Toronto Star

N. Korea shows signs of fulfilling agreement

- KIM TONG-HYUNG THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

North Korea appears to have started dismantlin­g key facilities at its main satellite launch site in a step toward fulfilling a commitment made by leader Kim Jong Un at his summit with U.S. President Donald Trump in June.

While Pyongyang could be trying to build trust with Washington as they engage in talks to resolve the nuclear standoff, analysts say dismantlin­g a few facilities at the site alone wouldn’t realistica­lly reduce North Korea’s military capability or represent a material step toward denucleari­zation. And they expressed concern that the work is being done without verificati­on.

The North Korea-focused 38 North website said commercial satellite images from July 20 to 22 indicate the North began dismantlin­g key facilities at the Sohae launch site.

The facilities being razed or disassembl­ed include a rocket engine test stand used to develop liquid-fuel engines for ballistic missiles and space-launch vehicles and a rail-mounted processing building where space launch vehicles were assembled before being moved to the launch pad, according to the report.

“Since these facilities are believed to have played an important role in the developmen­t of technologi­es for the North’s interconti­nental ballistic missile program, these efforts represent a significan­t confidence building measure on the part of North Korea,” analyst Joseph Bermudez wrote in the report.

An official from South Korea’s presidenti­al office said Tuesday that Seoul has also been detecting dismantlem­ent activities at the Sohae launch site but did not specify what the North was supposedly taking apart.

Other analysts said that North Korea is giving up little in dismantlin­g the rocket engine test site when it’s clear the country is satisfied with its current design of long-range weapons and could easily build other similar test facilities if needed in the future.

Adam Mount, a senior defence analyst at the Federation of American Scientists, said it’s also troubling that the North has been apparently allowed to duck verificati­on by unilateral­ly dismantlin­g parts of its nuclear and missile facilities without the presence of internatio­nal inspectors.

In May, North Korea invited foreign journalist­s to observe the destructio­n of tunnels at its nuclear testing ground, but did not invite outside experts capable of certifying what had been destroyed.

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