The Columbus Dispatch

NKorea making missiles, intel says

- By Ellen Nakashima and Joby Warrick

U.S. spy agencies are seeing signs that North Korea is constructi­ng new missiles, according to officials familiar with the intelligen­ce.

New evidence, including satellite photos taken in recent weeks, indicates that work is underway on at least one liquid-fueled ICBM at a large research facility in Sanumdong, on the outskirts of Pyongyang, according to the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe classified intelligen­ce.

The findings are the latest to show ongoing activity inside North Korea’s nuclear and missile facilities at a time when the country’s leaders are engaged in arms talks with the United States. The new intelligen­ce does not suggest an expansion of North Korea’s capabiliti­es but shows that work on advanced weapons is continuing weeks after President Donald Trump declared in a Twitter posting that Pyongyang was “no longer a Nuclear Threat.”

The reports about new missile constructi­on come after recent revelation­s about a suspected uranium enrichment facility, called Kangson, that North Korea is operating in secret. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo acknowledg­ed during Senate testimony last week that North Korean factories “continue to produce fissile material” used in making nuclear weapons. He declined to say whether Pyongyang is building new missiles.

During a summit with Trump in June, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un agreed to a vaguely worded pledge to “work toward” the “denucleari­zation” of the Korean Peninsula. But since then, North Korea has made few tangible moves signaling an intention to disarm.

Many analysts and independen­t experts, however, see that dismantlin­g as largely symbolic.

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