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Yongbyon: North Korean nuclear complex and one of the sticking points in Hanoi Hanoi, March 1 (AFP) Mar 01, 2019 The future of North Korea's decades-old Yongbyon nuclear complex was one of the sticking points that sparked deadlock between leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump at their second summit in Hanoi. Pyongyang offered to "completely dismantle" its nuclear production facilities in the presence of US experts if Washington lifted some sanctions "that hamper the civilian economy and the livelihood of our people", the North's Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho told reporters in a surprise late-night briefing. Yongbyon has long been at the heart of Pyongyang's atomic development programme, but remains shrouded in secrecy. Here is what we know about it:
In the aftermath of the summit, a State Department official described it as: "A sprawling three square-mile site, with more than 300 different separate facilities located on it, all of which are dedicated to supporting the nuclear weapons programme in North Korea." Opened in 1986, it is home to the country's first nuclear reactor, with a five megawatt capacity, and is the only known source of plutonium for the North's weapons programme. It also produces other key fuels for nuclear bombs -- highly enriched uranium and tritium -- and according to a 2019 report by the Stanford Center for International Security and Cooperation has been expanding even amid the recent diplomatic thaw. The report by leading nuclear researcher Siegfried Hecker, who has visited Yongbyon four times, said the complex produced enough fissile material for five to seven atomic bombs in 2018.
US intelligence believes Pyongyang has at least two more uranium plants -- one near Kangson, just outside Pyongyang, and another at an undisclosed location. A Yongbyon closure "may *slow* the growth of North Korea's fissile material stockpile, but it would not *cap* it", tweeted Jeffrey Lewis, a researcher at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. Critics also note that North Korea has already produced a stockpile of fissile material with which to build more bombs. "It is important to be precise about what a shut-down accomplishes and what it does not," Lewis added. Given the size of the complex, the State Department official said it was important to be "very precise" about what the North Koreans were offering to dismantle. "The North Koreans struggled to give us a precise definition of what that was," said the official.
The qualification goes to the heart of one of the disagreements between Washington and Pyongyang -- the North wants the US to make concessions step-by-step along the way, particularly sanctions relief, while Washington has insisted the restrictions must remain in place until denuclearisation is completed.
The main reactor was shut down in 1994 under an agreement with Washington, only to be restarted in 2003 after the deal was derailed. Another agreement to shut down the reactor was signed in 2007, and the North blew up a cooling tower as a token of its commitment. But that deal also fell apart when relations soured and Pyongyang reactivated the reactor, using river water to cool it. Experts say previous broken promises show that simple deactivation will not be enough. "This demonstrates the need for (1) verification by trusted inspectors, (2) acceptance that somethings can be reversed, (3) the ability to reverse economic inducements," tweeted Melissa Hanham, a researcher at the One Earth Future foundation.
But Pyongyang expelled them in 2009 ahead of the second of its six nuclear tests and has since refused to allow international inspections on its territory. And the IAEA has said its representatives were never given full access to the complex, including the uranium enrichment facilities. |
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