[IMG] The above map depicts night time satellite imagery....

  1. 5,454 Posts.


    The above map depicts night time satellite imagery.


    http://www.nti.org/gmap/nuclear_north_korea.html?/

    Makes you wonder where all the power is going.

    This map depicts multpile nuclear power plants.
    Capture.PNG

    http://www.nti.org/gmap/nuclear_north_korea.html?/

    Not sure of the accuracy of the pictures however.

    Some more interesting facts.

    Unclassified Report to Congress, July - December 2000
    North Korea

    During this time frame, North Korea continued procurement of raw materials and components for its ballistic missile programs from various foreign sources, especially through North Korean firms based in China. We assess that North Korea is capable of producing and delivering via munitions a wide variety of chemical and biological agents.
    During the remainder of 2000, P’yongyang continued its attempts to procure technology worldwide that could have applications in its nuclear program, but we do not know of any procurement directly linked to the nuclear weapons program. We assess that North Korea has produced enough plutonium for at least one, and possibly two, nuclear weapons. The United States and North Korea completed the canning of all accessible spent fuel rods and rod fragments in April 2000 in accordance with the 1994 Agreed Framework. That reactor fuel contains enough plutonium for several more weapons.

    https://www.cia.gov/library/reports/archived-reports-1/july_dec2000.htm

    The U.S. government and the CIA
    Paul Joseph Watson
    Infowars.com
    April 12, 2013

    Both the Clinton and Bush administrations played a key role in helping the late Kim Jong-Il develop North Korea’s nuclear prowess from the mid 1990’s onwards.
    Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld presided over a $200 million dollar contract to deliver equipment and services to build two light water reactor stations in North Korea in January 2000 when he was an executive director of ABB (Asea Brown Boveri). Wolfram Eberhardt, a spokesman for ABB confirmed that Rumsfeld was at nearly all the board meetings during his involvement with the company.
    Rumsfeld was merely picking up the baton from the Clinton administration, who in 1994 agreed to replace North Korea’s domestically built nuclear reactors with light water nuclear reactors. Clinton policy wonks claimed that light water reactors couldn’t be used to make bombs. Not so according to Henry Sokolski, head of the Non-proliferation Policy Education Center in Washington, who stated, “LWRs could be used to produce dozens of bombs’ worth of weapons-grade plutonium in both North Korea and Iran. This is true of all LWRs — a depressing fact U.S. policymakers have managed to block out.”
    “These reactors are like all reactors, they have the potential to make weapons. So you might end up supplying the worst nuclear violator with the means to acquire the very weapons we’re trying to prevent it acquiring,” said Sokolski.

    https://www.infowars.com/who-gave-north-korea-nukes-in-the-first-place/
    For the second time this month, North Korea launched an intercontinental ballistic missile Friday, sending the projectile 600 miles into the Sea of Japan.
    The Pentagon said in a statement that the missile, which was determined to be an ICBM, was launched from Mupyong-ni in North Korea's Chagang province and never posed a threat to North America.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...red-missile-japanese-media-reports/519867001/

    Doug Stanglin, USA TODAYPublished 11:36 a.m. ET July 28, 2017 | Updated 9:47 p.m. ET July 28, 2017
    Notice a trend anyone?

    Remembering.


 
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