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International News Title: Did North Korea kill off its own nuclear testing capability? The mystery of the abrupt about-face in Pyongyang may have its answer deep beneath Mount Mantap. After years of belligerent threats to conduct nuclear tests until North Korea had weapons that could reliably hit the entire United States, Kim Jong-un suddenly reversed himself last week and declared an end to nuclear testing. The regime called further tests unnecessary, and suddenly began pursuing engagement with South Korea and the US rather than trading threats. What changed? According to two studies authored by Chinese scientists reported by the Wall Street Journal, the North Korean nuclear weapons may have been too effective. Seismic activity and a sudden height change for Mount Mantap indicate that Kims underground test facility at Punggye-ri has collapsed, and that another test might be catastrophic for both North Korea and China: Seismologists involved in a soon-to-be-published study also warned that another blast in the same spot and with similar yield could cause environmental catastrophe.
Soon after the sixth and largest blast last September, satellite images suggested that one part of the site, a 7,200 foot granite peak called Mount Mantap had diminished in height. Some U.S. and South Korean experts suggested that tunnels inside the mountainwhere five of North Koreas six nuclear tests took placehad collapsed, rendering much of the site useless. Now, the two Chinese studies give credence to that theory. They both used data from seismic monitoring stations in China and abroad to analyze the initial 6.3-magnitude tremor caused by the blast and another smaller tremor 8½ minutes later. Both studies concluded that the second tremor, of 4.1-magnitude, was caused by the collapse of damaged rock above the blast cavity inside the mountain, rather than another explosion or a shift in tectonic plates. This has been the subject of intense speculation ever since the test itself took place. The secondary seismic activity got picked up immediately and was assumed to be a collapse, as the yield was far greater than expected. The primary quake registered a full point above the previous nuclear test: 2006: 4.3 The Spectator Index (@spectatorindex) September 3, 2017 The blast in September was the last test conducted at Punggye-ri, although there seems to be some debate over whether it remains functional. The Washington Post notes that a well-respected analytical site cant decide either, despite access to satellite imagery: The following day, 38 North published an analysis by Frank V. Pabian, Joseph S. Bermudez Jr. and Jack Liu that pointed to satellite imagery from Friday, the day after Kims announcement, showing at least eight mining carts and a new structure at Punggye-ris West Portal, a site not directly under Mount Mantap and not previously associated with nuclear tests but one with new tunneling seen as recently as early April. The authors said this could be the first visible indication that North Korea intends to cease further tunneling but added that this was speculation and would require more assessment. It is not clear whether the tunneling was designed to get the area ready for more testing or why it had stopped. There may be another explanation between the two. Its a little curious that these China-backed studies have been allowed to go public. It might be that Beijing has had enough of the testing in part because further testing presents a very clear danger to their own territory. The South China Morning Post makes the danger of further use of Punggye-ri very specific: Radioactive dust could escape through holes or cracks in the damaged mountain, the scientists said. The rock collapse
was for the first time documented in North Koreas test site, Lius team wrote in a paper published last month in Geophysical Research Letters. The breakdown not only took off part of the mountains summit but also created a chimney that could allow fallout to rise from the blast centre into the air, they said. And if thats not bad enough, theres also an active volcano in the region that could make matters infinitely worse: If thats the case, then Beijing may have made it abundantly clear to Kim that his nuclear-test days were over. There are other sites where Kim could set up underground test facilities, but (a) it would cost billions in hard currency that North Korea no longer can easily acquire, and (b) China has no reason to believe that Pyongyang wouldnt create the same problem at a new site. Kim might be able to afford alienating Malaysia, but he cant afford to cut ties with Beijing, not if he wants to continue his habit of breathing for very long. If all this is true and much of it is speculation then Kim had little choice but to cash in his leverage and agree to denuclearization, hoping to get the best terms possible. That would actually be good news, as it means we have a real opportunity to settle the Korean question and dial down tensions in the region, rather than just play our usual part in show talks that go nowhere. Kim will meet with Moon Jae-in on Friday. Perhaps Kim will tip his hand a little more in that summit, which will be televised live, at least in part. Were not likely to see how much hes bluffing until we call him on it in the Trump-Kim summit later this spring, though. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Yes undoubtedly NK is the victim of an unfortunate set of events of their own making and who knows, they may even have killed off their nuclear scientists. China may have indeed suggested they don't like nuclear tests so close to their territory and major cities, not to mention Kim behaving like a meglomaniac
What changed? ---- Trump... But hey, let's hope that they also blew their program up, as described..
They did. But they can rebuild it or move elsewhere. If they have the money/resources to do it. South Korea pledged denuclearization and unification. North Korea only promised unification, exactly as they have since the Fifties. IOW, Korea unified under Nork domination. So they really didn't change their position at all but merely found a new South Korean leader desperate to get some peace deal from them. I'm not greatly hopeful that the Norks have changed. This is most likely just more stalling and trying to take advantage of the West, perhaps trying to escape the sanctions regime.
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