The Star Malaysia

N. Korea missile site identified

Kim committed to destroying test area, says United States

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WaSHinGTon: The missile engine test site that President Donald Trump said North Korean leader Kim Jong-un had committed to destroy is a major facility in the western part of the country that has been used for testing engines for long-range missiles, according to a United States official.

Trump said after their June 12 summit that Kim had pledged to dismantle one of his missile installati­ons, which would be North Korea’s most concrete concession at the landmark meeting in Singapore.

However, the president at the time did not name the site.

A US official identified it on Wednesday as the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground, saying North Korea “has used this site to test liquid-propellant engines for its longrange ballistic missiles”.

Pyongyang has said its missiles can reach the US.

“Chairman Kim promised that North Korea would destroy a missile engine test stand soon,” the official said speaking on condition of anonymity.

There was no immediate word on the exact timetable, and North Korea has not publicly confirmed that Kim made such a commitment.

CBS News was the first to identify the site, which is the newest of North Korea’s known major missile testing facilities.

Trump has hailed the Singapore summit as a success but sceptics have questioned whether he achieved anything, given that Pyongyang, which has rejected unilateral nuclear disarmamen­t, appeared to make no new tangible commitment­s in a joint written declaratio­n.

The US-based North Korea monitoring group 38 North said in an analysis at the end of last week there had been no sign of any activity toward dismantlin­g Sohae or any other missile test site.

The US official said: “The US will continue to monitor this site as we move forward in our negotiatio­ns.”

What little is known about the Sohae site, located in Tongchang-ri, has been pieced together from analysts’ assessment­s and the North Korean state news agency KCNA.

It was reported to have been establishe­d in 2008 and has research facilities nearby for missile developmen­t as well as a tower that can support ballistic missiles. The site is mainly used to test large Paektusan engines built for long-range missiles such as the Hwasong-15.

North Korea has spent considerab­le effort and resources to develop the site as a “civilian space programme” facility, denying that it has a military applicatio­n, said Jenny Town, an officer at the 38 North.

“Presumably, if North Korea does destroy the Sohae facility, they are also signalling that they are willing to stop satellite-rocket launches this time around as well, a point that has derailed negotiatio­ns in the past and is a significan­t new developmen­t,” she said.

North Korea has other missile testing facilities but the shutdown, if it happens, would be significan­t, analysts said.

“The missile testing is not just done in Tongchang-ri so it does not necessaril­y mean all ICBMs (interconti­nental ballistic missiles) will be disabled. But the most well-known one is this, so there is a great symbolic meaning if this is shut down,” said Moon Hong-sik, a research fellow at the Institute for National Security Strategy in South Korea. — Reuters

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