Satellite images indicate N. Korea halted dismantling of launch site
WAShiNGToN: Satellite photos from last week indicate North Korea halted work to dismantle a missile engine test site in the first part of August, in spite of a promise to US President Donald Trump at a June summit, a Washington think tank reported.
The 38 North project said commercial satellite imagery of the Sohae Satellite Launching Station taken on Aug 16 indicated “no significant dismantlement activity” at either the site’s engine test stand or launch pad since Aug 3.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last month that reports that North Korea had started dismantling facilities at Sohae were consistent with a commitment North Korean leader Kim Jong-un made at a summit with Trump in Singapore on June 12.
The 38 North report said significant progress in tearing down the test stand had been made from July to early August, but added: “The components previously removed remain stacked on the ground.”
It said work to take down a rail-mounted transfer/processing building at the launch pad also appeared to have stalled and it was not clear if the work that had taken place on that was associated with dismantling or modification of the structure.
The 38 North report comes at a time of widespread doubts about North Korea’s willingness to go along with US demands for it to give up its nuclear weapons.
The UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said in a report on Monday that it had not found any indication that North Korea had stopped its nuclear activities. — Reuters