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North Korea warns it has restarted all nuclear bomb fuel plants


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North Korea warns it has restarted all nuclear bomb fuel plants
By ERIC TALMADGE

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — With a big anniversary drawing near, North Korea declared Tuesday it has upgraded and restarted all of its atomic fuel plants — meaning it could possibly make more, and more sophisticated, nuclear weapons.

The statement, coming just a day after it said it is ready to conduct more rocket launches any time it sees fit, has heightened concerns the North may soon either conduct a launch — which Washington and its allies see as a pretext for testing missile technology — or hold another test of nuclear weapons that it could conceivably place on such a rocket.

Either would be sure to get world attention and be milked by North Korea's state media as major achievements by Kim Jong Un and his ruling regime.

But North Korea's recent statements also fit a pattern of using claimed improvements in its nuclear and missile programs — many of which don't lead to launches or nuclear tests — to push for talks with the United States that could eventually provide the impoverished country with concessions and eased sanctions, or backfire and deepen its standoff with the U.S. and its allies.

North Korea has spent decades trying to develop operational nuclear weapons.

It is thought to have a small arsenal of atomic bombs and an impressive array of short- and medium-range missiles. But it has yet to demonstrate that it can produce nuclear bombs small enough to place on a missile, or missiles that can reliably deliver their bombs to faraway targets.

Still, it has conducted three nuclear tests and a series of steadily improving long-range rocket launches, and some analysts see the announcements as foreshadowing another launch ahead of the anniversary celebration or a fourth nuclear test, which would push North Korea further along in its nuclear aims.

North Korea said Tuesday in its state media that, as it pledged to do in 2013, the plutonium and highly enriched uranium facilities at its main Nyongbyon nuclear complex have finally been "rearranged, changed or readjusted and they started normal operation." It said its scientists had improved "the levels of nuclear weapons with various missions in quality and quantity."

North Korea agreed to shut down the Nyongbyon reactor in 2007 in return for emergency energy assistance and steps toward the normalization of relations with the U.S. and Japan in a deal resulting from six-party talks involving the U.S., China, Russia, Japan and the two Koreas. In 2009, North Korea pulled out of the denuclearization talks and expelled international inspectors after the U.N. Security Council condemned Pyongyang for a failed satellite launch that was considered a test of an intercontinental ballistic missile. The North later pledged to resume its nuclear enrichment program at Nyongbyon.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the United States and other nations around the world will not accept North Korea as a nuclear state.

"That's why we urge North Korea to refrain from actions and rhetoric that threaten regional peace and security and focus instead on fulfilling its international obligations and commitments," Earnest said. "We will work with our partners in the context of the six-party talks to try to return North Korea to a posture of fulfilling those commitments that they have made."

Earnest said the United States is aware of actions North Korea has taken.

"We will repeat our call that North Korea should refrain from the irresponsible provocations that aggravate regional tension and should focus instead on fulfilling its international obligations and commitments," Earnest said.

North Korea, an autocracy run by the same family since 1948, closely controls information about its nuclear program. As a result, just what is happening at Nyongbyon is unclear. North Korea booted out international inspectors in 2009, and independent assessments by outside experts since then have been spotty.

At various points in the decades-long standoff over its nuclear ambitions, North Korea has said it has shut down or restarted its atomic fuel production. In 2013, it said it would restart a plutonium reactor that had been shuttered under a 2007 disarmament agreement.

Satellite imagery earlier this year showed signs it still wasn't operating fully. A uranium enrichment facility unveiled to a visiting American scientist in 2010 presumably gives North Korea a second way to make fissile material for bombs.

On Monday, the North's aerospace agency said it is ready to launch new satellites aboard long-range rockets. Many analysts abroad have expected North Korea would launch a rocket as part of celebrations of the Oct. 10 ruling Workers' Party founding anniversary.

The world will "clearly see a series of satellites soaring into the sky at times and locations determined" by the Workers' Party, an unidentified director at the North's National Aerospace Development Administration director was quoted as saying by state media.

North Korea has said its satellite launches are peaceful and meant for weather observation. The United States and its allies consider them covers for banned tests of long-range missiles.

Ballistic missiles and rockets used in satellite launches share similar bodies, engines and other technology.

South Korea's Defense Ministry said Tuesday that it had not detected any sign indicating North Korea is preparing a rocket launch.

Analysts in Seoul, meanwhile, said North Korea's announcements suggest an imminent nuclear test, although that is far from clear at this point.

After several failures, North Korea put its first satellite into space with a long-range rocket launched in late 2012. The U.N. said it was a banned test of ballistic missile technology and imposed sanctions.

North Korea conducted its third nuclear test in February 2013, inviting further international condemnation and sanctions. Later that year it threatened Seoul and Washington with nuclear strikes.

Despite the domestic propaganda gains and value to the North's military, a rocket launch or especially a nuclear test could come at a heavy cost for its regime.

China, North Korea's last major ally and aid benefactor, made it clear that it doesn't want to see a rocket launch by North Korea.

"As a sovereign country, North Korea has the right to the peaceful use of outer space, but it's restricted by relevant resolutions by the U.N. Security Council," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a regular news briefing Tuesday. "The resolutions by the U.N. Security Council should be fully implemented."

North Korea's latest announcements also raise doubts about recent signs of easing animosities between the rival Koreas, which agreed to hold reunions next month of families separated by the Korean War.

Before a thaw, the two Koreas had threatened each other with war in August in the wake of mine explosions blamed on the North that maimed two South Korean soldiers earlier that month.

The Korean Peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty. About 28,500 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea.

Washington and Seoul say the troops must remain as deterrence against potential aggression from North Korea, but the North says they must be removed if there is to be peace on the peninsula.
___

Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Foster Klug in Seoul, South Korea, Kevin Freking in Washington, and news assistant Liu Zheng in Beijing contributed to this report.

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-- (c) Associated Press 2015-09-16

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And in the same breath they scrounged around for one bowl of rice for an entire village's breakfast, dry roasted cockroaches for a side dish, and threatened to invade Zimbabwe.

People in Zimbabwe...are hungry too, and more jealous than frightened.

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A smart move by North Korea... Now they can negotiate for aid or some of the trade embargo to be lifted in return for them to halt their nuclear program.

Not really this is the 3rd or 4th time they have pulled this stunt. Everyone expects it now. Its about time to let China feed North Korea starving people and not the west; IE South Korea and the US. China can certainly afford it, they just don't believe in charity. heh

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At least Kim Jong Un is smart enough to protect his country with nukes. If only Assad , Ghadaffi & Sadam were so clever.

Kim Jong Un's protection comes from a couple of countries a little further north.

I think the nukes help more. Kimmy isn't blind to US aggression too :

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-09-16/us-rejected-offers-afghanistan-iraq-libya-and-syria-surrender-%E2%80%A6-and-proceeded-wage-w

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How many times has North Korea done this since 89 and the Fall of the Soviet Empire? They ratchet up tensions then accept a deal of some sort followed by food aid as both Russia and China cannot and will not help North Korea when their people starve.

Time for the US to stop kowtowing to South Korea. If they want to feed their starving Korean countrymen, fine. Beyond that China should be first in line.

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How many times has North Korea done this since 89 and the Fall of the Soviet Empire? They ratchet up tensions then accept a deal of some sort followed by food aid as both Russia and China cannot and will not help North Korea when their people starve.

Time for the US to stop kowtowing to South Korea. If they want to feed their starving Korean countrymen, fine. Beyond that China should be first in line.

The U.S? "Kowtowing" to S. Korea?? Is S. Korea threatening somebody with nuclear weapons now? Oh, I get it. The US is "kowtowing" to South Korea because it gives in to North Korean demands for food aid?? Wow - quite a stretch there!

Let me explain this to you. It has absolutely nothing to do with South Korea. You see, this is how the U.S. now handles nuclear blackmail from psychopathic autocrats. It "negotiates" with them, then makes "deals" with them (you know, like you see on television gameshows), and then gives them lots of stuff. It's a successful gameshow formula, because the reruns are guaranteed. And the television stayathomes - who're generally a little weak on plot - just eat the stuff up.

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Uh Hawker

So if South Korea did not exist you are saying that the US would negotiate and give food biggrin.png that is a big LOL

Maybe once, possibly twice, but these ratchet up and negotiate has been the MO since the end of the Korean War. (The one where North invaded South with those nice upgraded, up-gunned T34 Tanks that Uncle Joe gave them) Since 1992 there has been a food and aid component depending on crop failures

Both Bush jr and Obama have tried to just IGNORE ... in other words no matter what they say they will just do the same thing. I should not blame that totally on South Korea, Japan gets itchy when they shoot missiles into the ocean.

Bottom line if they use nukes, how far can they shoot them ... Pusan .... Hokkaido ? Right, no need to bother EXCEPT if you are trying to keep allies happy.

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At least Kim Jong Un is smart enough to protect his country with nukes. If only Assad , Ghadaffi & Sadam were so clever.

Kim Jong Un's protection comes from a couple of countries a little further north.

Even China is getting mist off with this little boy of a leader.

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