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Lt-Col A. Tack
05-11-2009, 07:48 PM
Activities intensify at NKorea nuke, missile sites

Thu May 7, 2:05 am ET
SEOUL (AFP)

North Korea has intensified activities at weapons sites after threatening to stage more nuclear and missile tests in response to UN sanctions, a South Korean newspaper reported.

The Chosun Ilbo said busy movements of vehicles and people had been spotted in the northeastern county of Kilju, where the communist state carried out its first atomic test in October 2006.

The North has also been speeding up construction of a new long-range missile launch site on the west coast, the largest-circulation daily said, citing a government source.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service declined comment on the report.

"It's hard to forecast the timing for an underground nuclear test but the North is believed to be ready to do so at short notice," the source was quoted as telling the daily.

The North has also brought more people and equipment to the new launch site at Dongchang-ri, the report said.

The site 120 kilometres (75 miles) northwest of Pyongyang was initially expected to be finished by year-end but is now likely to be completed a few months earlier than anticipated, the source said.

South Korea's defence minister said last November the site was 80 percent complete and would be able to handle larger missiles than those previously fired.

The North has a separate site at Musudan-ri on the east coast, where it launched a long-range rocket on April 5. It said it put a peaceful satellite into orbit but other nations saw the launch as a disguised missile test.

After the UN Security Council condemned the launch and tightened sanctions, the North quit six-party nuclear disarmament talks and said it restarted a programme to make weapons-grade plutonium.

Last week it announced it would conduct a second nuclear test and ballistic missile tests unless the United Nations apologises for condemning and punishing its rocket launch.

Stephen Bosworth, the US special envoy for North Korea, was due Thursday in China on the first leg of a tour which will also take him to South Korea, Japan and Russia. He has no current plans to visit North Korea.

Bosworth will consult the fellow six-party members on ways to persuade the North to come back to negotiations.

Even before Pyongyang's pullout, the long-running talks were deadlocked by a dispute over how to verify the North's declared nuclear activities.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has played down hopes of an early breakthrough, saying last week that "at this point (it) seems implausible if not impossible" that the North will return to the six-party talks.

In Washington President Barack Obama spoke by phone Wednesday with his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao and shared his "concerns" over security issues including North Korea's nuclear programme, the White House said.

Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090507/wl_afp/nkoreausnuclearmissile;_ylt=AsVTaeGvYb.ALNXflvgnBl_Zn414)

Lt-Col A. Tack
05-11-2009, 07:49 PM
NKorea to strengthen nuclear deterrent

by Park Chan-Kyong Park Chan-kyong

Fri May 8, 5:54 am ET
SEOUL (AFP)

North Korea vowed Friday to strengthen its nuclear deterrent because of what it called Washington's continuing hostile policy, as a US envoy toured the region to try to restart disarmament talks.

"The study of the policy pursued by the Obama administration for the past 100 days since its emergence made it clear that the US hostile policy toward the DPRK (North Korea) remains unchanged," a foreign ministry spokesman said.

"The DPRK will bolster its nuclear deterrent as it has already clarified," the spokesman said in a statement on the communist state's official media.

Stephen Bosworth, US special envoy for North Korea, urged Pyongyang to return to the talks and warned of "consequences" if it goes ahead with its threat to stage a second nuclear test.

After the UN Security Council condemned its April 5 rocket launch and tightened sanctions, the North announced it was quitting six-party nuclear disarmament talks and restarting a programme to make weapons-grade plutonium.

Last week it vowed to conduct a second nuclear test as well as ballistic missile tests unless the UN apologises.

The North Friday denied its actions were aimed at pushing Washington to hold direct talks and said nothing would be gained from such an exchange.

"Nothing would be expected from the US, which remains unchanged in its hostility toward its dialogue partner," it said.

The talks group the two Koreas, the United States, China, Russia and Japan.

Bosworth, who flew from China to South Korea on the second leg of his trip, denied US policy is hostile and said "the door for dialogue is always open".

Speaking after talks with Foreign Minister Yu Myung-Hwan, he urged the North not to stage another atomic test but acknowledged there is "not much" Washington can do to prevent it.

"There will be consequences but we can't control at this stage what North Korea does," said Bosworth, who will go on to Japan and Russia next week but has no current plans to visit Pyongyang.

The envoy said that while Washington was prepared to hold bilateral talks with Pyongyang, "the six-party process is at the heart of the effort to deal with the North Korean nuclear issue".

The North appears to have timed its message with Bosworth's visit, said Yang Moo-Jin of Seoul's University of North Korean Studies.

"North Korea is telling Bosworth, 'We won't move the slightest bit as long as the US keeps its current policy. If you want to talk with us, show us some change,'" Yang told Yonhap news agency.

South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper Thursday reported brisk activity at the site where the North carried out its first atomic test in October 2006.

The North says its April launch put a satellite into orbit for peaceful research purposes. Other nations saw the exercise as a disguised test of a ballistic missile.

The North complained that Obama had called for punishment for the launch and had termed it a challenge and a provocation.

It said Secretary of State Hillary Clinton "is repeating such malignant vituperation let loose by the preceding government as slandering the system in the DPRK as 'tyrannical' and 'rogue regime' and the like".

Pyongyang also criticised the Obama administration for going ahead with major joint military exercises with South Korea in March.

In Washington Thursday, Clinton said the US and its negotiating partners may have to "show some patience" before the six-way talks can resume.

Speaking at a press conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, she said both Washington and Moscow want to try to get the North Koreans back to the forum.

Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090508/wl_afp/nkoreausskoreanuclearmissile)

IArsmad
05-11-2009, 11:37 PM
Thanks for posting. I ve two questions, all the fuel and other materials, do NK import them by sea or do they get them from China?
These new activities cost a lot of money, how do they can pay for this? Just tax from the people, exports, or donations from China?

FlintHillBilly
05-13-2009, 12:35 AM
Ill give you two hints my friend... American tax payer money,and international money. I wonder how much we have sent NK to try and be a good little country... hmmm.