Intelligence chief accuses Pyongyang of restarting a plutonium reactor and developing more ballistic missiles.
North Korea's recent missile and nuclear activity have alarmed South Korea and Japan, and provoked warnings from the US [Reuters]
North Korea has allegedly expanded its nuclear programme and restarted a plutonium reactor at its main nuclear facility, the United States' intelligence chief said.
"Pyongyang continues to produce fissile material and develop a submarine-launched ballistic missile," Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told a US Senate committee late on Tuesday.
North Korea's recent missile and nuclear activity has alarmed its regional neighbours, in particular South Korea and Japan, and provoked warnings from the US, China, and the United Nations.
Clapper also told the senators during his report on the annual Worldwide Threat Assessment that Pyongyang is supposedly trying to develop a mobile, long-range, nuclear missile system - though it had "not been flight-tested".
The restart of the plutonium reactor at the Yongbyon facility meant that Pyongyang "could begin to recover plutonium from the reactor's spent fuel within a matter of weeks to months", the threat assessment said.
It would take a year to recover enough plutonium to make a bomb, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported.
On Sunday, North Korea, led by leader Kim Jong Un, launched a long-range ballistic missile and sent a satellite into orbit.
On January 6 it detonated a nuclear device in its fourth nuclear test since 2006.
On Monday, the South Korean military fired warning shots at a military vessel from the North that crossed their maritime border.
"Pyongyang continues to produce fissile material and develop a submarine-launched ballistic missile," Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told a US Senate committee late on Tuesday.
North Korea's recent missile and nuclear activity has alarmed its regional neighbours, in particular South Korea and Japan, and provoked warnings from the US, China, and the United Nations.
Clapper also told the senators during his report on the annual Worldwide Threat Assessment that Pyongyang is supposedly trying to develop a mobile, long-range, nuclear missile system - though it had "not been flight-tested".
The restart of the plutonium reactor at the Yongbyon facility meant that Pyongyang "could begin to recover plutonium from the reactor's spent fuel within a matter of weeks to months", the threat assessment said.
It would take a year to recover enough plutonium to make a bomb, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency reported.
On Sunday, North Korea, led by leader Kim Jong Un, launched a long-range ballistic missile and sent a satellite into orbit.
On January 6 it detonated a nuclear device in its fourth nuclear test since 2006.
On Monday, the South Korean military fired warning shots at a military vessel from the North that crossed their maritime border.
UpFront - What do we really know about North Korea? |
Source: DPAï·¯
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