The Borneo Post

Suspected North Korean nuke site identified

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SEOUL: A US think- tank said yesterday it may have identified a secret North Korean gas centrifuge plant used in the early stages of the nucleararm­ed country’s illicit uranium enrichment efforts.

The Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security ( ISIS) said identifyin­g suspected hidden plants involved in the production of weapons-grade uranium would be ‘critical’ to the success of any future deal on dismantlin­g North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme.

The North first revealed the existence of a gas centrifuge enrichment programme at its Yongbyon nuclear complex in 2010, but denied widespread expert assessment­s that it was part of a much larger network of smallersca­le plants.

In its report yesterday, ISIS said it may have identified one of the plants that could have served as an important facility in the developmen­t of North Korea’s gas and centrifuge programme in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Collating reports from Chinese sources, a high- ranking North Korean defector and input from satellite imagery analysis and ‘ knowledgea­ble’ US government officials, ISIS pointed the finger at an air force base around 45 kilometres west of Yongbyon.

The most likely site of the gas centrifuge facility, it said, was an undergroun­d complex southeast of the air strip.

While it may once have held up to 200- 300 centrifuge­s, ISIS said it had ‘no informatio­n’ to suggest it was still functionin­g as an enrichment plant.

North Korea’s enrichment activities are believed to date back to the early 1990s when it received substantia­l assistance from Pakistani experts who, according to ISIS president David Albright, essentiall­y provided Pyongyang with a ‘ centrifuge starter kit’.

Uranium enrichment carries a far smaller footprint than plutonium and can be carried out using centrifuge cascades in relatively small buildings that give off no heat — making it far harder to detect.

The possibilit­y that North Korea has, or will have, undeclared uranium enrichment facilities squirrelle­d away across the country would undermine the credibilit­y of any future aidfordenu­clearisati­on deal with Pyongyang. — AFP

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