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N. Korea says it is making nuclear
bombs
Seoul -
North Korea said Thursday it has completed reprocessing its 8,000
spent nuclear fuel rods and is using plutonium extracted from them to
make atomic bombs.
"The (North) successfully finished
the reprocessing of some 8,000 spent fuel rods," a spokesman for North
Korea's Foreign Ministry said in a statement carried by the North's
official news agency, KCNA. The spokesman was not named.
Accusing the United States of taking
a "hostile policy" toward the North, the statement said that North
Korea "made a switchover in the use of plutonium churned out by
reprocessing spent fuel rods in the direction increasing its nuclear
deterrent force."
North Korea also said it will
reprocess more spent fuel rods to be produced from the small reactor
in its main nuclear complex in Yongbyon, north of Pyongyang.
Earlier this week, North Korea
claimed that it was taking "practical measures" to boost its nuclear
weapons program as a deterrent against what it calls a U.S. plan to
invade.
The claim came as some U.S.
intelligence analysts are becoming increasingly concerned that the
communist regime may have three, four or even six nuclear weapons
instead of the one or two the CIA had estimated.
New atomic bombs would give Pyongyang
more authority at the negotiating table, and may allow it to part with
one, either in a test or by selling it, experts say.
The United States and its allies are
trying to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear programs. The
North says it will do so only if the United States signs a
nonaggression treaty, provides economic aid and opens diplomatic ties.
The nuclear dispute flared in October
2002 when U.S. officials said North Korea admitted running a secret
nuclear weapons program in violation of international agreements. --
Associated Press
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