North Korea said to be preparing nuclear test

‘Various types of activities’ detected at location of previous underground tests

A US soldier and a South Korean counterpart at a joint live fire exercise at Rodriguez Range  in Pocheon, South Korea, earlier this month. The US and South Korea had heightened their combined surveillance and intelligence-gathering efforts to prepare for a possible nuclear test by North Korea, a South Korean defence ministry spokesman said. Photograph: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
A US soldier and a South Korean counterpart at a joint live fire exercise at Rodriguez Range in Pocheon, South Korea, earlier this month. The US and South Korea had heightened their combined surveillance and intelligence-gathering efforts to prepare for a possible nuclear test by North Korea, a South Korean defence ministry spokesman said. Photograph: Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

With South Korea preoccupied by a ferry disaster, North Korea has increased activities at its main nuclear test site, prompting Seoul and Washington to prepare for a possible nuclear test from the North, the South Korean defence ministry said today.

The report came as US president Barack Obama was nearing the start of his trip this week to Japan and South Korea, where he was expected to discuss with regional leaders how to deal with the North Korean nuclear threats.

“We have detected various types of activities at Punggye- ri,” a defence ministry spokesman, Kim Min-seok, said today, referring to the place in northeastern North Korea where the country has conducted three underground nuclear tests since 2006, with the latest occurring in February 2013.

Mr Kim said the US and South Korea had heightened their combined surveillance and intelligence-gathering efforts to prepare for a possible nuclear test from the North. The South Korean military activated a special crisis management taskforce yesterday morning, he said.

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Satellite imagery
South Korea and international analysts have recently said that satellite imagery showed continuing activities at the North's nuclear test site, but they reported no signs that a test was imminent. The South Korean defence ministry had said that a new nuclear test by North Korea was a "political" rather than technical decision, with its engineers ready to conduct one on relatively short notice from its leader, Kim Jong-un.

The fact that the South Korean military activated an emergency taskforce meant that it took the North’s most recent activities more seriously. The national news agency, Yonhap, quoted an anonymous government official as saying that the North had placed a large screen at the entrance of a tunnel in Punggye-ri, possibly to thwart western spy satellites watching the site.


Forcing engagement
Similar activities were reported ahead of the test in February last year, but the North Korean regime is also known for staging such activities to draw international attention and force Washington and Seoul to engage it with dialogue and grant it concessions.

The official told Yonhap that vehicle activities also sharply increased in Punggye-ri, probably to bring equipment for communications and for recording seismic waves. But the final signs of an imminent test – such as sealing a tunnel with concrete or soil – were not detected, the official said.

“North Korea wants attention ahead of Obama’s visit,” said Lee Byong-chul, senior fellow at the Institute for Peace and Co-operation in Seoul.

Six-nation talks on ending North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme collapsed in 2009. Recent efforts to revive them have stalled over differences between Washington and Pyongyang over what actions the North needed to take before such negotiations can resume.

Mr Lee said another nuclear test by North Korea “would add fuel to the fire” among South Koreans, who were already troubled by the ferry disaster.

Fears for a fourth nuclear test by the North have increased since late last month, when North Korea threatened to carry out a “new form” of nuclear test. Washington and its allies have warned that another nuclear test by the North would only bring more international sanctions against the country. North Korea is already heavily sanctioned for its previous tests of nuclear devices and long-range missile technology.

Washington and its allies have long suspected North Korea of trying to make nuclear devices small and sophisticated enough to be delivered by the intercontinental ballistic missiles it was also developing. It remained unclear how close the North has come to that goal, although it claimed after its last nuclear test that it had "diversified" and "miniaturised" its nuclear weapons.

Tensions
Following the test in February last year, relations on the divided Korean Peninsula plunged to their chilliest in years, with the North and the South trading threats of attack.

The tensions eased in the second half of last year. But they rose again in February of this year, when the US and South Korea conducted their annual joint military drills and North Korea test-launched a series of short- and mid-range missiles off its east coast.

North Korea is believed to have used some of its small stockpile of plutonium in its first two tests in 2006 and 2009.

The North had produced plutonium from spent fuel from its once-mothballed nuclear reactor, which the North is believed to have recently restarted.

North Korea is also running a uranium enrichment programme, unveiled in 2010, that officials and analysts in the region fear will provide the country with a steady supply of fuel for nuclear tests and bombs.

After the North's last underground nuclear test in February last year, analysts could not determine whether the North used highly enriched uranium for fuel. They said that by the "new form of nuclear test", North Korea may mean a test of a uranium bomb. – ( New York Times service)