North Korean nuclear crisis

sorcerer

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Why is North Korea cooling it? – CNN Security Clearance - CNN.com Blogs

Why is North Korea cooling it?

By Elise Labott

After weeks of fiery rhetoric, military saber rattling and threats against the United States and South Korea, North Korea seems downright quiet and willing to dial back the tension.

Fears Kim Jong Un would test a long-range missile have given way to an easing of his daily war threats, and North Korea has produced a list of conditions for dialogue.

In exchange for returning talks, North Korea wants the lifting of U.N. sanctions, the end of the U.S.-South Korea military drills, the withdrawal of U.S. nuclear strike capabilities from the region and a halt on criticism of the North. It also wants a South Korean apology for offending its leadership.

Still, even the subtle shift in tone is an improvement to the war footing Pyongyang was on just weeks ago.

So what gives?

It could just be the well-oiled pattern by the North in which hyper threats and provocations, such as nuclear and missile tests, are typically followed by a cooling off period in which the regime sits back and waits to be rewarded for backing down.

Moreover, U.S.-South Korea military drills ended Tuesday, which were a major cause of North Korea's angst.

But Korea watchers also know the road to North Korean compliance runs through Beijing.

During his trip to Asia last month, Secretary of State John Kerry placed premium importance on getting China to reign in North Korea.

While in the region Kerry said China had a vital role to play in getting North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons, calling China the "lifeline to North Korea."

"I believe China needs to become more engaged in this effort," Kerry has said since visiting Beijing. "Absent China coming to that table, I believe President Kim Jong Un calculates, literally calculates, that 'I can get away with anything if China isn't going to hold me accountable.'"

China, North Korea's largest economic partner and most important political backer, has been reluctant to pressure the North Korea.

China's main fear is that a collapse of the Kim regime could see the unification of the Korean Peninsula, which could put the American military at its doorstep. Beijing also doesn't want thousands of refugees crossing into China.

But after North Korea ignored China's warnings last December against launching a rocket into space, Beijing started losing its patience.

Then, after North Korea launched its third nuclear test in February, China supported stiff economic sanctions at the United Nations.

"Beijing's messages are not getting through and that is causing concern," one senior official said. "We think that is the main aspect for China's actions. And sure our diplomacy is playing a role as well."

In recent months there has been an open and critical debate in China over its relationship with North Korea, which would have been unthinkable only a few years ago.

Once a politically sensitive topic considered off limits, online columnists and Chinese on social media now open ponder the question of whether China's relationship with North Korea should be sacrosanct.

"For the first time in years, there is reason to hope China may be more helpful. Beijing is clearly exasperated with the North. The new Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, is more decisive than his predecessor. His new foreign policy team views Pyongyang with a jaundiced eye after years of mopping up the diplomatic messes," wrote Michael Green, Victor Cha and Christopher Johnson in a CNN blog post.

The writers are all former U.S. officials who now work at the Center for International Strategic Studies.

Kerry's warm public talk about China's helpfulness came, however, with tough talk and a not-so-subtle threat: reign in the North Koreans or expect the U.S. military buildup in the region to continue.

Obviously, if the threat disappears, the same imperative does not exist at that point in time for us to have that kind of robust, forward-leaning posture of defense," Kerry said in Beijing, referring to a nuclear-free North Korea. "And it is our hope in the short run that we can address that."

There are small, but encouraging, signs that Beijing got the message and is ready to work seriously with the U.S. on diplomatic efforts to rein in the North Korean nuclear weapons program.

Wu Dawei, China's special representative for North Korea policy, visited Washington this week for several days of consultations with Glyn Davies, the State Department's envoy for North Korea. U.S. officials say Davies is expected to meet with Wu again in Beijing next month.

Transfers of money from North Korean entities in China back to Pyongyang have slowed, as have customs checks at the borders, according to experts and officials. U.S. officials say that China has taken additional measures to crack down on the North, but would not be specific about them in order to build trust with their Chinese counterparts.

How much Kerry's backroom diplomacy with China was a factor in North Korea's calmer behavior has yet to be determined. Some U.S. officials acknowledge China is singing a helpful tune, but have yet to see serious moves by Beijing that would indicate they are putting serious pressure on the regime.

"We believe the views the Chinese have expressed publicly about North Korea are also being expressed privately," one senior U.S. official said. "Whether they are having an effect on North Korea, we don't know. I don't think we can say it's promising or not at this stage."

Other factors are also at play. Spring is typically the time of year North Korea's military returns to the fields for planting. With North Korea's economy in tatters, the military does double duty as farmers, laborers and manufacturers.

And there is the unfortunate realization that North Korea's time out, however welcome, is just that - a time out. Although Pyongyang is undoubtedly pleased the U.S.-South Korea military exercises are over, officials and experts are worried North Korea will feel more emboldened once again.

"This can go on for months with North Korea where nothing is happening or tomorrow they could launch a missile," one senior U.S. official said.
 

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More tests will take North Korea closer to nuclear missile, Pentagon says
By Jethro Mullen, CNN
May 4, 2013 -- Updated 1238 GMT (2038 HKT)

(CNN) -- If North Korea continues with its controversial missile and nuclear tests, it "will move closer" to its objective of reaching the United States with nuclear weapons, according to a Pentagon report.

During recent heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula, Pyongyang repeatedly threatened the possibility of nuclear attacks against the United States and South Korea, prompting questions on the progress of its weapons program.

North Korea's secretiveness has made it hard for Western intelligence agencies to gauge exactly what is going on inside its research facilities.

Many clues have come from the regime's large-scale tests such as the long-range rocket launch in December and the underground nuclear detonation in February.
The Pentagon's annual report to Congress on Thursday provided an overview of the military threat posed by North Korea, but it didn't say how long it believed it would take the isolated, Stalinist state to develop a fully operational nuclear missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.

It described North Korea's ballistic missile program as "ambitious" and said that "the pace of its progress will depend, in part, on how many resources it can dedicate to these efforts and how often it conducts tests."

Doubts over North's capabilities

A sign of differing views on North Korea's nuclear missile capabilities among U.S. intelligence agencies emerged last month.

Addressing the House Armed Services Committee, a congressman read out an excerpt from a report by the Pentagon's intelligence arm that said it believed with "moderate confidence" that the North had nuclear weapons that could be delivered by ballistic missiles, albeit with low "reliability."

But after the disclosure of that assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), top U.S. officials including President Barack Obama said the U.S. government didn't think North Korea was yet able to fit a nuclear warhead on a ballistic missile.

The Pentagon report Thursday included no reference to the DIA excerpt, which didn't specify the range of the ballistic missiles that it was talking about.

The report said that the type of long-range rocket that North Korea launched in December to put a satellite in orbit "could reach parts of the United States if configured as an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capable of carrying a nuclear payload."

But it noted that "a space launch does not test a re-entry vehicle (RV), without which North Korea cannot deliver a weapon to target from an ICBM."

The December launch and the display in April 2012 of an untested but road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missile help underscore "the threat to regional stability and U.S. national security posed by North Korea," according to the report.

Like father, like son

Its authors said they didn't expect much change under North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, from the strategy shaped by his father, Kim Jong Il, who died in December 2011.

The focus of that approach, they said, includes "coercive diplomacy to compel acceptance of its diplomatic, economic and security interests; development of strategic military capabilities to deter external attack;" and challenges to South Korea and the U.S.-South Korean alliance.

Under Kim Jong Un, North Korea has so far continued the pursuit of more advanced nuclear and missile technologies, which according to the report, the regime sees as "essential to its goals of survival, sovereignty and relevance."

The long-range rocket launch in December and underground nuclear test in February prompted international condemnation and tougher U.N. sanctions. Those measures were followed by intensified threats from Pyongyang, during which the United States said it would deploy additional missile defenses on its West Coast.

The Pentagon report also highlighted the murkiness of the North's decision-making processes -- a particular concern during periods of heightened tensions like the past few months.

"Although North Korea is unlikely to attack on a scale that it assesses would risk the survival of its government by inviting overwhelming counterattacks by the ROK or the United States, we do not know how North Korea calculates this threshold of behavior," the report said, using the abbreviated form of South Korea's official name, the Republic of Korea.

"North Korea's use of smallscale attacks and provocative acts leaves much room for miscalculation that could spiral into a larger conflict," it said.
 

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North Korea Sets Conditions for Reopening Kaesong
North Korea has set conditions for the revival of the jointly-run Kaesong industrial park, which has suspended operations amid escalating tensions.

The North's official Korean Central News Agency quoted a spokesman from the powerful National Defense Commission Sunday as saying that South Korea should stop all hostile acts and military provocation if it is truly worried about Kaesong's future.

The spokesman cited anti-Pyongyang leaflets sent across the border by defectors and the South's preparations for an annual military exercise with the U.S. scheduled for August.

Pyongyang pulled its 53,000 workers and blocked South Korean entry to the facility last month as part of its angry reaction to expanded U.N. sanctions against its latest nuclear test.

Last month, Seoul announced it was removing its nationals from Kaesong after Pyongyang rejected an offer to hold talks on restarting the complex.

The last seven South Korean workers left the complex Friday, ending the final peaceful tie between the two foes.

At the same time, a vehicle containing $13 million for unpaid taxes and wages for North Korean workers crossed over the border to the North.

The decade-long agreement on Kaesong provided North Korea with hard currency and the South with cheap labor. The withdrawal is the first time the factory has been completely closed since its opening in 2004.

Some information for this report was provided by AFP.
http://www.voanews.com/content/north-korea-sets-conditions-for-reopening-kaesong/1654810.html
 

sorcerer

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North Korea withdraws missiles from launch site
By Barbara Starr, CNN
May 6, 2013 -- Updated 1946 GMT (0346 HKT)
(CNN) -- Two North Korean Musudan missiles have been withdrawn from a launch site in the eastern part of the country and sent to a storage facility, a U.S. official confirmed Monday.

The United States had been worried about the prospects of the regime firing the missiles.

For weeks last month, North Korea dished out daily sabre-rattling threats aimed at South Korea and the United States.

The North's rhetoric intensified after the U.N. Security Council voted in March to slap tougher sanctions on the regime and amid U.S.-South Korean military drills in the region.
North Korea withdraws missiles from launch site - CNN.com
 

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North Korea to build replicas of Big Ben and Eiffel Tower for big-budget Pyongyang theme park, despite a food crisis that has left 2% of children suffering 'chronic malnutrition'



Country-wide building projects believed to represent an end to decades of austerity in North Korea, with the government using the slogan 'no more belt-tightening'

North Korea is to build a replica of Big Ben and the Eiffel Tower for a huge new theme park that will open in its capital Pyongyang.

According to the Associated Press, the only western news agency allowed to permanently operate inside the country, the theme park is to be the crowning glory in a colossal construction project currently taking place across the capital.

The numerous building developments are believed to represent an end to decades of austerity in North Korea, with the government using the slogan "no more belt-tightening" despite reports of mass starvation across the country and conditions in schools and colleges said to be "deteriorating rapidly".

AP reported on the changes in Pyongyang, describing how parts of the city have seen major redevelopment, with supermarkets now selling Coca Cola and other US brands, while "shop girls wear French designer labels, people with money can buy Italian wine, Swiss chocolates, kiwi fruit imported from New Zealand and fresh-baked croissants".

The report comes a month after the China Daily newspaper reported that North Korea was planning to build a mini-golf theme park called the Rungna People's Pleasure Ground in Pyongyang in a bid to double the number of foreign tourists visiting the city.

That project was said to have been directly commissioned by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un as an extension of his interests in sports, in particular golf.

The China Daily report also revealed ongoing projects at Kumgang Mountain, Ullim Falls and in the city of Songdowon on North Korea's eastern coast. All of these projects are said to be designed in order for foreign tourists to "get a deep understanding of the history and culture of Korea" which will "help enhance people-to-people between the DPRK and the rest of the world."


Despite a major constructive drive in the country, conditions in North Korea have been described as "worrying" by the United Nations.

Food is strictly rationed in many parts of the country, with 25 per cent of children suffering "chronic malnutrition", and 2.8 million people "in need of regular food assistance amid worrying levels of chronic malnutrition and food insecurity", according to a UN report.

The report continued: "Supplies of medicines and equipment are inadequate; water and heating systems need repair and the infrastructure of schools and colleges in deteriorating rapidly".

Electricity supplies are increasingly sporadic throughout North Korea, with power cuts occurring several times a day, even in Pyongyang.


http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...n-suffering-chronic-malnutrition-8594715.html
 

sorcerer

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With whose money?

North Korea Sets Conditions for Reopening Kaesong

Refer post# #324

The last seven South Korean workers left the complex Friday, ending the final peaceful tie between the two foes.

At the same time, a vehicle containing $13 million for unpaid taxes and wages for North Korean workers crossed over the border to the North.

The decade-long agreement on Kaesong provided North Korea with hard currency and the South with cheap labor. The withdrawal is the first time the factory has been completely closed since its opening in 2004.
May be that money..or some money which it got by selling missile technology
 

W.G.Ewald

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Justice Department's scrutiny of Fox News reporter James Rosen in leak case draws fire - The Washington Post

Journalists, First Amendment watchdogs and government transparency advocates reacted with outrage Monday to the revelation that the Justice Department had investigated the newsgathering activities of a Fox News reporter as a potential crime in a probe of classified leaks.

Critics said the government's suggestion that James Rosen, Fox News's chief Washington correspondent, was a "co-conspirator" for soliciting classified information threatened to criminalize press freedoms protected by the First Amendment. Others also suggested that the Justice Department's claim in pursuing an alleged leak from the State Department was little more than pretext to seize his e-mails to build their case against the suspected leaker.

...

The reactions followed a Washington Post report on the inner workings of a Justice Department investigation into a possible leak of classified information about North Korea.
 

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North Korea's Nuclear Test Site Appears To Show Signs Of New Tunneling Work
Satellite imagery has revealed new tunneling work at North Korea's nuclear test site, but nothing that points to an imminent detonation, a US research institute said on Wednesday.

The tunneling at the Punggye-ri nuclear test site -- evidenced by a large new dumpsite -- was taking place near the West Portal where the North's 2009 and possibly 2013 nuclear tests took place.

The purpose of the work was either to construct a new test tunnel that would take several years, or to repair or clean out an existing tunnel, the closely-followed website concluded.

"These activities do not appear to be part of preparations for a nuclear test in the near-term," it said.
 

SajeevJino

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N.Korea 'Almost Ready' for Fresh Nuke Test


South Korean and U.S. intelligence agencies have detected signs that North Korea is preparing for a fourth nuclear test.

"There has been a very brisk movement of vehicles and people in and around the Punggye-ri nuclear test site," a government source here said on Monday. "We're keeping a close watch on their movements."

"It doesn't look like the North is going to conduct a nuclear test in a day or two, but I don't think it's physically impossible for the North, if it has the political will, to do it to coincide" with U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to South Korea on Friday and Saturday, another source said.

Friday is also the North Korean Army's founding anniversary, which is another reason why that would be an opportune date.

The North conducted its third nuclear test in the western tunnel of the Punggye-ri test site in February last year. Currently, the southern tunnel looks ready for a test after a few more days of work.

The Chosun Ilbo (English Edition): Daily News from Korea - N.Korea 'Almost Ready' for Fresh Nuke Test
 

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Pakistan's nuclear-bomb maker says North Korea paid bribes for know-how
The founder of Pakistan's nuclear bomb program asserts that the government of North Korea bribed top military officials in Islamabad to obtain access to sensitive nuclear technology in the late 1990s.

Abdul Qadeer Khan has made available documents that he says support his claim that he personally transferred more than $3 million in payments by North Korea to senior officers in the Pakistani military, which he says subsequently approved his sharing of technical know-how and equipment with North Korean scientists.

Khan also has released what he says is a copy of a North Korean official's 1998 letter to him, written in English, that spells out details of the clandestine deal.

Some Western intelligence officials and other experts have said that they think the letter is authentic and that it offers confirmation of a transaction they have long suspected but could never prove. Pakistani officials, including those named as recipients of the cash, have called the letter a fake. Khan, whom some in his country have hailed as a national hero, is at odds with many Pakistani officials, who have said he acted alone in selling nuclear secrets.

Nevertheless, if the letter is genuine, it would reveal a remarkable instance of corruption related to nuclear weapons. U.S. officials have worried for decades about the potential involvement of elements of Pakistan's military in illicit nuclear proliferation, partly because terrorist groups in the region and governments of other countries are eager to acquire an atomic bomb or the capacity to build one.

Because the transactions in this episode would be directly known only to the participants, the assertions by Khan and the details in the letter could not be independently verified by The Washington Post. A previously undisclosed U.S. investigation of the corruption at the heart of the allegations — conducted before the letter became available — ended inconclusively six years ago, in part because the Pakistani government has barred official Western contact with Khan, U.S. officials said.

By all accounts, Pakistan's confirmed shipments of centrifuges and sophisticated drawings helped North Korea develop the capacity to undertake a uranium-based route to making the bomb, in addition to its existing plutonium weapons. Late last year, North Korea let a group of U.S. experts see a uranium-enrichment facility and said it was operational.

The letter Khan released, which U.S. officials said they had not seen previously, is dated July 15, 1998, and marked "Secret." "The 3 millions dollars have already been paid" to one Pakistani military official and "half a million dollars" and some jewelry had been given to a second official, says the letter, which carries the apparent signature of North Korean Workers' Party Secretary Jon Byong Ho. The text also says: "Please give the agreed documents, components, etc. to ."‰."‰. [a North Korean Embassy official in Pakistan] to be flown back when our plane returns after delivery of missile components."

The North Korean government did not respond to requests for comment about the letter.

Jehangir Karamat, a former Pakistani military chief named as the recipient of the $3 million payment, said the letter is untrue. In an e-mail from Lahore, Karamat said that Khan, as part of his defense against allegations of personal responsibility for illicit nuclear proliferation, had tried "to shift blame on others." Karamat said the letter's allegations were "malicious with no truth in them whatsoever."

The other official named in the letter, retired Lt. Gen. Zulfiqar Khan, called it "a fabrication."

The Pakistani Embassy in Washington declined to comment officially. But a senior Pakistani official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity "to avoid offending" Khan's supporters, said the letter "is clearly a fabrication. It is not on any official letterhead and bears no seal. ."‰."‰. The reference to alleged payment and gifts to senior Pakistani military officers is ludicrous."

There is, however, a Pakistani-Western divide on the letter, which was provided to The Post by former British journalist Simon Henderson, who The Post verified had obtained it from Khan. A U.S. intelligence official who tracks nuclear proliferation issues said it contains accurate details of sensitive matters known only to a handful of people in Pakistan, North Korea and the United States.

A senior U.S. official said separately that government experts concluded after examining a copy of the letter that the signature appears authentic and that the substance is "consistent with our knowledge" now of the same events. Both officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the diplomatic sensitivity of the allegation.

Olli Heinonen, a 27-year vet-eran of the International Atomic Energy Agency who led its investigation of Khan before moving to Harvard's Kennedy School last year, said the letter is similar to other North Korean notes that he had seen or received. They typically lacked a letterhead, he said; moreover, he said he has previously heard similar accounts — originating from senior Pakistanis — of clandestine payments by North Korea to Pakistani military officials and government advisers.

The substance of the letter, Heinonen said, "makes a lot of sense," given what is now known about the North Korean program.


Jon, now 84, the North Korean official whose signature appears on the letter, has long been a powerful member of North Korea's national defense commission, in charge of military procurement. In August, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed financial sanctions on his department for its ballistic missile work.

According to Khan, in the 1990s, Jon met then-Pakistani President Farooq Leghari, toured the country's nuclear laboratory and arranged for dozens of North Korean technicians to work there. Khan detailed the payments Jon allegedly arranged in written statements that Henderson, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, shared with The Post. Henderson said he acquired the letter and the statements from Khan in the years after his 2004 arrest by Pakistani authorities.

Henderson, who has written extensively about Khan, said he provided the letter to The Post because he lacked the resources to authenticate it himself.

He said the letter and the statements constitute new evidence that Khan's proliferation involved more-senior Pakistani officials than Khan himself. Khan has been freed from home detention but remains under round-the-clock surveillance in a suburb of Islamabad, where the government has recently threatened him with new sanctions for illicit communications.

Some of Khan's past statements have been called into question. Pakistani officials have publicly accused Khan — who is still highly regarded by many in his country — of exaggerating the extent of official approval he received for his nuclear-related exports to North Korea, Libya and Iran. In 2006, then-Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf accused Khan of profiting directly from nuclear-related commerce.

Although Khan "was not the only one who profited from the sale of Pakistan's nuclear weapons technology and components ."‰."‰. by Pakistani standards, his standard of living was lavish," and the disclosure of his private bank account in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates — with millions of dollars in it — was highly suspicious, said Mark Fitzpatrick, an acting deputy assistant secretary of state for nonproliferation during the George W. Bush administration.

Khan says the bank account was used by associates and a charity he founded, and the Pakistani government never asked him to return any money. He said that in 2007 — six years after his formal retirement and complaints of financial hardship — Musharraf arranged for a lump-sum payment equivalent to $50,000 and a monthly pension of roughly $2,500, which Khan says "belied all those accusations and claims."

Although U.S. officials disagreed for years about North Korea's uranium-enrichment capability, the dispute was settled in November when the Pyongyang government invited Siegfried Hecker — a metallurgist who formerly directed a U.S. nuclear weapons laboratory — to see a newly renovated building at Yongbyon that housed more than 1,000 enrichment centrifuges.

Hecker said in an interview that although the government did not disclose their origins, their size, shape and stated efficiency were close to a centrifuge model, known as the P2, that Khan obtained illicitly from Europe. Khan has said that he helped give North Korea four such devices.

"The combination of the Pakistani design, the Pakistani training and the major [Pakistani] procurement network they had access to" allowed North Korea to "put the pieces together to make it work," Hecker said.


According to Khan's written account, the swap of North Korean cash for sensitive Pakistani technology arose during a squabble in 1996 over delays in Pakistan's payment to North Korea for some medium-range missiles. U.S. officials said they had heard of this dispute.

In the letter, Jon first thanks Khan for his assistance to North Korea's then-representative to Islamabad, Gen. Kang Tae Yun, in the aftermath of a bizarre shooting incident in which an assailant supposedly gunning for Kang accidentally killed his wife. But the heart of the letter concerns two key transactions: the provision of a kickback to speed the overdue Pakistani missile-related payments and additional payments for the nuclear-related materials.

Khan, in his written statements — including an 11-page narrative he prepared for Pakistani investigators while under house arrest in 2004 that was obtained by The Post — said the idea for the kickback came from a Pakistani military officer.

Khan said Kang responded by delivering a half-million dollars in cash in a suitcase to a top Pakistani general, who declined it. Khan said Karamat, a more senior officer at the time, then said: "I should arrange with Gen. Kang to pay this money to him for some secret [Pakistani] army funds. He would then sanction the payment of their outstanding charges."

"I talked to Gen. Kang, and he gave me the $0.5 million in cash, which I personally delivered" to Karamat, Khan wrote. He says this payment only whetted the army's appetite, however: Karamat, who had just become chief of the army staff, "said to me that he needed more money for the same secret funds and that I should talk to Gen. Kang."

Kang then started bargaining, saying that his superiors "were willing to provide another $2.5 million, provided we helped them with the enrichment technology," Khan wrote.

Once the details of that assistance were worked out, Khan wrote, "I personally gave the remaining $2.5 million to Gen. Karamat in cash at the Army House to make up the whole amount." Khan said he transferred all the funds on two occasions in a small canvas bag and three cartons, in one case at the chief of army staff's official residence.

On the top of one carton was some fruit, and below it was $500,000 in cash, Khan wrote in a narrative for Henderson. Inside the bag was $500,000, and each of the other two cartons held $1 million, Khan wrote.

If the account is correct, the ultimate destination of the funds in any event remains unclear. Pakistani officials said in interviews that they found no trace of the money in Karamat's accounts after an investigation. But the military is known to have used secret accounts for various purposes, including clandestine operations against neighboring India in the disputed Kashmir region.

Karamat said that such a delivery would have been impossible and that he "was not in the loop to delay, withhold or sanction payments" to North Korea. He called the letter "quite mind-boggling."

The letter also states that Zulfiqar Khan, Karamat's colleague, received "half a million dollars and 3 diamond and ruby sets" to pave the way for nuclear-weapons-related transfers. Zulfiqar Khan, who later became the head of Pakistan's national water and power company, was among those who had witnessed the country's nuclear weapons test six weeks before the letter was written.

Asked to respond, he said in an e-mail that he considered the entire episode "a fabrication and figment of imagination," and he noted that he had not been accused of "any sort of dishonesty or irregularity" during 37 years as a military officer. He denied having any connection to North Korean contracts.

The senior Pakistani official said that Karamat and Zulfiqar Khan were "amongst the first to initiate accountability" for Abdul Qadeer Khan and his colleagues, and that implicating them in illegal proliferation "can only be deemed as the vengeful reaction of a discredited individual."

In the letter, Jon requests that "the agreed documents, components" be placed aboard a North Korean plane. He goes on to congratulate Khan on Pakistan's successful nuclear test that year and wish him "good health, long life and success in your important work."

The Pakistani intelligence service interrogated Karamat in 2004 about Khan's allegations, according to a Pakistani government official, but made no public statement about what it learned. Musharraf, who oversaw that probe, appointed Karamat as ambassador to Washington 10 months later, prompting further scrutiny by the U.S. intelligence community of reports that Karamat had arranged the sale of nuclear gear for cash.

Those inquiries, several U.S. officials said, ended inconclusively at the time because of Karamat's denial and Washington's inability to question Khan.
 

SajeevJino

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North Korean New SSK or SSN revealed ..

A new as-yet unnamed submarine class has been revealed in satellite imagery used by Google maps. It is estimated to be 66m (215ft) long and 6.7m (22ft) across, making is far large than existing NorthKorean built submarines, the next biggest of which is the 40m (130ft) long Shark-II Class (Sang-O 2). It is also significantly larger than the new Iranian submarine Fateh.

This is in addition to the new helicopter-capable corvettes, missile boats and Very-Slender-Vessels (VSV) entering service.


See for yourself on https://www.google.com/maps/@40.0256461,128.1671662,1389m/data=!3m1!1e3

The new submarine resembles the smaller Yoneo class midget submarine but is over twice as long. Its size implies that it could carry anywhere from twelve to twenty torpedoes.

H I Sutton - Secret Shores
 

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Kim Jong-un claims North Korea has H-bomb


North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has appeared to suggest his country possesses a hydrogen bomb, in comments published on state media.

The country was "ready to detonate a self-reliant A-bomb and H-bomb", KCNA quoted him as saying.

If true, the development would mark a significant advancement in North Korean nuclear capabilities.

But the claim has not been independently verified and has drawn scepticism from experts.

Mr Kim made the remarks as he inspected a historical military site in the capital Pyongyang.

The work of his grandfather Kim Il-sung had turned North Korea into a "powerful nuclear weapons state ready to detonate a self-reliant A-bomb and H-bomb to reliably defend its sovereignty and the dignity of the nation", he is quoted as saying.

While North Korea has made previous claims about its nuclear weapons capabilities this is thought to be its first reference to an H-bomb.

Such devices use fusion to create a blast far more powerful than a more basic atomic bomb.

North Korea has carried out three underground nuclear tests before, but experts cast doubt over the latest suggestions.

John Nilsson-Wright, Head of the Asia Programme at Chatham House, was sceptical, saying it fitted into a previous pattern of bold claims from the North Korean leader.

The comments were likely to be an "attention-grabbing effort to assert North Korean autonomy and his own political authority", he told the BBC.

"It's hard to regard North Korea as possessing an H-bomb," Lee Chun-geun, a research fellow at the Science and Technology Policy Institute in South Korea, [URL='http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/national/2015/12/10/64/0301000000AEN20151210002800315F.html']told Yonhap
.

But he added: "I think it seems to be developing it."

Independent observers are rarely allowed access to the secretive communist state, making verifying the authorities' claims difficult.
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rockey 71

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NORTH KOREA: WE HAVE H-BOMB

[URL]https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/1518c1ce50ee3a61



NORTH KOREA: WE HAVE H-BOMB North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said Thursday that his country has developed a hydrogen bomb. Kim reportedly said his grandfather “turned [North Korea] into a powerful nuclear weapons state ready to detonate a self-reliant [atomic] bomb and [hydrogen] bomb to reliably defend its sovereignty and the dignity of the nation,” during a tour of the Phyongchon Revolutionary Site. The hydrogen bomb has a stronger blast than the atomic bomb, but experts are skeptical of North Korea’s claims.

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