North Korea says it successfully conducts hydrogen bomb test
North Korea says it successfully conducts hydrogen bomb test
(CNN)Sticking
it to its foes, North Korea on Wednesday celebrated what it called a
successful hydrogen bomb test -- a milestone that, if true, marks a
colossal advancement for the reclusive regime and a big test for leaders
worldwide to determine what to do about it.
"Make
the world ... look up to our strong nuclear country and labor party by
opening the year with exciting noise of the first hydrogen bomb!" read a
document signed by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on state television.
Pyongyang
has been very vocal about its nuclear ambitions, pressing on despite
widespread condemnation, sanctions and other punishments. Having a
hydrogen bomb -- a device far more powerful than the plutonium weapons
that North Korea has used in three earlier underground nuclear tests --
ups the ante significantly.
Still, is
this boast legitimate? The purported underground test, which happened at
10 a.m. (8:30 p.m. ET Tuesday), corresponded with a magnitude 5.1
seismic event centered 12 miles (19 kilometers) east-southeast of
Sungjibaegam, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
That's comparable (but not bigger, as you'd expect with a hydrogen
bomb) to readings from North Korea's most recent plutonium test in 2013.
Norsar,
a Norway-based group that monitors nuclear tests, noted both fact and
estimated, based on the seismic readings, a blast equivalent to less
than of 10,000 tons of TNT -- smaller than those of the atomic bombs
used on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and far less than thermonuclear weapons
that typically are as potent as millions of tons of TNT.
"We won't know for another few days or weeks whether this was (a hydrogen bomb)," said Martin Navias,
a military expert at King's College London. "It doesn't look like one;
... one would have expected it to be greater if it was an H-bomb."
An answer may come from U.S. or South Korean analysis of the atmosphere for "trace elements [of] radiation," though Mike Chinoy, a fellow at the University of Southern California's U.S.-China Institute, noted that "we may never know 100%."
North Korea says it successfully tested H-bomb
Count Bruce Bennett, a senior defense analyst with the nonpartisan research group, among the skeptics. He said
North Korea has had trouble "mastering even the basics of a fission
weapon," so it's a big leap to think it could create an even more
complicated hydrogen bomb.
"Unless
North Korea has help from outside experts, it is unlikely that it has
really achieved a hydrogen/fusion bomb since its last nuclear test just
short of three years ago," Bennett said.
U.N. Security Council to convene meeting
Whether
or not it's true, North Korea's claim -- which Kim hinted was coming a
few weeks ago -- got the world's attention. And that may be Pyongyang's
main aim.
"If there's no invasion on
our sovereignty, we will not use nuclear weapon[s]," North Korea's state
news agency reported. "This H-bomb test brings us to a higher level of
nuclear power."
The United Nations
Security Council will hold a closed-door meeting starting at 11 a.m. ET
Wednesday on this topic at the request of the United States and Japan.
The question is: What can be done, and will it make a difference?
Past
U.N. resolutions have included arms, nonproliferation and even luxury
good embargoes, a freeze on overseas financial assets and a travel ban.
None of these have stopped North Korea from continuing its nuclear
program.
With
discord raging over things like Syria's civil war, the Shiite-Sunni
Muslim divide, Ukraine, migrants and much more, it's rare nowadays to
get unanimity on anything. Yet North Korea's hydrogen bomb bluster
appears the exception, drawing harsh criticism from the likes of Russia,
NATO, China and beyond.
The anger and danger were felt most in South Korea, which split from the North more than six decades ago.
"This
is clearly a provocation and threatening the lives of people and
safety," South Korean President Park Geun-hye said. "We have been
continuously warning that [North Korea] will pay a price for conducting a
nuclear test."
Test puts U.S. 'on the spot'
Pyongyang
singled out the United States -- or, as it called it, "a gang of cruel
robbers" and "hideous nuclear criminal that has constantly posed nuclear
blackmail for more than 70 years, seriously endangering mankind" -- in
its highly charged official reports around the time of the test
announcement.
North Korea not only has a
"legitimate right" to have nuclear weapons, they're needed as a
deterrent to Washington's "deep-rooted, harsh and ... hostile policy,"
according to these reports.
"The
spectacular success ... in the H-bomb test [is] a historic event of ...
national significance as it surely guarantees the eternal future of the
nation," the KCNA story stated.
Chinoy pointed out that three of North Korea's four nuclear
tests -- in 2009, 2013 and now -- have taken place during the tenure of
U.S. President Barack Obama, who's made inroads toward curtailing
Iran's atomic aspirations but not North Korea's. This latest one, in
particular, "puts the U.S. on the spot," according to Chinoy.
"Will any of their steps do anything to restrain North Korea?" the analyst mused. "My guess is probably not."
A heavy militarized state
Combined
with its secrecy and seclusion, North Korea's us-against-the-world
perspective and the fact it doesn't play by traditional rules makes it
unpredictable at best and dangerous at worst. Add nuclear weapons to the
mix -- even if they aren't thermonuclear -- and Pyongyang could unleash
devastation of a sort not seen in over 70 years.
That's
when U.S. forces used atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, ending World War II. Minuscule in power compared with
H-bombs, the two blasts nonetheless killed about 200,000 people.
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