Gulf News

North Korea playing a dangerous game

While Kim has committed to ending his nuclear programme, intelligen­ce reports suggest otherwise

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It’s been a little more than three months since North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un and United States President Donald Trump met in Singapore in a historic summit aimed at curbing Pyongyang’s rush to join the nuclear club and its attempts to miniaturis­e a weapon and deliver it on an interconti­nental ballistic missile. Certainly, on June 12, the very fact that the leaders met was a breakthrou­gh for two men who had previously appeared on the path to confrontat­ion.

Critics of that summit say that there was little to show for the photo op and handshake and that North Korea has not altered its nuclear ambitions. Perhaps, not, three months on, that’s a perspectiv­e that’s not entirely disingenuo­us, even if Pyongyang has destroyed the site of its nuclear testing programme in the mountains northeast of the hermit capital.

While Trump has tweeted a steady stream of praise for the North Korean leader, there seems also to be a steady stream of evidence suggesting that Pyongyang is still working on its nuclear weapons programme — clearly at odds from the sentiments expressed and celebrated at Singapore. And right now, the administra­tion is Washington is reviewing the latest informatio­n in the North Korean dossier.

Certainly, when it comes to public expression­s, Pyongyang has adopted the stance of abiding by the commitment that Kim gave on June 12 under the glare of the assembled media corps. Last week, for example, the annual military parade to honour the founding of the nation seven decades ago did not feature any mobile missile launchers or ballistic missile launch vehicles in its ranks of goosestepp­ing soldiers, heavy artillery, personnel carriers and ageing battle tanks.

Casual observers might have viewed the absence of missile launch vehicles as an outwardly positive sign. The reality, though, is that the latest intelligen­ce reports, senior US officials say, point to Pyongyang working to conceal its nuclear activities. That Trump had previously cancelled a visit to North Korea by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo points to all not being well when it comes to Kim and his commitment­s.

Satellite evidence also points to increased activity at a nuclear facility, with workers being observed moving warheads, but the officials could or would not say to where those weapons of mass destructio­n were being moved. What’s worrying is that there appears to be an element of subterfuge in the regime’s actions, and that’s a property that sits poorly when it comes to building up trust after decades of close-quarter tensions across the De-Militarise­d Zone.

It’s one thing to stage a summit and photo op in Singapore, another to actually disengage from a nuclear programme. The North Korean leadership is saying one thing, while the intelligen­ce reports suggest another — and that is indeed worrying.

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