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China-Japan-Koreas
N.Korea Has Bought Complete Nuclear Bomb
2005-01-27
North Korea appears to have bought a complete nuclear weapon from either Pakistan or a former Soviet Union state, a South Korean newspaper said on Thursday quoting a source in Washington.
Most likely Pakistan, they've been real cozy
Seoul Shinmun quoted the source as saying the United States was checking the intelligence. The purchase was apparently intended to avoid nuclear weapons testing that could be detected from the outside, the source was quoted as saying. North Korea is believed to have one or two nuclear weapons and possibly more than eight. U.S. Congressman Curt Weldon said after a visit to the North this month that its second-ranked leader had told his delegation that it possessed nuclear weapons. Pyongyang has declared that a nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, sealed under a 1994 agreement with the United States, had been restarted. Spent nuclear fuel from that reactor could be converted to weapons-grade material. North Korea has never officially declared that it possessed atomic weapons, speaking instead of its "nuclear deterrent." U.S. experts who visited the Yongbyon facility said spent plutonium previously stored there had been removed. North Korea is suspected of running a separate program based on uranium enrichment technology, assisted by a former top Pakistani nuclear scientist.
All together now; "Khaaaaaaannnnnnnnn!"
Posted by:Steve

#8  Silly question: if they bought this thing so as not to reveal its existence by detectable testing, how come everybody/Reuters knows about it?
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-01-27 8:23:15 PM  

#7  Unfortunately tritium boosters are good for around 4-7 years (4 if booster types are of very crude design and capability). But yeah you usually don't need to change the tritium for about 7 years which is a long time.
Posted by: Valentine   2005-01-27 6:02:06 PM  

#6  Don't bug us, Americans, or you go kaboom!
Posted by: Kim Jong Hung Low   2005-01-27 2:44:06 PM  

#5  "The purchase was apparently intended to avoid nuclear weapons testing that could be detected from the outside"

Would this be to disassemble the bomb to reverse engineer a proven design? But why would they need an actual weapon instead of just the plans, which Kahn was so freely selling? Perhaps this weapon is not the Kahn design.
Posted by: DO   2005-01-27 12:31:13 PM  

#4  or, as Ed so slyly noted? A "train accident"
Posted by: Frank G   2005-01-27 11:43:46 AM  

#3  If it is one that uses tritium then the tritium has to be changed on a schedule depending on when the tritium was first made. It degrades over time. The bomb will still explode but will not be nearly as powerful. It's called a fizzle in the bomb society.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2005-01-27 11:39:02 AM  

#2  They'll bring in Syrians with hammers to test for duds, just like in Ryongchon.
Posted by: ed   2005-01-27 11:03:31 AM  

#1  But what about ongoing maintenance? Rantburg experts have assured us that without very frequent and persnickety maintenance, the thing quickly becomes useful only as an expensive, and radioactive, paperweight.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-01-27 10:43:38 AM  

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