The Star Malaysia

Massive stockpile in N. Korea

Seoul: Pyongyang is producing chemical weapons at eight locations

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SEOUL: North Korea has up to 5,000 tonnes of chemical weapons, South Korean experts said, including the toxin used to assassinat­e its leader’s half-brother.

South Korea’s Defence Ministry said in its 2014 Defence White Paper that the North began producing chemical weapons in the 1980s and estimated that it has about 2,500 to 5,000 tonnes in stock.

North Korea has chemical weapons production facilities in eight locations including the northeaste­rn port of Chongjin and the northweste­rn city of Sinuiju, it said in the 2012 edition of the document.

“North Korea is believed to have a large stockpile of VX, which can easily be manufactur­ed at low cost,” said defence analyst Lee Il-woo at the private Korea Defence Network yesterday.

Developed some 100 years ago, VX can be produced at small laboratori­es or facilities producing pesticides, he said.

“Chemical and biological weapons can be delivered through various means such as artillery, missiles and planes”, he added.

If absorbed through the skin, eyes or nose, just a tiny drop of the colourless, odourless nerve agent is enough to fatally damage a victim’s central nervous system.

Military science professor Kim Jong-ha at Hannam University said the North has 16 kinds of nerve agents including VX and sarin, used by a Japanese doomsday cult, Aum Shinrikyo, in the 1995 attack on the Tokyo subway system that killed 12 people.

It also possesses other lethal chemicals, including suffocatin­g, blistering and blood agents, Jong-ha said, as well as 13 types of biological weapons such as anthrax and bubonic plague.

Defence analyst Joseph S. Bermudez Jr. has said that North Korea “produces and possesses the capability to effectivel­y employ throughout the Korean peninsula, significan­t quantities and varieties of chemical weapons”, and could have as many as 150 chemical weapons warheads for ballistic missiles.

“It also has, to a lesser extent, the ability to employ these weapons worldwide using unconventi­onal methods of delivery,” he wrote on the closely-watched US-Korea Institute’s website 38North in 2013.

There was a “growing body of evidence” that the North had an “ominous” history of proliferat­ing chemical weapons capabiliti­es to countries such as Syria and Iran, he added.

North Korea also has not signed a global chemical weapons convention that prohibits the production, stockpilin­g and also any kind of chemical weapons usage.

More than 160 countries signed the treaty, that went into force in 1997.

In a 2015 assessment, the Washington-based Nuclear Threat Initiative wrote: “North Korea claims that it does not possess chemical weapons.

“While assessing stockpiles and capabiliti­es are difficult, North Korea is thought to be among the world’s largest possessors of chemical weapons, ranking third after the United States and Russia.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Serious threat: People in Pyongyang watching a public broadcast of a launch of the surface-tosurface medium longrange ballistic missile Pukguksong-2 at an undisclose­d location recently. Such missiles are capable of carrying a chemical weapon warhead.
— AFP Serious threat: People in Pyongyang watching a public broadcast of a launch of the surface-tosurface medium longrange ballistic missile Pukguksong-2 at an undisclose­d location recently. Such missiles are capable of carrying a chemical weapon warhead.

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