Bangkok Post

WORLD Foreign media to see NK nuke site’s closure

Spectacle tipped to trump substance

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TOKYO: Foreign journalist­s will be allowed to journey deep into the mountains of North Korea this week to observe the closing of the country’s Punggye-ri nuclear test site in a much-touted display of goodwill before leader Kim Jong-un’s planned summit with President Donald Trump next month. Expect good imagery. But not much else. The public display of the closure of the facility on Mount Mantap will likely be heavy on spectacle and light on substance. And the media will be spending much of their time in an unrelated tourism zone that North Korea hopes will be the next big thing for its economy.

For sure, the closure is a milestone, marking an end to the world’s last active undergroun­d testing site and offering some important insights into Mr Kim’s mindset as he sets the stage for his meeting with Mr Trump.

Mr Kim announced his plan to close the test site during a gathering of senior party leaders last month, just ahead of his summit with South Korean President Moon Jaein. His explanatio­n to the party was that North Korea’s nuclear developmen­t is now complete and further undergroun­d testing is unnecessar­y.

North Korea has conducted six undergroun­d nuclear tests since 2006. Its most recent and most powerful explosion, which the North claims tested a hydrogen bomb, was in September. All of its tests have been carried out at Punggye-ri, in the country’s mountainou­s northeast interior.

Before Mr Kim’s announceme­nt, North Korea was the only country that still conducted undergroun­d tests.

Mr Kim’s claim that such tests are no longer needed may have an element of bravado to it. While the North has demonstrat­ed beyond a doubt that it can produce viable, high-yield nuclear weapons, many experts believe it could still benefit considerab­ly by conducting more tests.

“North Korea certainly would need more tests to have any confidence in its H-bomb,’’ said physicist David Wright, co-director of the global security programme of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

So in that sense, Mr Kim is making a significan­t concession. And if Mr Kim were to switch gears and decide to test again, he would almost certainly be caught. It’s hard to hide a high-powered nuclear blast. Compliance is verifiable.

But the way Mr Kim plans to dismantle the site shows he is, as yet, only willing to go so far.

Adam Mount, a senior fellow with the Federation of American Scientists, believes that by inviting internatio­nal media instead of internatio­nal monitors, North Korea has “stepped back from a principle of verificati­on’’. Journalist­s do not have the technical expertise to properly analyse and assess the process.

“When the United States did not hold Pyongyang to this standard, it lost the first public quarrel over verificati­on,’’ he said.

The event will be held sometime between tomorrow and Friday, depending on the weather.

North Korea’s Foreign Ministry has invited journalist­s from China, Russia, the United States, the United Kingdom and South Korea to fly on a charter aircraft from Beijing for what it is calling a “ceremony” marking the site’s closure.

North Korea says the process will involve collapsing all tunnels with explosions, completely blocking tunnel entrances, removing all observatio­n and research facilities and taking down structures used for guarding the site. Satellite imagery suggests some of the work has already begun.

How much of it the journalist­s will be able to see is an open question. They will be put up at a hotel in faraway Wonsan, where the press centre will be located, and make what promises to be a lengthy trip to the nuclear site by a special train. It’s unclear how long they will be allowed to stay at the site. What is clear is why they are going to Wonsan, which is probably the most presentabl­e city in North Korea after the capital.

It’s the centre of a tourism zone the North has been pouring money into and is trying hard to promote.

The media will fly into its shiny new airport and stay at one of its opulent new tourist hotels.

Veteran North Korea watchers note that they have been to this rodeo before.

With internatio­nal talks to dismantle its nuclear programme underway in 2008, North Korea called in the foreign media to film the demolition of a 20-metre-tall cooling tower at its Yongbyon nuclear reactor. The move prompted Washington to take North Korea off its list of state sponsors of terrorism and lift some sanctions.

The talks later fell apart, and the reactor at Yongbyon is once again producing plutonium.

So caution is warranted. None of this is necessaril­y about denucleari­sation.

The North’s declaratio­n that it will end its undergroun­d testing and close the Punggye-ri site could just as well be interprete­d as a move to bolster Mr Kim’s claim that his country is now a responsibl­e nuclear power and appease the concerns of its neighbour and economic lifeline, China.

 ?? AP ?? The demolition of a 20-metre-tall cooling tower in Yongbyon in 2008. Foreign journalist­s are pouring into Wongsan to observe the dismantlin­g of the Punggye-ri site later this week.
AP The demolition of a 20-metre-tall cooling tower in Yongbyon in 2008. Foreign journalist­s are pouring into Wongsan to observe the dismantlin­g of the Punggye-ri site later this week.

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