N.Korea closer to nuclear-tipped missile – U.S. expert
Dec 29th, 2011 | By erico_yu | Category: Military Spending, North Korea, Nuclear Weapons, Regional Security, Six-Party Talks, United StatesPosted on Dec. 29th
(Reuters) – North Korea likely is closer to mounting nuclear warheads on its ballistic missiles than generally reported, possibly only one or two years away, the U.S. Congress’s former top expert on the issue has concluded.
Larry Niksch, who tracked North Korea for the nonpartisan U.S. Congressional Research Service for 43 years, concludes in a new paper that the North probably would need as little as one to two years to miniaturize and mount a nuclear warhead atop its medium-range Nodong missile once it has produced enough highly enriched uranium as the warhead’s core fuel.
A North Korea armed with nuclear-tipped missiles would rattle East Asia and present new policy and military challenges to the United States and its allies.
Trying to determine when Pyongyang will reach that threshold has long been a challenge for the U.S. intelligence community. Niksch’s timeline, if correct, puts out a new marker for strategists.
