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News ID: 74682
Publish Date : 03 January 2020 - 22:57

Image Shows Activity at North Korean Missile Site



SEOUL, South Korea (Dispatches) — A new satellite image of a factory where North Korea makes military equipment used to launch long-range missiles shows the construction of a new structure.
The release of several images from Planet Labs comes amid concern that North Korea could launch a rocket or missile as it seeks concessions in stalled nuclear negotiations with the United States.
North Korea has warned that what "Christmas gift” it gives the U.S. depends on what action Washington takes.
One of the satellite images taken on Dec. 19 shows the completion of a new structure at the March 16 Factory near Pyongyang, where North Korea is believed to be developing and manufacturing vehicles used as mobile launchers for long-range ballistic missiles.
Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia nonproliferation program at the Middlebury Institute, said in an email that the construction seemed to be an expansion of the factory, which would be "big news.”
North Korea used what appeared to be vehicles imported from China during its three flight tests of the Hwasong-14 and -15 intercontinental ballistic missiles in 2017, Lewis said. An increased capacity to produce mobile launchers would potentially help expand North Korea’s ICBM force and improve its survivability during nuclear conflict.
Lewis said, as far as he knows, North Korea only imported six of the vehicles that were used during the 2017 ICBM tests.
"I would think North Korea would want 50-100 such systems,” he said. "This would probably be some mix of ICBMs we have seen and the new system that North Korea claims is under development.”
Nuclear talks between the U.S. and North Korea have been stalled since a February summit between leaders Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un fell apart.
Earlier this month, North Korea carried out two major tests at its long-range rocket launch and missile engine testing site in the country’s northwest. Experts believe it tested a new engine for either an ICBM or a satellite launch vehicle.
The other images released by Planet Labs show that site before and after the Dec. 7 test.
Pentagon chief Mark Esper insisted Thursday that U.S. forces were indeed ready to "fight tonight," after former National Security Adviser John Bolton questioned whether the military was ready to confront North Korea.
"We have a full array of forces," Esper told Fox News' "America's Newsroom." "They are ready. They are air and naval, Marine, Army forces. We have our South Korean partners with us, and we have a broader set of allies and partners out there as well. I am confident in the readiness of our forces to deter North Korean bad behavior."