Waterloo Region Record

New activity seen at North Korea nuke sites

Worries could point to creating material for a nuclear bomb; developmen­t ahead of summit between two leaders

- ERIC TALMADGE

TOKYO — Increased activity at a North Korean nuclear site has once again caught the attention of analysts and renewed concerns about the complexiti­es of denucleari­zation talks as President Donald Trump prepares for a summit with Kim Jong Un in the coming weeks.

Satellite imagery taken last month suggests the North has begun preliminar­y testing of an experiment­al light water reactor and possibly brought another reactor online at its Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center. Both could be used to produce the fissile materials needed for nuclear bombs.

The findings come at a particular­ly sensitive time. Trump and Kim are planning to meet by May, according to officials, and denucleari­zation will likely be the biggest topic on their agenda if they do meet. North Korea tested its biggest nuclear device to date last September. Pyongyang claims it was an H-bomb.

While the North hasn’t conducted any tests since, or testlaunch­ed any long-range missiles since Nov. 28, the heightened activity at the Yongbyon complex could be ominous. According to an analysis in Jane’s Intelligen­ce Review published earlier this month, a testing program is now underway at the experiment­al reactor, which means it could become operationa­l with “little warning later in 2018 or in 2019.” It said the preliminar­y testing follows increased activity throughout 2017. The reactor was completed five years ago and is primarily designed to generate electricit­y for civilian use. But it could also be used to produce plutonium or tritium. The Jane’s report cautioned that without internatio­nal inspection­s it’s impossible to tell for sure if it’s being used to produce civilian electricit­y or weapons-grade material for bombs. The reactor has been linked to the local electricit­y grid and is believed to be potentiall­y able to power a city of about 50,000 if operated at full capacity.

“Further monitoring of the type and cadence of activity at the site is likely to reveal clues about North Korea’s ultimate intentions,” the Jane’s report concluded.

In a report posted on 38 North, a website that specialize­s in North Korea news , experts said they have detected activity at another reactor in the Yongbyon complex, which is located north of Pyongyang, that could be an even bigger concern. Imagery of Yongbyon’s 5-megawatt reactor suggests it was brought into operation recently. The website said that would mean “North Korea has resumed production of plutonium presumably for its nuclear weapons program.”

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