A former CIA official made an alarming statement about North Korea’s ability to strike the U.S. with a ballistic missile.
Bruce Klingner, a former CIA deputy division chief
for Korea, said the isolated nation is closer than people realize to
developing a nuclear missile that could cross the ocean and strike the
U.S.
“We can expect an [intercontinental ballistic
missile] test this year with full capability within the next few years,”
Klingner told Fox News.
North Korea has provoked the world by firing
ballistic missiles in defiance of a United Nations Security Council
resolution prohibiting the country from doing so. And those tests have
sparked global fear that North Korea could soon attack foreign countries
with nuclear weaponry.
In his annual address earlier this year, North Korean
dictator Kim Jong-un said the country was in the final stages of
test-launching an “intercontinental ballistic rocket.” But some,
including President Trump, have said the threats were intended to make
the world shiver – but weren’t based on reality.
“North Korea just stated that it is in the final
stages of developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the
U.S. It won't happen!” the president tweeted in January.
North Korea has so far conducted five nuclear tests, claiming success as recently as September of last year.
Instability in the region continues, as South Korea’s
top court has upheld the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye. Many
experts in the area believe that Kim Jong-un could try to capitalize on
the uncertainty gripping the nation.
In a Senate Armed Services subcommittee hearing on
Wednesday, Gary Samore, former Obama White House Coordinator for Arms
Control and Weapons of Mass Destruction, testified on the global nuclear
weapons environment. He called North Korea’s mission to achieve a
nuclear intercontinental ballistic missile the “most significant and the
most immediate” of new nuclear threats.
"It's difficult to calculate or predict when North
Korea might achieve that capability, a reliable nuclear-armed
[intercontinental ballistic missile],” Samore said. “Certainly with the
pace of testing they've been carrying out something in the next five to
10 years seems like a reasonable guess."
Klingner believes North Korea should be put back on
the terrorist list. He told Fox News that in 2013, “Kim Jong-un was
photographed in front of a map of the U.S. which appeared to show four
targets for North Korean missiles – Hawaii, San Diego, Washington D.C.
and perhaps Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana.”
He said several four-stars generals believe North Korea already has the ability to launch nuclear-tipped missiles.
“However, most experts think Pyongyang does not yet
have that ability since the regime hasn’t tested and demonstrated a
reentry vehicle for its [intercontinental missiles],” he said.
There have been reports that Trump is mulling a
proposal that would send B-52 bombers to Korea. But a spokesman for the
U.S. Pacific Command told Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin that, “there are no
plans at this time to send B52s to South Korea” to participate in the
war games currently taking place on the Korean peninsula.
In a detailed report
for the Heritage foundation, Klingner writes, “preemptive attacks on
test flights that do not clearly pose a security threat could trigger a
war with a nuclear-armed state that also has a large conventional
military force poised along the border with South Korea.”
Klingner said if the U.S. tries to interfere with North Korea’s nuclear missile race, it has to tread gently.
“Trying to target North Korean mobile nuclear
missiles in a crisis is like trying to win three-card monte on a New
York street corner,” Klingner said, “there’s a high risk you’ll lose
more than your shirt.”
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