North Korea vowed today to restart a nuclear reactor which can make
one bomb's worth of plutonium a year, escalating tensions already raised
by near daily warlike threats against the United States and South
Korea.
The North's plutonium reactor was shut down in 2007 as part of international nuclear disarmament talks which have since stalled.
The
declaration of a resumption of plutonium production - the most common
fuel in nuclear weapons - and other facilities at the main Nyongbyon
nuclear complex will boost fears in Washington and among its allies
about North Korea's timetable for building a nuclear-tipped missile that
can reach the US, technology it is not currently believed to have.
A
spokesman for the North's General Department of Atomic Energy said
scientists will begin work at a uranium enrichment plant and a
graphite-moderated 5 megawatt reactor, which generates spent fuel rods
laced with plutonium and is the core of the Nyongbyon nuclear complex.
The
unidentified spokesman said the measure is part of efforts to resolve
the country's acute electricity shortage but also for "bolstering up the
nuclear armed force both in quality and quantity", according to a
statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.
Pyongyang
conducted its third nuclear test in February, prompting a new round of
UN sanctions which have infuriated its leaders and led to a torrent of
threatening rhetoric.
The US has sent nuclear-capable
bombers and stealth jets to participate in annual South Korean-US
military drills that the allies call routine but that Pyongyang claims
are invasion preparations.
North Korea has declared
that the armistice ending the Korean War in 1953 is void, threatened to
launch nuclear and rocket strikes on the US and, most recently, declared
at a high-level government assembly that making nuclear arms and a
stronger economy are the nation's top priorities.
The
threats are seen as efforts to force policy changes in Seoul and
Washington and increase domestic loyalty to young North Korean leader
Kim Jong-un by portraying him as a powerful military force.
"North
Korea is keeping tension and crisis alive to raise stakes ahead of
possible future talks with the United States," said Hwang Jihwan, a
North Korea expert at the University of Seoul. "North Korea is asking
the world 'What are you going to do about this?"'
North
Korea added the 5-megawatt, graphite-moderated reactor to its nuclear
complex at Nyongbyon in 1986 after seven years of construction. The
country began building a 50-megawatt and a 200- megawatt reactor in
1984, but construction was suspended under a 1994 nuclear deal with
Washington.
North Korea says the facility is aimed at
generating electricity. It takes about 8,000 fuel rods to run the
reactor. Reprocessing the spent fuel rods after a year of reactor
operation could yield about 7 kilograms of plutonium - enough to make at
least one nuclear bomb, experts say.
Nuclear bombs
can be produced with highly enriched uranium or with plutonium. North
Korea is believed to have exploded plutonium devices in its first two
nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.
In 2010, the North
unveiled a long-suspected uranium enrichment programme, which would give
it another potential route to make bomb fuel. Uranium worries outsiders
because the technology needed to make highly enriched uranium bombs is
much easier to hide than huge plutonium facilities.
But
experts say plutonium is considered better for building small warheads,
which North Korea needs if it is going to put them on missiles.
Analysts say they do not believe North Korea currently has mastered such
miniaturisation technology.
Scientist and nuclear
expert Siegfried Hecker has estimated that Pyongyang has 24 to 42
kilograms of plutonium - enough for perhaps four to eight rudimentary
bombs similar to the plutonium weapon used on Nagasaki in the Second
World War.
It is not known whether the North's latest
atomic test, in February, used highly enriched uranium or plutonium
stockpiles. South Korea and other countries have so far failed to detect
radioactive elements that may have leaked from the test and which could
determine what kind of device was used.
"North Korea
is dispelling any remaining uncertainties about its intention for
developing nuclear arms. It is making it clear that its nuclear arms
programme is the essence of its national security and that it's not
negotiable," said Sohn Yong-woo, a professor at the Graduate School of
National Defense Strategy of Hannam University in South Korea.
"North
Korea is more confident about itself than ever after the third nuclear
test," Prof Sohn said. "That confidence is driving the leadership toward
more aggressive nuclear development."
AP
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