For the first time on Friday, North Korea revealed images of its uranium enrichment facility, featuring leader Kim Jong Un touring the site and urging the expansion of centrifuges to bolster the nation’s nuclear capabilities.
Although North Korea conducted its initial nuclear test in 2006 and has been subjected to numerous UN sanctions for its illicit weapons programs, it had never previously shown its uranium enrichment facility to the public.
These facilities are crucial in producing highly enriched uranium by using centrifuges to spin the raw material at high speeds, essential for creating nuclear warheads.
Kim Jong Un toured the Nuclear Weapons Institute and the “production base of weapon-grade nuclear materials,” according to a report by the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), which did not disclose the location or timing of his visit.
State media shared images of Kim inspecting the facility, where he emphasized the necessity of increasing the number of centrifuges to exponentially boost the nuclear arsenal for self-defense.
Kim also reviewed the production of nuclear warheads and the current status of nuclear materials, KCNA reported, noting that he was informed about the facility’s development of nuclear materials through advancements in systems like centrifugal separators.
He called for the implementation of new types of centrifuges to further solidify the nation’s ability to produce weapon-grade nuclear materials and urged the setting of long-term goals to increase production.
North Korea’s nuclear weapons programs are prohibited by UN sanctions, yet the country has repeatedly violated these restrictions, partially with backing from allies such as Russia and China.
Experts suggest that the public revelation of the enrichment facility may be intended to influence the upcoming U.S. presidential election. Hong Min, a senior analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, said the images send a message to the next U.S. administration that denuclearizing North Korea is not feasible and demand recognition of the country as a nuclear state.
However, Hong noted that another nuclear test is unlikely to occur immediately following this disclosure.
North Korea recently reported heavy flooding in its northern regions near China due to record rainfall in late July, which resulted in casualties, the flooding of homes, and widespread agricultural damage. A report from the Stimson Center’s 38 North program on Wednesday indicated that North Korea’s primary nuclear test site had also been damaged by floodwaters.
“The main nuclear test site is in poor condition, with roads and railways washed away, and the ground is severely weakened,” Hong stated.
Tensions between North and South Korea have worsened in recent years, with North Korea recently deploying 250 ballistic missile launchers near the southern border. The North has also been sending trash-laden balloons across the border, including a five-day campaign last week.
On Thursday, South Korea reported that the North had fired multiple short-range ballistic missiles into waters east of the Korean Peninsula. However, KCNA later clarified that this was a test of a “new-type 600mm multiple rocket launcher,” supervised by Kim Jong Un.