Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

North Korea still mastering how to deliver nuke to U.S.

- By Deb Riechmann

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — U.S. intelligen­ce officials are pretty sure North Korea can put a nuclear warhead on an interconti­nental missile that could reach the United States. But experts aren’t convinced the bomb could make it all that way intact.

They cite lingering questions about North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s nuclear know-how.

“I don’t think North Korea has a good measure of how accurate the missile is at this point,” said Michael Elleman, an expert with the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies. “They don’t know if the reentry technologi­es will really hold up — whether the bomb will survive the trip.”

North Korea has shortrange missiles that can hit its neighbors. It has tested an intermedia­te one that could strike Guam, a U.S. territory, as well as a longer-range missile that could reach Hawaii and perhaps the U.S. West Coast. The intermedia­te and long-range missiles are still being developed and it’s still questionab­le whether they can reliably strike targets.

The North must conduct more tests to master what is known as “re-entry” in missile parlance, experts believe. The process involves shielding a nuclear warhead from the high temperatur­es and force it faces when it re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere at about 15,500 mph.

“In principle, Kim Jong Un could hit the United States with a nuclear weapon,” said Mr. Elleman, a former scientist at Lockheed Martin’s Research and Developmen­t Laboratory who also worked as missile expert for U.N. weapons inspection missions. “In practice, I think they are probably a halfyear to a full year away from having something that will work more often than it would fail.”

Joseph Bermudez Jr., an internatio­nally recognized expert on North Korean defense and intelligen­ce affairs and ballistic missile developmen­t, agrees.

“Putting these things all together and making them work is extremely challengin­g, and they haven’t yet demonstrat­ed a capability to produce a reliable re-entry vehicle, which is what houses the actual nuclear device,” he said. “Remember, they’ve only tested these systems very few times.”

Still, Mr. Bermudez, said, North Korea is “on track” to figure it out.

U.S. officials also think it’s just a matter of time before Mr. Kim’s program fully matures.

National Intelligen­ce Director Dan Coats told Congress in May that Mr. Kim has been photograph­ed beside a nuclear warheaddes­ign and missile airframes to show that North Korea has warheads small enough to fit on a missile.

That same month, Lt. Gen Vincent Stewart, the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency director, told lawmakers that while Mr. Kim must still work on the technical aspects of re-entry, it’s only a “matter of enough trial and error to make that work. They understand the physics, so it’s just a matter of design.”

Mr. Coats and Gen. Stewart testified before North Korea conducted its first test of an interconti­nental missile on July 4. On July 28, it conducted a second test of its long-range Hwasong-14 ICBM.

The second test flight was capturedby a rooftop camera operated by Japan’s NHK television on the northern island of Hokkaido. Mr. Elleman, who analyzed the video, concluded that it most likely “disintegra­ted” before splashdown, suggesting North Korea is still struggling­with re-entry.

“I think it probably failed fairly late in the process,” said John Schilling, a consultant with 38 North, a respected website on North Korea at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies.

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