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North Korea nuclear capability has increased
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- North Korea's nuclear weapons arsenal has grown since the country was labeled part of an "axis of evil" by President Bush three years ago, CIA Director Porter Goss testified Wednesday before the Senate Select Intelligence Committee.
"Our assessment is they have a greater capability than that assessment," Goss said, referring to a January 2002 CIA assessment of North Korea's nuclear program, which stated the communist state had produced enough plutonium for one or two nuclear weapons. "In other words, it has increased since then." In his first public appearance as CIA director, Goss said he could not be more specific because the information was classified. In his opening statement to the committee, Goss outlined various international threats to the United States, including al Qaeda, whose leaders -- Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri -- remain at large. (Full story) In addition to pursuing nuclear weapons, Goss said North Korea "continues to develop, produce, deploy and sell ballistic missiles of increasing range, augmenting Pyongyang's large operational force of Scud and No Dong class missiles." North Korea is looking for new customers for its ballistic-missile technology, Goss said, now that "traditional customers" such as Libya have stopped trading with North Korea. The CIA also believes North Korea has "active chemical weapons and biological weapons programs," and may even have chemical and biological weapons at their disposal, Goss said. U.S.: No concessions Bush labeled North Korea, Iran and Iraq an "axis of evil" in his January 2002 State of the Union address. "By seeking weapons of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger," the president said then. By the end of 2002, North Korea had expelled inspectors from the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency and removed the IAEA's monitoring seals and cameras from its nuclear facilities. Six-party talks aimed at ending North Korea's nuclear program have been stalled since September 2004, and North Korea last Thursday said it had no intention of returning to the negotiating table. Pyongyang also declared for the first time publicly that the country has nuclear weapons and threatened to bolster its weapons arsenal, in response to what it deemed U.S. threats to its political system. The United States has refused to offer concessions to entice North Korea back to the multilateral talks, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Monday. Three of the other parties -- China, South Korea and Japan -- have advocated a more conciliatory approach to solving the North Korean nuclear issues and have urged the United States to be more flexible. The CIA director told the committee he believes the main reason for nuclear proliferation in countries such as North Korea and Iran is not so much to stage an attack as to keep up with their nuclear neighbors. "Having watched the pride of some countries in acquiring the world-stage status of having nuclear weapons -- and what that has meant for nationalism and leadership ... it becomes almost a piece of the holy grail for a small country that |
in case you do not know - their nuclear "capability" has been increasing since the early 90's to the present day. saying that it "increased" between 02 and 04 is not really saying anything. its like saying the world continued to rotate further in the clockwise direction on its axis between 02' and 04'
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Kim Jong needs to put less money into nukes and more money into finishing that ugly hotel in the middle of Pyongyang. That thing is just an eyesore.
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http://www.olscom.com/tours/17/2.jpg It's 105 floors. The hotel was never finished. It's just an empty concrete shell. |
no offence but who cares, we all know bush is going to throw a fit and use N Korea using nukes just to take over another country. its all lame
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Those people are fucking nuts..if it's one country that is to be feared it's those crazy bastards
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