Bangkok Post

PYONGYANG LETS WORLD KNOW IT HAS ITS OWN WMD

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>> For years, North Korea has rattled the world with its nuclear tests and its threats to visit a nuclear holocaust upon the United States. Now, the finding by Malaysian police that Kim Jong-nam was assassinat­ed with VX nerve agent is a stark reminder of the North’s lesser-known weapons of mass destructio­n — a stockpile of chemical and biological weapons.

Kim, the estranged elder brother of North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, was killed on Feb 13 when two women rubbed his face with the nerve agent at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport, the police said on Friday.

If North Korean nationals were indeed behind the killing, as Malaysian officials suggest, the use of VX raises several questions: Was the North Korean government using the attack to signal to the world its fearsome arsenal of such dangerous weapons? Or was the toxin simply an attempt to avoid detection in carrying out a brazen killing at one of the world’s busiest airports?

“By using VX in an internatio­nal airport in the heart of Asia, North Korea has sent a very clear message to the world that it will strike its enemies anywhere in the world,” said Rohan Gunaratna, an expert on terrorism at the S Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore. “It also demonstrat­es the North Korean response in the event of an attack against North Korea.”

North Korea’s nuclear programme has long been the most urgent concern of the United States and its allies, and the now-dormant six-party talks to curb the programme did not address chemical and biological weapons.

“The reported use of VX reminds us that not only is the North’s nuclear-missile threat serious but so are its asymmetric threats, including biochemica­l weapons and cyber that are all part of the regime’s WMD tool kit,” said Duyeon Kim, a Seoul-based nonresiden­t fellow at Georgetown University’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy.

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement on Friday expressing “shock” at the use of a chemical weapon and vowed to work with the internatio­nal society to deal “strongly” with the violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

The deadly use of a chemical weapon banned by internatio­nal convention­s in a such a public manner could strengthen calls for the United States to put North Korea back on a list of terrorism-sponsoring countries, analysts said.

The North was first put on the terrorist list after its bombing of a South Korean airliner near Myanmar in 1987, killing all 115 people on board. But the United States delisted the country in 2008 as part of an agreement aimed at ending North Korea’s nuclear programmes — a deal that has since disintegra­ted with the North’s subsequent missile and nuclear weapons tests.

After his announceme­nt that Kim had been killed by VX nerve agent, Khalid Abu Bakar, the inspector general of the Malaysian police, said on Friday that small amounts of the poison could have been brought into the country without being discovered.

“If the amount of the chemical brought in was small, it would be difficult for us to detect,” Mr Khalid told reporters.

The airport terminal, which handles more than 2 million passengers a month, will be decontamin­ated despite the passage of time since the killing, he said.

Two women have been arrested in the killing, one from Indonesia and the other from Vietnam. Their defenders say they were duped into carrying out the attack and thought it was a prank, but Mr Khalid said they had trained for the attack and practised it at two major shopping malls. The women used their bare hands to apply the poison on Kim’s face and washed them immediatel­y afterward, he said.

One drop of VX, or about 10 milligrams, can be fatal. But the attackers could have used a safety-enhancing battlefiel­d form of the agent. Known as VX2, it is divided into two compounds that are harmless individual­ly but become lethal when mixed together.

Each component also could have been made in slow-release form, as is done with many drugs.

If Kim’s two assassins had each applied one component of VX, this would explain why two assassins were needed, how they survived the attack, and perhaps why it took 15 minutes or more for Kim to die.

“Use of a binary nerve agent lends itself to this method and allows for a potentiall­y highly targeted hit,” said Vipin Narang, an associate professor of political science at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology who has two degrees in chemical engineerin­g.

The woman who applied the second compound would have risked exposing herself to the first component, which could explain why, as Mr Khalid said Friday, one of the women became ill and began vomiting after the attack.

This scenario raises the possibilit­y that Kim could have saved his own life by immediatel­y washing his face rather than going to airport staff to report the attack.

Mr Narang said it was clear that North Korea wanted the West to know what it is capable of.

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