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UN Nuclear Chief Says North Korea Has Close To Six Nukes

"I'm not sure they will gain anything by testing other than provoking every member of the international community and bring - and play a brinkmanship policy, which nobody will benefit": ElBaradei.
Washington (AFP) May 08, 2005
The International Atomic Energy Agency estimates that North Korea has close to six nuclear weapons, the UN nuclear watchdog's chief said Sunday.

Asked by CNN if it was the IAEA's assessment that the North Koreans already have as many as six nuclear bombs, IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei said: "I think that would be close to our estimation."

"We knew they had the plutonium that could be converted into five or six North Korea weapons," he said.

"We know that they had the industrial infrastructure to weaponize this plutonium. We know - we have read also that they have the delivery system."

According to US intelligence reports, Pyongyang is believed to have one or two crude nuclear bombs, and North Korea declared on February 10 that it had developed nuclear weapons to defend itself from the United States.

Recent media reports have said that North Korea has been preparing an underground nuclear test since March and might conduct one as early as June.

The New York Times reported Friday that US officials familiar with satellite and intelligence data believed the Stalinist state was building a reviewing stand and filling in a tunnel, signs of a potential underground nuclear test.

"I'm not sure they will gain anything by testing other than provoking every member of the international community and bring - and play a brinkmanship policy, which nobody will benefit," ElBaradei told CNN. "I think everybody would lose if they were to do that."

"I do hope that the North Koreans would absolutely reconsider such a reckless, reckless step," he said.

ElBaradei has urged world leaders to call Pyongyang to dissuade it from conducting a nuclear test.

"I'm afraid that this will throw back the whole North Korean side into again yet another worse situation than what we had in the last few years," he said.

"It is getting from bad to worse. And the earlier we intervene to engage the North Koreans, the earlier we try to find a comprehensive solution, the better for everybody."

A North Korean test would cause "a lot of insecurity fallout," ElBaradei said. "The impact on the whole East Asian and Japan, South Korea is tremendous."

"I think implicitly, to me at least, it involves crying for help, frankly," he said.

"North Korea, I think, has been seeking a dialogue with the United States, with the rest of the international community ... through their usual policy of nuclear blackmail, nuclear brinkmanship, to force the other parties to engage them."

Talks between the two Koreas, Russia, China, Japan and the United States on the North's nuclear programs have been stalled since a third round of discussions last June.

The North has boycotted the six-party talks, citing "hostile" US policy.

US Senator Pat Roberts, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, urged North Korea to return to the talks on Sunday.

The threat of a nuclear test "is the only card they have to play," Roberts told CNN. "I think basically that Kim Jong-Il believes this is his card to play to stay on the world stage to make demands."

All rights reserved. � 2004 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.

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South Korea Warns North Korea Not To Carry Out Nuclear Tests
Seoul (AFP) Apr 25, 2005
South Korea warned North Korea Monday against carrying out a nuclear weapons test, saying it would only push the Stalinist country further into isolation.



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