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N. Korea tested hydrogen bomb that can be mounted on ICBM – state TV

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N. Korea tested hydrogen bomb that can be mounted on ICBM – state TV
Published time: 3 Sep, 2017 06:41Edited time: 3 Sep, 2017 08:59
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un provides guidance on a nuclear weapons program © KCNA / Reuters

Pyongyang has successfully tested a hydrogen bomb which can be mounted on an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM), the country’s state TV announced. Earlier an “artificial quake” was registered near a nuclear testing site in North Korea.
The bomb test was a “perfect success” and was a “meaningful” step to complete the North’s nuclear weapons program, state television said, as cited by Reuters.

North Korea says it has developed ‘advanced hydrogen bomb’ that can be fitted on ICBM

Kim watched “an H-bomb to be loaded into new ICBM,” KCNA state news agency reported, adding that all components of the device were “homemade.”

“The H-bomb, the explosive power of which is adjustable from tens kiloton to hundreds kiloton, is a multi-functional thermonuclear nuke with great destructive power which can be detonated even at high altitudes for super-powerful [Electromagnetic pulse] EMP attack according to strategic goals,” the agency said.

On Saturday, Pyongyang said it developed a new, more advanced hydrogen nuke that is small enough to be fitted on a ICBM, KCNA state media reported.

North Korea’s Nuclear Weapons Institute created a “more developed nuke,” bringing about a “signal turn” in the country’s nuclear arsenal, the outlet said. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un reportedly inspected the new weapon during his visit to the nuclear facility.

“Our hydrogen fuel, which can be arbitrarily adjusted from tens to hundreds of kilotons depending on the target of the nuclear strike, not only exerts enormous destructive power,” but can also explode at a high altitude, producing a “super powerful EMP [electromagnetic pulse] against a vast region,” KCNA said in the Saturday statement.

READ MORE: Pyongyang conducted nuclear test, Tokyo says after ‘artificial earthquake’ strikes N. Korea
On Sunday, a 6.3 magnitude earthquake rocked North Korea near a known nuclear test site – Punggye-ri in North Hamgyeong Province, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA), as cited by South Korean Yonhap news agency.

China says it will never allow war or chaos on its doorstep as tensions escalate on Korean Peninsula

The USGS reported the tremor as 6.3 in magnitude, while China’s earthquake administration also said it detected a 6.3 magnitude earthquake in northeastern North Korea, calling it a “suspected explosion,”Reuters reports.

The Japanese Foreign Ministry claimed that, according to its data, “it was a nuclear test.” According to the Japan Meteorological Agency, the tremors in North Korea were at least 10 times as powerful as previous nuclear tests.

Witnesses in the Chinese city of Yanji, which borders North Korea, said they felt a tremor which lasted several seconds.

“I was eating brunch just over the border here in Yanji when we felt the whole building shake,”Michael Spavor, director of the Paektu Cultural Exchange, told Reuters, “It lasted for about five seconds. The city air raid sirens started going off.”

Moscow has voiced unease over North Korea’s nuclear test. “That [North Korea] now has such a projectile after the latest ballistic missile tests is a big, serious concern,” Frants Klintsevich, deputy head of the Federation Council committee for defense and security, told Interfax.

The official called the test “an unfavorable trend,” although it did not endanger Russia or its citizens.

North Korea’s nuclear test is a blatant violation of UN Security Council resolutions to “send a blunt message to the West,” Leonid Slutsky, head of the State Duma foreign affairs committee, told reporters on Sunday.

“The United States and South Korea are provoking Pyongyang by flexing military muscle and making repeated threats of intervention and pre-emptive strikes,” Slutsky said.

Trump, Moon ‘conceptually’ agree on revising ballistic missile treaty & arms supplies

China strongly condemns the North Korean nuclear test, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

“The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea has once again conducted a nuclear test in spite of widespread opposition from the international community. The Chinese government resolutely opposes and strongly condemns it,” it said.

On Monday, South Korea’s National Intelligence Service warned that the North might be preparing its sixth nuclear weapon test from a test site in Punggye-ri. Pyongyang has already conducted five nuclear tests – in 2006, 2009, 2013, and in January and September 2016. Following the previous test, the North claimed it had successfully detonated a small nuclear warhead.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have been running high over the past months. While the US and its allies say Pyongyang violated its international obligations with the missile tests, North Korea slammed Washington’s military build-up in the region – in particular, the joint US-South Korea Ulchi Freedom Guardian drills, which took place in late August.

Following the ballistic missile tests, US President Donald Trump said “all options are on the table” regarding North Korea, later tweeting that “talking is not the answer.”

Russia and China continue to insist that a military solution to the crisis is not an option. On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that further escalation could lead to a regional conflict.

“The situation on the Korean Peninsula, where tensions have grown recently, is balancing on the brink of a large-scale conflict. Russia believes that the policy of putting pressure on Pyongyang to stop its nuclear missile program is misguided and futile,” Putin said.
https://www.rt.com/news/401861-pyongyang-tested-hydrogen-bomb/
 
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'Perfect success': North Korea detonates a HYDROGEN bomb designed for a ballistic missile as Kim's regime celebrates its most powerful nuclear test ever after causing 6.3 magnitude quake
  • North Korea detonates hydrogen bomb sparking powerful 6.3 magnitude quake
  • Terrifying tremor detected in northeast where the Punggye-ri test site is located
  • Blast directly ordered by Kim Jong-Un and was large enough to destroy a city
  • South Korea pledges to deploy most powerful US tactical weapons in response
  • It comes hours after regime said it developed more advanced nuclear weapon
By JENNY STANTON and CHEYENNE ROUNDTREE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM and SCOTT CAMPBELL FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 00:09 BST, 3 September 2017 | UPDATED: 10:53 BST, 3 September 2017
North Korea today detonated a hydrogen bomb sparking a powerful 6.3 magnitude earthquake amid an 'escalating' nuclear crisis.

The terrifying tremor was detected in the northeast of the country where the Punggye-ri test site is located - but was so strong that it shook buildings in China and Russia.

State television claimed the country's sixth nuclear test - 10 times more powerful than its fifth - was a 'perfect success' and could pave the way for a frightening new range of intercontinental ballistic missiles.

It added that the hydrogen bomb test - which was directly ordered by leader Kim Jong-Un - was a 'meaningful' step in completing the country's nuclear weapons programme.

The recent development comes amid heightened tension following Pyongyang's test launch of two missiles in July that potentially could hit major mainland US cities.

Also at the weekend, North Korea taunted world leaders, calling them 'puppets' and bragged that an attempt to locate and destroy its missiles was a 'silly dream'.

The blast - which was large enough to destroy an entire city - has sparked an international backlash with South Korea pledging to 'completely' isolate North Korea and deploy the most powerful US tactical weapons.

US National Security Adviser HR McMaster spoke to his South Korean counterpart in an emergency phone call following the test, which was seen as a direct challenge to Donald Trump.

The American President had just hours earlier talked to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe about the 'escalating' nuclear crisis in the region.
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North Korean television today released these photos appearing to show Kim Jong-Un signing the order to carry out the test
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Kim Jong-Un (left) appears to sign the order (right) asking his scientist to proceed with the test

Abe later slammed the test as 'absolutely unacceptable' and said its nuclear and missile programmes now pose a 'more grave and urgent' threat to his country.

He added: 'North Korea's nuclear and missile development programme is a threat that is more grave and urgent to the safety of our country and has entered a new stage.

'It is significantly hurting regional and international peace and stability.'

China added that it 'resolutely opposes' and 'strongly condemns' the test while urging the rogue state to 'stop taking wrong actions'.

Meanwhile Russia urged calm and warned Pyongyang to 'refrain from any actions that lead to a further escalation of tension'.

Photographs released today appeared to show Kim signing the order to carry out the test blast, which seismologists calculate was eight times as damaging as the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima by the US in World War II.

The shock news was delivered on state television by veteran anchor Ri Chun-hee - who has become the face of North Korean media after delivering major propaganda announcements from the rogue state for the past 40 years.

A statement from the country read: 'Scientists in the nuclear field of the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] successfully carried out a test of H-bomb for ICBM [intercontinental ballistic missile] in the northern nuclear test ground of the DPRK at 12:00 on September 2, true to the Workers' Party of Korea's plan for building a strategic nuclear force.'

Just hours earlier, the country claimed it had developed a more advanced nuclear weapon with 'great destructive power'.
The earthquake came after North Korea claimed it had developed a more advanced nuclear weapon. Photos released on Sunday show the country's leader Kim Jong-un inspecting a hydrogen bomb
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Yonhap, South Korea's official news agency, reports the quake struck where North Korea's nuclear test site Punggyeri is located
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Overhead pictures of Punggye-ri nuclear test site from August 17, published by 38 North, revealed Kim Jong-un could order a test blast 'at any time with minimal advance warning', experts said
South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said it had detected a seismic wave from 12.34pm to 12.36pm on Sunday around Punggye-ri.

The country's weather agency and the Joint Chiefs of Staff said an artificial 5.7 magnitude quake occurred at 12.29pm local time, in Kilju, northern Hamgyong province, the site where North Korea has conducted nuclear tests in the past.

Seoul officials revised their earlier estimate of 5.6 magnitude quake. The U.S. Geological Survey called the first quake an explosion with a magnitude of 6.3.

South Korea's presidential office also said it would hold a National Security Council meeting chaired by President Moon Jae-in.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said: 'It is absolutely unacceptable if North Korea did force another nuclear test, and we must protest strongly.'

China's earthquake administration detected a second tremor of magnitude 4.6 in North Korea minutes after the first.

It described the event as a cave-in. South Korea's weather agency, however, said no second quake happened.
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The announcement was delivered by news anchor, Ri Chun-hee (pictured during the announcement Sunday) - who has been making announcements on Korean Central Television for more than 40 years
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North Koreans are pictured reacting with joy to the news of the latest nuclear test
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Citizens of the North Korean capital Pyongyang gathered around a screen showing the order signed by Kim Jong-Un authorising the nuclear test
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Meanwhile in Japan pedestrians were shocked as they walked past a monitor revealing news of the blast

A US researcher told the BBC that if the earthquake was caused by a nuclear blast, it would be the largest atomic test conducted by North Korea.

Dave Schmerler, of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, added: 'We should definitely be alarmed.'

Japan's Ministry of Defence has dispatched three military jets to test for radiation despite North Korea's claims that radioactive material did not leak into the environment.

Tremors caused by the nuclear test were at least ten times as powerful as the last time Pyongyang exploded an atomic bomb a year ago, the Japan Meteorological Agency said at a briefing aired by public broadcaster NHK.

The previous nuclear blast in North Korea is estimated by experts to have been around 10 kilotons.

South Korea's defence committee says the blast was about 100 kilotons - powerful enough to destroy an entire city, BBC reports.

Residents in the Vladivostok in eastern Russia said they felt the tremors.

North Korea conducted its fifth test last September - which also caused a massive earthquake.

NORTH KOREA'S MISSILE DEVELOPMENT
Here are key dates in the North's quest to develop a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting the United States:

Late 1970s: North Korea starts working on a version of the Soviet Scud-B (range 300 kilometres or 185 miles). Test-fired in 1984.

1987-92: Begins developing variant of Scud-C (range 500 km), Rodong-1 (1,300 km), Taepodong-1 (2,500 km), Musudan-1 (3,000 km) and Taepodong-2 (6,700 km).

Aug 1998: Test-fires Taepodong-1 rocket over Japan in what it calls a satellite launch -- the US and others say it is a missile test.

Sept 1999: Declares moratorium on long-range missile tests amid improving ties with US.

July 12, 2000: Fifth round of US-North Korean missile talks in Kuala Lumpur ends without agreement after North demands $1 billion a year in return for halting missile exports.

March 3, 2005: Pyongyang ends moratorium on long-range missile testing, blames Bush administration's 'hostile' policy.

July 5, 2006: Test-fires seven missiles, including a long-range Taepodong-2 which explodes after 40 seconds.

Oct 9, 2006: Conducts underground nuclear test, its first.

April 5, 2009: Launches long-range rocket which flies over Japan and lands in the Pacific, in what it says is an attempt to put a satellite into orbit. The United States, Japan and South Korea see it as a disguised test of a Taepodong-2.

May 25, 2009: Conducts its second underground nuclear test, several times more powerful than the first.

April 13, 2012: Launches what it has said is a long-range rocket to put a satellite into orbit, but which disintegrates soon after blast-off.

December 12, 2012: Launches a multi-stage rocket and successfully places an Earth observational satellite in orbit.

February 12, 2013: Conducts its third underground nuclear test.

January 6, 2016: Conducts its fourth underground nuclear test, which it says was a hydrogen bomb - a claim doubted by most experts.

March 9, 2016: Kim Jong-Un claims the North has successfully miniaturized a thermo-nuclear warhead.

April 23, 2016: Pyongyang test-fires a submarine-launched ballistic missile.

July 8, 2016: US and South Korea announce plans to deploy an advanced missile defence system -- THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense).

August 3, 2016: North Korea fires a ballistic missile directly into Japan's maritime economic zone for the first time.

September 9, 2016: Conducts fifth nuclear test, its most powerful to date.

March 6, 2017: Fires four ballistic missiles in what it says is an exercise to hit US bases in Japan.

March 7, 2017: US begins deploying THAAD missile defence system in South Korea.

May 14, 2017: North Korea fires a ballistic missile which flies 700 kilometres before landing in the Sea of Japan. Analysts say it has an imputed range of 4,500 kilometres (2,800 miles) and brings Guam within reach.

July 4, 2017: Test-fires a ballistic missile that analysts say brings Alaska within reach. Pyongyang later says it was a 'landmark' test of a Hwasong-14 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

July 28, 2017: Launches an ICBM with a theoretical range of 10,000 kilometres, meaning it could hit much of the United States.

August 26, 2017: Fires three short-range ballistic missiles.

August 29, 2017: Fires ballistic missile over Japan and into the Pacific, acknowledging for the first time that it has done so. South Korea says it flew around 2,700 kilometres at a maximum altitude of about 550 kilometres.

September 3, 2017: North Korea appears to carry out sixth nuclear test, with seismic monitors measuring an 'explosion' of 6.3 magnitude near its main test site. Japan's government confirms a nuclear test has been carried out.
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Japan Meteorological Agency's earthquake and tsunami observations division director Toshiyuki Matsumori points at graphs of ground motion waveform data observed in Japan during a news conference on Sunday following the earthquake felt in North Korea

North Korea was ready to carry out a sixth nuclear bomb test.
The overhead pictures of Punggye-ri nuclear test site, in the country's north east revealed Kim Jong-un could order a test blast 'at any time with minimal advance warning', experts said.

There were fears the tyrant may chose September 9, North Korea's Day of the Foundation of the Republic, to carry out the trial.

The same date was chosen last year by North Korea to conduct its fifth nuclear test, marking the 68 years since Kim Il-sung came to power.
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The satellite images from August 27 suggested North Korea was ready to carry out a sixth nuclear bomb test
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The facility in north eastern North Korea remains on 'standby', according to experts

Satellite pictures released by 38 North showed minor movements at Punggye-ri - suggesting that the site was on 'standby'.

The think tank said: 'As long as the site remains in standby status, we cannot rule out that a sixth nuclear test could be conducted at any time with minimal advance warning.'

But it added that the images do 'not provide observable corroborative evidence that the DPRK is about to conduct another underground nuclear test immediately.'

Instead, 'the DPRK has, since April 2017, continued to maintain the site at a high state of readiness such that it could conduct a test on short notice, whenever the political decision is made to proceed with another test or tests.'

Kim Jong-un's secret son who will inherit his brutal regime
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has a secret son who is heir to his brutal regime, it has been claimed.

The dictator has three children with his wife Ri Sol-Ju but the gender of the couple's first - who was born in 2010 - has never been revealed.

It was previously revealed that Sol-Ju had given birth to a daughter six months ago.
The first lady had disappeared for an extended period last year, raising speculation that she could be pregnant.

According to previous intelligence reports from Seoul's spy agency, Ri married Kim in 2009 and gave birth to their first child the following year, with their second born in 2013.

Kim is the third generation of his dynasty to rule North Korea, but little has been revealed about the country's first family.

NHK WORLD - English
North Korea nuclear test: Latest developments - CNN
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-claims-developed-advanced-hydrogen-bomb.html
 
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Pakistan don't even have 100kt nuke.:o:
 
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They have better missile tech than us, we gave them nuclear tech and they gave us missile tech.
Well, that kind of supports the idea that current test could be a Pakistani design of 100 Kt perfected by repeated testing in NK. Pakistan gets a perfected design. NK gets the bomb and an opportunity to defy US. Everyone is happy.
 
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The size looks good and pretty solid machining in the pictures (above) and from independent reports seems a perfect test. Congratulations to N Korea for making their defence impregnable.

What they need to do now is check the same one at a lower yield and workout the data, if indeed it's a variable dial to yield weapon.
 
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I think both India and Pakistan will now buy their 'Phatake' from North Korea.
both the country have much better nuke and delivery system.
we refrain from getting public bwcause it will cause more harm than good.

we are not war mongers like nk. we have a place in world unlike them.

They have better missile tech than us, we gave them nuclear tech and they gave us missile tech.
not really. nk has almost nothing to offer you. you can get better techology from china and may be develope things.

also what ever relation pakistan had in past were surely under shadow of usa. its very complex world politics.
 
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both the country have much better nuke and delivery system.
we refrain from getting public bwcause it will cause more harm than good.

we are not war mongers like nk. we have a place in world unlike them.


not really. nk has almost nothing to offer you. you can get better techology from china and may be develope things.

also what ever relation pakistan had in past were surely under shadow of usa. its very complex world politics.
Well it is widely reported that Pakistan gave nuclear tech to NK in return for Missile tech. Pakistan doesn't have slbm or ICBM we are playing catch up with North Korea and Israel.
 
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Well it is widely reported that Pakistan gave nuclear tech to NK in return for Missile tech. Pakistan doesn't have slbm or ICBM we are playing catch up with North Korea and Israel.
who are your enemy in icbm range?

why would you jeopardise your national intrest just for sake of a few test. who do u want to prove?
if icbm would have been required you will have it. in world politico you have one enemy and he is sitting wall to wall.
 
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who are your enemy in icbm range?

why would you jeopardise your national intrest just for sake of a few test. who do u want to prove?
if icbm would have been required you will have it. in world politico you have one enemy and he is sitting wall to wall.
A submarine launched ICBM is like the best deterrent a country can have. These submarine can stay under water for so long and perform deterrence patrols or launch 2nd strike in retaliation very important.
 
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I smell a war in few years or in 2018 which will mark a end of US super power badge.

China never allow to US to dictate terms at their door step and sit permanently
 
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Its extremely sad to see in order for you to earn respect in this world is through nuclear bombs or else you gonna be another Iraq or Libya :coffee:
 
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