Rice: World united against N. Korea nuclear bid
U.S. spy satellites detect activity at test site, U.S. media report
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WASHINGTON - U.S. spy agencies confirmed North Korea’s recent nuclear test on Monday, even as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declared that U.N. sanctions prove the world is united in opposing Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions.
Meanwhile, U.S. spy satellites have detected suspicious vehicle and people activity near the site of North Korea’s nuclear test that may signal preparations for another test, U.S. television networks reported on Monday.
Rice said that the strong opposition reflected by U.N. sanctions should be a warning to Iran. Rice leaves Tuesday morning for an Asian trip that is expected to be dominated by the nuclear issue. She will visit Japan, South Korea, China and Russia.
“The Iranian government is watching, and it can now see that the international community will respond to threats from nuclear proliferation,” said Rice, who added that she believes the Security Council will begin working on a sanctions resolution against Iran this week. “The Iranian government should consider the course that it is on.”
Rice dismissed skepticism among some in Washington about China’s commitment to tough action against its communist neighbor following the sanctions resolution adopted unanimously by the U.N. Security Council on Saturday.
“I am not concerned that the Chinese are going to turn their backs on their obligations,” she said. “I don’t think they would have voted for a resolution that they did not intend to carry through on.”
U.S. officials said they could not be certain of what the North Koreans were doing in the area surveilled by the satellites, but the activity there could be preparations for a second nuclear blast, ABC News said, with no further details.
Negroponte confirms test
National Intelligence Director John Negroponte’s office released the government’s first definitive confirmation that North Korea tested a nuclear device on Oct. 9.
“The explosion yield was less than a kiloton,” the statement said, smaller than many experts had expected.
“Analysis of air samples collected on October 11, 2006, detected radioactive debris which confirms that North Korea conducted an underground nuclear explosion,” the statement continued.
Each kiloton is equal to the force produced by 1,000 tons of TNT. An intelligence official said the North Korean device was believed to be roughly the equivalent of 200 tons of TNT, suggesting to analysts that it was probably a partial failure. Experts in and out of government had anticipated a detonation of at least several thousand tons.
At the State Department, Rice said the world “has responded calmly and firmly” to the test.
“North Korea cannot endanger the world and then expect other nations to conduct business as usual in arms or missile parts,” Rice said, previewing her message for the Asia trip. “It cannot destabilize the international system and then expect to exploit elaborate financial networks built for peaceful commerce.”
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Worrisome maverick
The United States, North Korea and seven other nations are now believed to have nuclear arms. Yet North Korea’s unpredictable behavior and its history of trading military arms and components makes its nuclear advancements particularly worrisome to its neighbors and the international community.
The U.S.-sponsored United Nations resolution on North Korea demands that Pyongyang eliminate nuclear weapons. But it also rules out military action against the country, as the Russians and Chinese demanded.
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It calls on countries to block North Korea from receiving equipment or materials to build weapons of mass destruction and other advanced weaponry. It also would clamp down on travel for North Koreans involved in the weapons program and freeze many of the international assets of people or businesses connected to that program.
After the resolution was unanimously passed, North Korea’s U.N. ambassador accused council members of a “gangster-like” action that neglects the nuclear threat posed by the United States.
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