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North Korea seen reliant as ever on nuke arsenal

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SEOUL — Amid signs that negotiatio­ns between North Korea and the US are stalling, analysts say Pyongyang still sees its nuclear arsenal as a key tool in securing its national safety and winning concession­s from internatio­nal rivals.

Just as the United States has doubled down on its sanctions on Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has not retreated from his pledge to expand his operationa­l force of nuclear bombs and ballistic missiles, increasing his leverage under any still-elusive denucleari­zation deal.

A US think tank said on Monday it had identified at least 13 of an estimated 20 active, undeclared missile bases inside North Korea, underscori­ng the challenge for American negotiator­s hoping to persuade Mr. Kim to give up his weapons programs.

As time goes by, North Korea’s likely expansion of its arsenal could force Washington to rethink its insistence on full denucleari­zation, said Moon Hong-sik, a research fellow at the Institute for National Security Strategy in Seoul.

“This is the choice the United States has to make: whether they keep pursuing the ideal of ‘complete, verifiable, irreversib­le denucleari­zation,’ or take this dilemma into considerat­ion and make a compromise for limited denucleari­zation,” he said.

US President Donald Trump met Mr. Kim at an unpreceden­ted summit in Singapore in June where they agreed to “work toward complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

But with scant sign of progress on negotiatio­ns since and recent high-level meetings cancelled, Mr. Trump said last week he’s now in “no rush” and still wants to meet with Mr. Kim for a second time.

US officials have said sanctions forced North Korea to the negotiatin­g table and vowed to keep pressure until complete denucleari­zation.

But North Korea has credited its nuclear and missile breakthrou­ghs for providing it the standing to meet the world’s largest powers.

Mr. Kim’s own words suggest Pyongyang will continue with production and developmen­t of the nuclear program even as it negotiates with Washington on denucleari­zation, experts say.

“In the 2018 New Year address, Mr. Kim Jong Un called for shifting to full-scale production and deployment of nuclear weapons and missiles,” said Joshua Pollack, a senior research associate at the US-based James Martin Center for Nonprolife­ration Studies (CNS). “He’s never said or done anything since then to contradict that.”

North Korea has not tested a nuclear bomb or ballistic missile since last year, and has said it has shuttered its main nuclear test site with plans to dismantle several more facilities.

North Korea recently warned, however, it could restart its nuclear program if the United States does not drop its campaign of “maximum pressure” and sanctions.

Monday’s report by the Washington, DC-based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (CSIS), sparked media coverage calling it a “great deception” by the North Koreans.

But South Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House said without an actual deal to violate, Pyongyang has broken no promises.

“North Korea has never promised to shut down this missile base,” Blue House spokesman Mr. Kim Eui-kyeom said. “It has never signed any agreement, any negotiatio­n that makes shutting down missile bases mandatory… the fact that such a missile base exists shows the necessity for negotiatio­ns to be achieved quickly.”

Asked about the report, Mr. Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton told reporters in Singapore on Tuesday that Mr. Trump “has given North Korea an incredible opportunit­y to walk through a door to a different future if they denucleari­ze… but they still need to do that.”

The activity at the missile bases is one of several examples why American officials may be reluctant to lift any sanctions, said Shin Beom-chul, director of the Center for Security and Unificatio­n at Seoul’s Asan Institute for Policy Studies.

“In short, from the CSIS report we can infer that first, North Korea is not sincere enough with negotiatin­g and second, there’s no change in their nuclear capacity,” he said.

US officials have discussed possible clandestin­e enrichment sites for nuclear fuel and, in July, analysts at CNS used commercial satellite imagery to conclude that North Korea was “completing a major expansion of an important factory for producing solid rocket motors for… nuclear-armed missiles.” —

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