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US has plan to dismantle N. Korea nuclear program within a year

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WASHINGTON — White House national security adviser John Bolton said on Sunday he believed the bulk of North Korea’s weapons programs could be dismantled within a year, although some experts say the complete process could take far longer.

Mr. Bolton told CBS’s Face the Nation that Washington has devised a program to dismantle North Korea’s weapons of mass destructio­n — chemical, biological and nuclear — and ballistic missile programs in a year, if there is full cooperatio­n and disclosure from Pyongyang.

“If they have the strategic decision already made to do that and they’re cooperativ­e, we can move very quickly,” Mr. Bolton said.

“Physically, we would be able to dismantle the overwhelmi­ng bulk of their programs within a year.”

He said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will likely discuss that proposal with the North Koreans soon. The Financial Times reported that Pompeo was due to visit North Korea this week but the State Department has not confirmed any travel plans.

Some experts disputed Mr. Bolton’s optimistic time frame.

“It would be physically possible to dismantle the bulk of North Korea’s programs within a year,” said Thomas Countryman, the State Department’s top arms control officer under President Barack Obama.

“I do not believe it would be possible to verify full dismantlem­ent within a year, nor have I yet seen evidence of a firm DPRK decision to undertake full dismantlem­ent.”

North Korea is completing a major expansion of a key missileman­ufacturing plant, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing researcher­s who have examined new satellite imagery from San Francisco-based Planet Labs, Inc.

Images analyzed by the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey, California shows that North Korea was finishing constructi­on on the exterior of the plant around the time North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met with US President Donald Trump in Singapore in June, the report said.

The Chemical Material Institute in Hamhung makes solidfuel ballistic missiles, which could allow North Korean to transport and launch a missile more quickly, compared to a liquid-fuel system that requires lengthy preparatio­n.

Siegfried Hecker, a nuclear scientist and Stanford University professor, has predicted it would take around 10 years to dismantle and clean up a substantia­l part of North Korea’s Yongbyon nuclear site.

South Korea media reported on Sunday that US envoy Sung Kim, the American ambassador to the Philippine­s, met with North Korean officials at the border on Sunday to coordinate an agenda for Pompeo’s next visit to North Korea.

US intelligen­ce is not certain how many nuclear warheads North Korea has. The Defense Intelligen­ce Agency is at the high end with an estimate of about 50, but all the agencies believe Pyongyang is concealing an unknown number, especially smaller tactical ones, in caves and other undergroun­d facilities around the country.

TRUST BUT VERIFY

North Korea agreed at the summit to “work toward denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula,” but the joint statement signed by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump on June 12 gave no details on how or when Pyongyang might surrender its nuclear weapons.

US intelligen­ce agencies believe North Korea has increased production of fuel for nuclear weapons at multiple secret sites in recent months and may try to hide these while seeking concession­s in nuclear talks with the United States, NBC News quoted US officials as saying on Friday.

The Washington Post reported on Saturday that US intelligen­ce officials have concluded that North Korea does not intend to fully give up its nuclear arsenal and is considerin­g ways to hide the number of weapons it has. It also reported Pyongyang has secret production facilities, according to the latest evidence they have.

Mr. Bolton refused to comment on intelligen­ce matters but the United States was going into nuclear negotiatio­ns aware of Pyongyang’s failure to live up to its promises in the past.

“We know exactly what the risks are — them using negotiatio­ns to drag out the length of time they have to continue their nuclear, chemical, biological weapons programs and ballistic missiles,” he said.

“There’s not any starry- eyed feeling among the group doing this,” he said. “We’re well aware of what the North Koreans have done in the past.”

Asia expert Patrick Cronin called the NBC and Washington Post reports “extremely worrisome.”

Mr. Cronin, senior director of the Asia-Pacific Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, said he had heard from US and South Korea officials that Pompeo was expected to return to Pyongyang at the end of this week and that Sung Kim was working to prepare the way for that trip.

The US side was “working to see whether they can prepare for high-level talks between Secretary Pompeo and Kim Jong Un and others in Pyongyang that would be a specific denucleari­zation road map, or at least significan­t dismantlem­ent steps that could fill in a road map,” he said.

Republican Senator Susan Collins said she was troubled by the news reports.

“North Korea has a long history of cheating on agreements that it’s made with previous administra­tions,” she said on CNN’s State of the Union.

Ms. Collins stressed the need for “verifiable, unimpeded, reliable inspection­s” of the North’s weapons programs.

Another of Mr. Trump’s fellow Republican­s in the US Senate, Lindsey Graham, echoed the need for skepticism.

“If it is true that they are saying one thing and doing another, nobody should be surprised,” he said on NBC’s Meet the Press. —

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