers paraphrased the South Korean spy agency as saying.
Some analysts speculate that North Korea could attempt to dial up
pressure on Washington by conducting a nuclear test ahead of the
U.S. presidential election.
But the South Korean spy agency assessed that North Korea could wait
on a nuclear test until after the election since there are other
steps it may want to try first, such as test-firing a long-range
missile targeting the U.S. mainland or launching a military
reconnaissance satellite, Lee said.
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