[FPSPACE] North Korea has 2nd long range missile site...for space launches?
Peter Pesavento
pjp961 at svol.net
Wed Sep 10 14:20:20 EDT 2008
>From the Associated Press
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080910/ap_on_go_ot/north_korea_missiles_4
North Korea has second long-range missile site
By PAMELA HESS, Associated Press Writer 51 minutes ago
WASHINGTON - North Korea has quietly built a long-range missile base that is
larger and more capable than an older and well-known launch pad for
intercontinental ballistic missiles, according to independent analysts
relying on new satellite images of the site and other data. Analysts
provided images of the previously secret site to The Associated Press.
Construction on the site on North Korea's west coast began at least eight
years ago, according to Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr., senior analyst with Jane's
Information Group, and Tim Brown with
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_go_ot/storytext/north_korea_missi
les/29041367/SIG=10rkub54s/*http:/Talent-keyhole.com> Talent-keyhole.com, a
private satellite imagery analysis company. Bermudez first located the site
in early spring and they have tracked its construction using commercial and
unclassified satellite imagery.
"The primary purpose of the facility is to test," Bermudez told The
Associated Press in an interview last week. A base capable of a long-range
test could obviously be used in wartime to launch a missile that carried a
warhead.
"This is a clear indication North Korea is continuing its ballistic missile
development program," Bermudez said.
Bermudez is also unveiling the images on the defense web site
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_go_ot/storytext/north_korea_missi
les/29041367/SIG=10i261757/*http:/Janes.com> Janes.com and in the Sept. 17
edition of Jane's Defence Weekly.
He said the launch pad has been operational since 2005 but has not yet been
used. He believes North Korea wants to use it to develop longer-range and
more accurate ICBMs. It could also launch satellites into space.
Although North Korea has been long thought to want additional missile
capability and test facilities, this is the first public disclosure of the
new launch facility, according to Bermudez, Brown and John Pike, an imagery
analyst with
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_go_ot/storytext/north_korea_missi
les/29041367/SIG=10r77v5al/*http:/GlobalSecurity.org> GlobalSecurity.org,
who first reviewed the information last week.
Pike said the new facility represents a major step forward for North Korea's
long-range missile program as it would allow multiple test flights in a
short time, which is difficult at the smaller, original long-range missile
launch site known as Musudan-ni.
"This would be a facility to conduct a real flight-test program and develop
something that you have some operational confidence in," Pike told the
Associated Press. "It would suggest they have the intention to develop the
capability to perfect a missile to deliver atomic bombs to the United
States."
"At the old facility, (a robust test program) just wasn't going to happen,"
he said.
Pike and Brown identified Musudan-ni nine years ago when they were both with
the Federation of American Scientists in Washington.
A U.S. counterproliferation official said U.S. intelligence has been aware
of the North Korean site for several years. He spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss classified information.
North Korea has not used the new site, but could at any time, U.S.
intelligence officials and the outside analysts said.
"There is no reason they couldn't launch in the near future," Brown told The
Associated Press.
Construction has continued even as the U.S. government renewed its attempt
to persuade North Korea to shut down its nuclear weapons program. Those
negotiations do not address North Korea's long-range missile program, but
would give North Korea much-desired economic and political incentives in
exchange for giving up nuclear weapons.
The deal's future may be in doubt with news this week that Kim Jong Il, who
has held absolute rule in the impoverished, isolated Stalinist regime, may
have been incapacitated by a stroke or other health crisis. North Korean
authorities deny he is ailing.
The new launch facility exceeds in both size and sophistication the
Musudan-ni base on North Korea's east coast, images from DigitalGlobe and
GeoEye suggest.
North Korea launched a failed long-range Taepodong-2 space launch vehicle in
2006 from Musudan-ni. That test alarmed the world and gave new energy to the
stop-and-start diplomacy over North Korea's nuclear program. It also
conducted a surprise launch of a Taepodong-1 over Japan in 1998 from that
east coast site.
Pyongyang has not yet attempted to launch the ballistic missile version of
Taepodong-2, which is estimated to have a maximum range of about 2,500
miles, potentially threatening the western edge of Alaska. The range could
be extended with engine improvements and light payloads.
The new launch facility is built on the site of a small village called
Pongdong-ni which was displaced during construction. It includes a movable
launch pad and 10-story tall tower capable of supporting North Korea's
largest ballistic missiles and rockets. It also includes a rocket motor test
pad, which Brown and Bermudez said is similar in size and design to a rocket
test facility outside of Tehran, Iran. There are also support buildings.
"The discovery of this new facility demonstrates that North Korea is still
conducting an ambitious ballistic missile program and may still have plans
to launch satellites into space," Brown said.
Bermudez and Brown refer to the site as the Tongch'ang-dong launch facility,
naming it after the closest village. U.S. intelligence does not use the same
name for the site. Officials would not immediately divulge the term they
use.
The base is not quite complete, according to Pike, who reviewed the most
recent imagery Tuesday and said it is still missing a vertical assembly
building where the missile would undergo its final assembly before being
rolled to the launch site. Brown and Bermudez have not yet found optical or
radar tracking facilities; they believe North Korea will rely on mobile or
shipboard radar systems in tests. They have also not identified fixed air
defense systems that would protect the facility from air attack.
But the site does have an engine test stand, a critical facility for
measuring vibration from the engines and adjusting guidance systems to
account for it, Bermudez said.
"The engine test stand means they now have the ability to increase the
reliability of whatever system" they develop, he said.
Brown and Bermudez say the new launch facility is more protected from
surveillance aircraft than Musudan-ni because it is mostly surrounded by
hills. Its proximity to Chinese airspace could also discourage close
observation by plane, as the U.S. military may want to avoid a repeat of the
2001 collision of a U.S. spy plane and a Chinese fighter.
North Korea is believed to possess up to a dozen nuclear warheads. The new
launch pad would help in the development of missiles to carry them, he said.
In 2006, North Korea conducted an underground nuclear test, removing any
doubt it had the means to make a nuclear warhead. Its previous missile test
showed it also had the means to deliver one.
North Korea has agreed in principle to forswear nuclear weapons and the
plutonium used to fuel them. It placed its known plutonium-producing reactor
out of commission earlier this year, but has recently backtracked by taking
some equipment back out of storage in possible preparation to restart the
reactor.
In June, North Korea destroyed the reactor's distinctive conical cooling
tower as a symbolic show of good faith with the United States and other
nations bargaining with it. But the deal has since stalled over North
Korea's obligations to allow intensive international fact-checking of its
past nuclear activities.
North Korea claims the U.S. has not held up its end of a nuclear disarmament
deal because it has not removed the North from a list of state sponsors of
terrorism.
(This version CORRECTS SUBS graf bgng, Pike and Brown ... to correct that
they identified the Musadan-ni plant nine years ago, sted 18.)
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