San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. officials: North Korea could have ICBM in 2018

- By Ellen Nakashima, Anna Fifield and Joby Warrick Ellen Nakashima, Anna Fifield and Joby Warrick are Washington Post writers.

North Korea will be able to field a reliable, nuclear-capable interconti­nental ballistic missile as early as next year, U.S. officials have concluded in a confidenti­al assessment that dramatical­ly shrinks the timeline for when Pyongyang could strike North American cities with atomic weapons.

The new assessment by the Pentagon’s Defense Intelligen­ce Agency (DIA), which shaves a full two years off the consensus forecast for North Korea’s ICBM program, was prompted by recent missile tests showing surprising technical advances by the country’s weapons scientists, at a pace beyond which many analysts believed was possible for the isolated communist regime.

The U.S. projection closely mirrors revised prediction­s by South Korean intelligen­ce officials, who also have watched with growing alarm as North Korea has appeared to master key technologi­es needed to loft a warhead toward targets thousands of miles away.

The finding further increases the pressure on U.S. and Asian leaders to halt North Korea’s progress before it can threaten the world with nucleartip­ped missiles. President Trump, during his visit to Poland earlier this month, vowed to confront Pyongyang “very strongly” to stop its missile advances.

The DIA has concluded that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will be able to produce a “reliable, nuclear-capable ICBM” program sometime in 2018, meaning that by next year the program will have advanced from prototype to assembly line, according to officials familiar with the document. Already, the aggressive testing regime put in place in recent months has allowed North Korea to validate its basic designs, putting it within a few months of starting industrial production, the officials said.

The DIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce declined to address any classified assessment­s.

North Korea has not yet demonstrat­ed an ability to build a miniaturiz­ed nuclear warhead that could be carried by one of its missiles. Officials there last year displayed a sphere-shaped device the regime described as a miniaturiz­ed warhead, but there as been no public confirmati­on that this milestone has been achieved.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The test launch of the Hwasong-14 interconti­nental ballistic missile occurred earlier this month.
Associated Press The test launch of the Hwasong-14 interconti­nental ballistic missile occurred earlier this month.

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