Now North Korea boasts advances in nuclear programme

SEOUL,  (Reuters) – Secretive North Korea boasted  advances in its nuclear programme on Tuesday, making sure it held  the world’s attention, saying it had thousands of working  centrifuges, as pressure built on China to rein in its ally.

Nuclear-armed Pyongyang’s revelations about its uranium  enrichment, which gives it a second route to make a nuclear  bomb, came a week after it fired an artillery barrage at a  South Korean island, killing four people, including two  civilians.

Experts have voiced surprise at the sophistication of a  uranium enrichment plant and light-water reactor at the North’s  main nuclear complex, which were shown to a U.S. scientist  earlier this month. There has been no way to verify the North’s  claims.

The North is also seen as a proliferation risk, accused by  the West of supplying Syria, and possibly Iran, with nuclear  know-how.

“Currently, construction of a light-water reactor is in  progress actively and a modern uranium enrichment plant  equipped with several thousands of centrifuges, to secure the  supply of fuels, is operating,” the Rodong Sinmun newspaper  reported.

“Nuclear energy development projects will become more  active for peaceful purpose in the future,” added the paper,  according the state news agency KCNA.

New revelations by whistle-blower Wikileaks, meanwhile, suggested that some Chinese officials did not view North Korea  as a useful ally and would take no action if it collapsed.

The United States kept up pressure on China to use its  influence with North Korea.
“The Chinese have a duty and an obligation to greatly  impress upon the North Koreans that their belligerent behavior  has to come to an end,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs  said. “I think you’ll see progress on multilateral discussions  around this over the next few days.”

By staging provocations and flexing its nuclear muscle, the  isolated North is seeking to increase its leverage as it pushes  for a resumption of talks with regional powers, which it walked  out of two years ago, in return for aid, analysts say.
Andrei Lankov, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Kookmin  University, said Pyongyang was simply following a typical  pattern.

“For the last two years, both Washington and Seoul have  tried to ignore them, so now they use both artillery and  centrifuges to say: ‘We are here, we are dangerous, and we  cannot be ignored. We can make a lot of trouble, but also we  behave reasonably if rewarded generously enough’,” Lankov wrote  on the East Asia Forum website.

North Korea has conducted two nuclear tests to date and is  believed to have enough fissile material from its  plutonium-based programme to make between six and 12 bombs.

It is impossible to verify the North’s uranium enrichment  programme, which it first announced last year. International  inspectors were expelled from the country last year, but  Washington has said since 2002 that it suspected Pyongyang had  such a program.

Analysts say its actions are also linked to family  politics, as ailing leader Kim Jong-il seeks to burnish a  military image for his inexperienced son and chosen successor  Kim Jong-un.

South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said yesterday the North’s  nuclear program, last week’s attack on Yeonpyeong island and a  Chinese proposal for emergency talks would be raised at meeting  of foreign ministers in Washington in early December.

South Korea, Japan and the United States, three of the six  countries involved in the on-off disarmament talks, will  attend.

Talks host China has proposed a summit meeting of the six  parties that have been trying to rein in North Korea’s nuclear  programme. Russia and North Korea are also part of that group.