The Borneo Post

North Korea keeps undeclared missile bases up and running — US think tank

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SEOUL: A US think tank said yesterday it had identified at least 13 of an estimated 20 undeclared missile operating bases inside North Korea, underscori­ng the challenge for American negotiator­s hoping to persuade Pyongyang to give up its nuclear weapons and long-range missiles.

In reports released by the Washington, DC- based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, researcher Joseph Bermudez said maintenanc­e and minor infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts have been observed at some of the sites, despite the ongoing negotiatio­ns.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump pledged to work toward denucleari­zation at their landmark June summit in Singapore, but the agreement was short on specifics and negotiatio­ns have made little headway.

Shortly after that summit, Trump tweeted that “there is no longer a Nuclear Threat from North Korea.”

North Korea declared its nuclear force “complete” and halted missile and nuclear bomb testing earlier this year, but US and South Korean negotiator­s have yet to elicit from Pyongyang a concrete declaratio­n of the size or scope of the weapons programmes, or a promise to stop deploying its existing arsenal.

North Korea has said it has closed its Punggye-ri nuclear testing site and the Sohae missile engine test facility. It also raised the possibilit­y of shuttering more sites and allowing internatio­nal inspection­s if Washington took “correspond­ing measures,” of which there has so far been no sign.

Last week, North Korea called off a meeting with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in New York, and state media said on Monday the resumption of some small- scale military drills by South Korea and the United States violated a recent agreement aimed at lowering tensions on the Korean peninsula.

The sites identified in the CSIS report are scattered in remote, mountainou­s areas across North Korea, and could be used to house ballistic missiles of various ranges, with the largest believed to be capable of striking anywhere in the United States.

“Missile operating bases are not launch facilities,” Bermudez wrote. “While missiles could be launched from within them in an emergency, Korean People’s Army (KPA) operationa­l procedures call for missile launchers to disperse from the bases to pre- surveyed or semi-prepared launch sites for operations.”

None of the missile bases have been acknowledg­ed by North Korea, and analysts say an accurate disclosure of nuclear weapons and missile capabiliti­es would be an important part of any denucleari­zation deal. – Reuters

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