North Korea's New Reactor At Nuke Site Likely To Be Formally Operational Next Summer, Seoul Says
South Korea's defence minister has expressed concerns that North Korea's light-water reactor at the Yongbyon nuclear complex is likely to be fully operational by next summer. There are suspicions that North Korea may use the reactor to produce fissile materials for nuclear weapons.
A light-water reactor at North Korea's main nuclear complex will likely be formally operational by next summer, South Korea's defence minister said, amid suspicions that the North may use it as a new source of fissile materials for nuclear weapons. Concerns about North Korea's nuclear program deepened recently as the UN atomic agency and foreign experts said they've detected signs indicating that North Korea had begun operating its light-water reactor at the Yongbyon nuclear complex.
IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi said last week that his agency had observed increased levels of activity at and near the reactor and since mid-October, a strong water outflow from its cooling system.
He said the reactor is "a cause for concern" because it can produce plutonium - one of the two key ingredients used to manufacture nuclear weapons, along with highly enriched uranium.
The South Korean Defence Ministry said Friday that Defence Minister Shin Wonsik told local reporters a day before that his country had also spotted similar cooling system-related activities associated with the reactor last summer.
Shin said the reactor appears to be in the stage of a trial operation and that it's expected to be officially operational around next summer.
North Korea has long produced weapons-grade plutonium from its widely known 5-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon. The light-water reactor would be an additional source of bomb fuels. Yongbyon has a uranium enrichment facility as well.
There are questions about the reactor's reported operation, as light-water reactors are best-suited for electricity generation. Shin noted there has been no country which has used light-water reactors to produce weapons-grade plutonium. However, many observers say North Korea could adapt one at Yongbyon to produce weapons-grade plutonium.
"(North Korea)'s commissioning of a new light water nuclear power plant raises serious concerns, including safety," the US Mission to the UN in Vienna said Saturday in a message posted on X, formerly known as Twitter. "(North Korea's) unlawful nuclear, ballistic missile programs continue to pose a grave threat to international peace & security."
Grossi also noted the North's operation of the light-water reactor violates UN Security Council resolutions.
The IAEA and foreign governments have no access to Yongbyon and other suspected nuclear sites in North Korea, and they typically rely on satellite imagery to monitor the North's nuclear activities. North Korea kicked out IAEA inspectors from the country in 2009.
Outside estimates on the size of North Korea's nuclear arsenal vary, ranging from 20-60 to more than 100. Since his diplomacy with the US collapsed in 2019, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has repeatedly vowed to build more nuclear weapons and introduce high-tech weapons to cope with what he calls intensifying US hostility.
Foreign experts say Kim would ultimately hope to use his expanded nuclear arsenal to win sanctions relief from the US when diplomacy resumes. In response to the North's latest intercontinental ballistic missile test last week, the US, South Korea and Japan urged other countries to fully implement UN Security Council resolutions that have imposed punishing sanctions on the North for its past banned weapons tests.
No comments:
Post a Comment