One of 20 undeclared ballistic missile operating bases in North Korea serves as a missile headquarters, a report by the US Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) published on Monday said.
“The Sino-ri missile operating base and the Nodong missiles deployed at this location fit into North Korea’s presumed nuclear military strategy by providing an operational-level nuclear or conventional first strike capability,” the report coauthored by analyst Victor Cha said.
The discovery of an undeclared missile headquarters comes three days after US President Donald Trump said he “looks forward” to another summit to discuss denuclearization with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un late next month.
Kim vowed to work toward denuclearization at his first summit with Trump in June last year, but there has since been little concrete progress.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The CSIS, which last reported on the 20 missile bases in November, said the Sino-ri base has never been declared by North Korea and as a result “does not appear to be the subject of denuclearization negotiations.”
The report said that missile operating bases would presumably be subject to declaration, verification and dismantlement in any nuclear deal.
“The North Koreans are not going to negotiate over things they don’t disclose,” Cha said.
“It looks like they’re playing a game. They’re still going to have all this operational capability,” even if they destroy their disclosed nuclear sites, he wrote.
Located 212km north of the demilitarized zone, the Sino-ri complex is an 18km2 base that plays a key role in developing ballistic missiles capable of reaching South Korea, Japan and even the US territory of Guam, he wrote.
It houses a regiment-sized unit equipped with Nodong-1 medium-range ballistic missiles, the report added.
Satellite images of the base from Dec. 27 show an entrance to an underground bunker, reinforced shelters and a headquarters, the report said.
In South Korea, the facility has long been known as one of the bases housing the Nodong, a medium-range missile based on Soviet-era Scud technology that the North began deploying in the mid-1990s.
“It is a facility we’ve been monitoring with interest, in cooperation with the United States,” Kim Joon-rak, a spokesman for South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a news briefing yesterday.
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