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Thursday, 13 April 2017
North Korea: Pyongyang preparing for nuclear test, satellite images suggest
North’s Punggye-ri site appears to be ready for what would be the country’s sixth nuclear test since 2006
North Korea is the only country in the world that still conducts nuclear weapons tests.
Photograph: Wong Maye-E/AP
North Korea appears to be preparing to conduct a nuclear test in a show of defiance towards Donald Trump,
who has not ruled out military action to pressure the regime into
abandoning its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes.
The US-based monitoring group 38 North
said on Thursday that the satellite images from the North’s Punggye-ri
site showed it was “primed and ready” for what would be the country’s
sixth nuclear test since 2006.
“Commercial satellite imagery of North Korea’s Punggye-ri nuclear
test site from April 12 shows continued activity around the North
Portal, new activity in the main administrative area, and a few
personnel around the site’s Command Center,” 38 North said on its
website.
“In the courtyards of the main administrative area are approximately
11 probable tarp-covered pallets of equipment or supplies, a formation
of personnel, and several individuals walking about,” the site added.
South Korean officials, however, played down speculation that a
nuclear test was imminent. “There has been no unusual activity so far,”
Roh Jae-chun, a spokesman for the country’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told
reporters, according to Yonhap news agency.
The possibility that North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, will again
defy international opinion has strengthened since Pyongyang conducted a
series of missile tests earlier this year, as it attempts to perfect a
nuclear weapon capable of striking the US mainland.
On Thursday, foreign journalists in North Korea
said they had been told to prepare for a “big and important event”.
About 200 reporters, including those from Japan and the US, are in
Pyongyang as the country prepares to mark the 105th birth anniversary of
the birth of its founder, Kim Il-sung, on Saturday.
A rehearsal for the ‘Day of the Sun’ celebrations at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang. Photograph: How Hwee Young/EPA
Despite speculation that the event could be connected to a missile
launch or nuclear test, the reporters were taken to the opening of a
high-rise residential complex in Pyongyang. Kim reportedly attended the
opening, but did not speak.
Some experts believe the regime is planning to conduct a missile
launch or nuclear test to coincide with Saturday’s anniversary, a hugely
significant date in the North Korean calendar known locally as the Day
of the Sun.
The journalists’ visit coincides with a significant rise in tensions
after the US sent an aircraft carrier strike group towards the Korean
peninsula in a move many believe is designed to warn the regime off
conducting missile or nuclear tests.
The USS Carl Vinson and its strike group are currently sailing north from Singapore,
and are reportedly planning to conduct drills with Japanese
self-defence force vessels en route to the waters off the Korean
peninsula.
“We are sending an armada. Very powerful,” Trump said on Wednesday.
“We have submarines. Very powerful. Far more powerful than the aircraft
carrier.” Japan’s Nikkei business paper said on Thursday that the US
had sent a “sniffer” plane to Japan to monitor any nuclear tests.
The aircraft, which has been used before to monitor North Korean
rocket launches, has arrived on the southern Japanese island of Okinawa,
the paper said, citing a Japanese self-defence force official.
A nuclear detonation would be the biggest test yet of Trump’s more
aggressive stance towards North Korea, coming soon after he warned that
the US was prepared to address North Korea’s nuclear threat without help
from China, the North’s biggest ally and economic partner.
Earlier
this week Trump tweeted: “North Korea is looking for trouble. If China
decides to help, that would be great. If not, we will solve the problem
without them! U.S.A.”
In a phone conversation with Trump on Wednesday, China’s president,
Xi Jinping, repeated calls for a peaceful resolution to the nuclear
issue.
“China remains committed to the goal of denuclearising the (Korean)
peninsula, safeguarding peace and stability on the peninsula, and
advocates resolving problems through peaceful means,” the Chinese state
broadcaster CCTV quoted Xi as saying.
Trump said on Twitter that he and Xi had enjoyed a “very good”
conversation about the “menace of North Korea”, and later praised
China’s decision to send coal ships back to the North as part of UN
sanctions against the regime.
An editorial in the Global Times, a tabloid linked to the Chinese
communist party, warned that the recent US airstrike on a Syrian
airfield lent greater weight to Trump’s warnings that Washington would
respond to any North Korean provocation with or without Beijing’s help.
“The Korean peninsula has never been so close to a military clash
since the North conducted its first nuclear test in 2006,” it said,
adding that Pyongyang “should avoid making mistakes at this time”.
The China Daily, however, adopted a more cautious tone. “The truth is
that although the prospect of war may seem real, no party really wants a
war,” the newspaper said. “Many sources indicate Washington is
increasing the pressure in the hope that Pyongyang will change course
without a shot being fired. Otherwise, it would not have insisted that
Beijing could and should help rein in Pyongyang.”
The newspaper called on North Korea to refrain from conducting
missile or nuclear tests at the weekend, and urged the US and South
Korea to suspend joint military drills that Pyongyang regards as a dress
rehearsal for an invasion.
Coupled
with recent missile launches, a nuclear test could offer experts a
better idea of how far North Korea is from being able to mount a
miniaturised nuclear warhead on an intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM).
On Thursday, Australia’s defence industry minister, Christopher Pyne, said North Korea was developing a nuclear-armed missile capable of reaching Australia and the United States “within two years”.
Pyne made the claim after the acting US ambassador to Australia,
James Carouso, said in an interview with the Australian that there was
“extreme concern” that North Korea will be able to strike the west coast
of the US and Australia with nuclear missiles within that timeframe.
The source of Carouso’s claim wasn’t clear, but many experts believe
it will take North Korea several years to perfect an ICBM capable of
carrying a nuclear warhead.
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