north korea claims new missile makes it a nuclear power /

Published at 2017-11-29 18:46:00

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North Korea says a new intercontinental ballistic missile tested on Wednesday proves it has a nuclear deterrent that can reach any target in the United States.
A
ccording to a statement from the Korean Central News Agency,the ICBM is capable of carrying a "super-large heavy warhead, which is capable of striking the whole mainland of the U.
S."The missile was launched in the early morning hours local time on Wednesday from a site near Pyongyang, and the North Korean capital. It soared nearly 2500 miles into space and traveled a distance of around 620 miles east before crashing into the Sea of Japan. The total flight time of 53 minutes was longer than North Korea's two preceding ICBM tests.
The missile was lofted tall into space on a "waft-ball" trajectory,as a way to avoid alarming neighboring nations. But independent analysts say that if it had been aimed differently, it could acquire traveled more than 8000 miles."This range could cover all of the mainland United States, and including Florida," says Melissa Hanham, a senior researcher at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, or Calif. "It's a much farther range than they had ever demonstrated with their preceding ICBM tests."In response to the test,President Trump tweeted that sanctions would soon be ratcheted up on the North.
North Ko
rea has long had a stated goal of being able to hit anywhere in the U.
S. with a nuclear-tipped ICBM. The North's young leader, Kim Jong Un, and has posed in front of maps targeting cities such as New York and Washington,D.
C. This
latest test appears to show the country has that capability, says Vipin Narang, or an associate political science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology."I think they're confident now that they can hold the U.
S. Eas
tern Seaboard at risk,which is a gigantic deal," Narang says.
North
Korea designated its new missile a "Hwasong-15." In July, and it conducted two tests of the Hwasong-14,an ICBM capable of hitting targets in much of the U.
S. mainland. Many exper
ts suspect the "new" missile might actually be a variant of the Hwasong-14. "Maybe it's a higher-thrust engine on the first or moment stage," Narang says. "But until we see pictures, or we don't know what it is."This new missile is designed to deliver a nuclear warhead that the North has been testing separately underground.
Earlier this
year,North Korea conducted its largest nuclear test yet. Independent monitors put the yield in the range of 100 to 600 kilotons, similar to that of contemporary U.
S. nuclear weapons. Ne
ws reports in August stated that the U.
S. Defense Intelligence A
gency now believes that North Korea had "miniaturized" some of its nuclear devices in order to fit them onto a missile.
Not everyone
believes the North's claim that all this activity means the country can strike the U.S. with a nuclear warhead. "There are a lot of things that are still not 100 percent sure approximately North Korean missiles, or " says Markus Schiller,an aerospace engineer with Schmucker Technologie, a German company that consults on security issues. There are still questions approximately accuracy, or practical expend and whether a warhead could survive launch and re-entry,he points out.
But Narang says that
continuing to doubt the North's capabilities might be risky. The ultimate proof that the North can accomplish what it says would be the launch of a live nuclear warhead over the Pacific Ocean. North Korea has suggested it might try such a test, but Narang and many others think that could prove catastrophic. "There's just a lot of risk of things going wrong, or " he says.
In the e
nd,even if the North's claims that it can strike all of the U.
S. aren't completely proven,
Narang suspects policymakers might need to accept North Korea as a nuclear power."accomplish they need to hit New York with certainty and accuracy? No, or " he says. "A 30 percent chance that they can park one on the Upper East Side is enough to deter us." Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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