The Cold Test
Anti-idiotarian Dr. Bala Ambati emailed a link to this fascinating and important article by Seymour Hersh at the New Yorker, on the nuclear connections between North Korea (Axis of Evil member) and Pakistan (not Axis of Evil member…yet): The Cold Test.
In 1985, North Korea signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which led to the opening of most of its nuclear sites to international inspection. By the early nineteen-nineties, it became evident to American intelligence agencies and international inspectors that the North Koreans were reprocessing more spent fuel than they had declared, and might have separated enough plutonium, a reactor by-product, to fabricate one or two nuclear weapons. The resulting diplomatic crisis was resolved when North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Il, entered into an agreement with the Clinton Administration to stop the nuclear-weapons program in return for economic aid and the construction of two light-water nuclear reactors that, under safeguards, would generate electricity.
Within three years, however, North Korea had begun using a second method to acquire fissile material. This time, instead of using spent fuel, scientists were trying to produce weapons-grade uranium from natural uranium—with Pakistani technology. One American intelligence official, referring to the C.I.A. report, told me, “It points a clear finger at the Pakistanis. The technical stuff is crystal clear—not hedged and not ambivalent.” Referring to North Korea’s plutonium project in the early nineteen-nineties, he said, “Before, they were sneaking.” Now “it’s off the wall. We know they can do a lot more and a lot more quickly.”



