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China-Japan-Koreas
Satellite image: activity at North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear site
2010-10-11
From October 4th but we need to know this.
North Korea continues to keep the experts guessing. Last week, it promoted the third son of its current leader, Kim Jong Il, prompting speculation that he is on track to succeed his father. And now, apparently, it has commissioned construction activity at the site where it used to produce plutonium for its nuclear arsenal.

An image taken last week by DigitalGlobe, a U.S.-based commercial satellite firm, shows new construction or excavation activity in an area surrounding a destroyed cooling tower at the Yongbyon site. Experts said the construction appeared to be the first sign of genuine activity at Yongbyon since 2008, when the cooling tower was demolished as part of an agreement made during now-stalled negotiations over the North's nuclear program.

The photograph shows heavy machinery tracks, trucks, and heavy construction or excavation equipment, along with two small new buildings, according to a report by the Institute for Science and International Security. What exactly all that activity means, said David Albright, who wrote the report, is unclear.
Nonsense, Mr. Albright, it's perfectly clear ...
Albright said the activity could mean that North Korea is moving toward reopening Yongbyon as part of a plan to increase its stock of plutonium - now estimated at just less than 80 pounds. Then again, it could also be a move, said Joel S. Wit, a North Korea watcher and former State Department official, "for show, to pull our chains."
I'm not a betting man ordinarily but I'll just bet the Norks need more plutonium; they have many other ways of yanking our chain.
North Korea is well aware that its nuclear facilities are under almost constant surveillance by both intelligence and commercial satellites.
And they don't really care ...
The photograph was released as the United States and its partners in the region try to figure out how to deal with North Korea after the sinking of a South Korean warship in March, which Seoul has blamed on Pyongyang.
Let us know how that works out, since any response will be a new response ...
North Korea, which has been referring to itself as a "nuclear weapons state," has been vowing for months to resume some type of nuclear activity. Now, the new satellite image has experts worried that North Korea is carrying out its pledge.

"It is by no means clear what is happening," said Jonathan Pollack, an expert on North Korean security at the U.S. Naval War College, "but any new construction at Yongbyon cannot be a good thing."
No, really? As I note above, it's perfectly clear and yes, it's not a good thing.
Pollack said any resumption of activity at Yongbyon could be a payoff of sorts for North Korea's military. The North appears to be in the throes of a leadership transition, with the elder Kim engineering promotions for his third son, Kim Jong Eun.

"It could be a compensation package for the military," Pollack said.
Or it could be that the Norks need more plutonium ...
Both Pollack and Wit stressed that U.S. officials would underestimate North Korea's capabilities at their own peril.

"It's a serious mistake," Wit said, "to believe that they are not capable of doing anything to step up their nuclear arsenal."
Finally, someone with some sense. Any ordinary person would understand that if you re-open a nuclear production plant, you're doing so to make more fissible material. You need to be a particular kind of political, scientific, intellectual person to engage in this degree of hand-waving.
Posted by:Steve White

#1  Attention NASA, is there a convenient space rock we could divert to NORK?
If so, In immortal words "Make it so".
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2010-10-11 12:27  

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