Hungnam,
North Korea:
Delving
into Pyongyang’s Long Nuclear Past
by
Bill Streifer
“Since V-J Day wisps of information have drifted into
the hands of U.S. Army Intelligence of the existence of a gigantic and
mystery-shrouded industrial project operated during the closing months of
[WWII] in a mountain vastness near the Northern Korean coastal city of Konan
[Hungnam]. It was near here that Japan's uranium supply was said to exist.”
David
Snell, journalist
North Korea recently conducted their third
underground nuclear test. Experts agree that the nuclear fuel used in the first
two was plutonium, made from natural uranium in a Sovietdesigned breeder
reactor. More than a month after their most recent test in February of this
year, however, despite the use of sophisticated collection means, the U.S. was
unable to determine if the nuclear fuel was in fact plutonium or rather Highly
Enriched Uranium (HEU), which if true, experts say, would represent a
significantly enhanced capability.
Back in 2000, a
former nuclear researcher at North Korea’s 304th Research Center, “[an]
important laboratory in the Bungang area, and…the main research center for
nuclear weapons development as well as for chemical arms development" at
the Yongbyon Nuclear Research Center, defected, first to China and then to an
unidentified third country. During a June 2002 interview, Ms. Dong Chun-ok1
was asked thirteen questions. Her answers, and a hand-drawn map of the
facility, were then published on the website of RENK (“Rescue North Korea”), a
Japanese-based organization in support of North Korean refugees.
Some believe
that Ms. Dong’s revelations led Kim Jong-il to admit in October 2002 — during
high-level talks in Pyongyang between U.S. Assistant Secretary of State James
A. Kelly and North Korean officials — what the United States, Japan, and South
Korea had long feared: North Korea was pursuing a nuclear weapons program. At
the White House, reporters were told that the Chinese were stunned upon
learning of North Korea's confession since Pyongyang had managed to keep their
nuclear weapons program a secret for decades.
First,
Ms. Dong was asked about her family and to describe how she became involved in
Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program. She said she was
born in Pungseo-gun (county), Ryanggang Province in North Korea on August 2,
1955. After her father died in 1957, Ms. Dong said her mother was secretly
summoned by the Central Party. So she, her mother and her two elder sisters
were then transferred to a special base of the Atomic Science Committee. After
graduating from Pyongyang Physics College in the summer of 1974, Ms. Dong began
work at Office 25 of the 304th Research Office of Atomic Energy Science until
her dismissal on February 21, 1999. She defected the following year.
When Ms. Dong
was asked how the North Koreans were able to trick IAEA inspectors, she
offering the following explanation. The underground facilities, Ms. Dong said,
were constructed by the 66th Industry, deep beneath Yak Mountain (Yaksan), “at
a huge human cost.” Many workers died in various accidents during construction,
Ms. Dong said, which began in 1965 and was completed five years later. Several
female researchers who were inadvertently exposed to large doses of radiation
gave birth to deformed children.
The complex is
extremely large and well illuminated, Ms. Dong said, with underground caves
branching out into various interconnecting tunnels. Concrete walls block the
entrance, which is “large enough for trucks to enter,” and clever camouflage
hide it from outsiders. The caves are used to hide lab equipment and other
evidence of a nuclear weapons program in case of inspections. During the IAEA
inspection, for example, tell-tale equipment and materials were secretly moved
into the Yaksan cave, and laboratory staff members wore military uniforms to
hide their true roles.
According to
Dr. Kang Ho-je, a South Korean authority on North Korean science technology,
the weaponization of nuclear technology in North Korea began in the late-1960’s
or early-1970’s, apparently as the result of a “confluence of change in the
international situation, North Korean domestic politics, and the state of North
Korean science.” According to a 1988 CIA report, the Yongbyon Nuclear Research
Center was established with Soviet assistance in the
1960’s, and was the “focal point” of a North Korean
nuclear effort. Until the 1980’s, the CIA report said, the center consisted of
an operations area with a 4-MW (megawatt) research reactor, supplied by the
Soviets under IAEA safeguards, and a large support area. Since North Korea’s
expansion program, which began in 1980, the CIA said, Pyongyang constructed
additional support buildings and a 10-30 MW graphite-moderated gas-cooled
reactor which was fueled with natural uranium, mined in the Hamhung and
Ch’olsan areas of North Korea. Although the new reactor had been in operation
since October 1987, a CIA report the following year concluded, “We have no
evidence that North Korea is pursuing a nuclear weapon option, but we cannot
rule out that possibility.”
When Ms. Dong
was asked to discuss the origin of Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program, she
said it began in the 1950’s during the Korean War when Kim Il-sung, Kim
Jongil’s father, ordered Lee Hak-mun, a two-time national hero medal winner, to
develop nuclear weapons. Lee Hak-mun then recruited prominent South Korean
scientists such as Dr. Do Sangrok, Dr. Han In-suk and Dr. Lee Sung-gi to carry
out nuclear research. Do Sang-rok, a quantum field theorist who conducted North
Korea's first experiments in nuclear reactions, defected to Soviet-occupied
North Korea in May 1946, only nine months after World War II had ended. By
September of that year, Dr. Do became the head of the physics and mathematic
departments and chief of research at what would later become Kim Il-sung
University. Dr. Do also built North Korea’s first particle accelerator and
carried out the North’s first nuclear experiments. He later enthusiastically
helped establish North Korea’s main nuclear facility at Bungang, some fifty
miles north of Pyongyang.
Other South
Korean scientists were reluctant to aid North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.
According to Kim Dae-ho, who requested asylum at the South Korean embassy in
Beijing in 1994, Lee Sung-ki — best known for his invention of the synthetic
fiber Vinalon — was kidnapped at the outbreak of the Korean War. He was
eventually persuaded to join the effort by Kim Il-sung who argued that “nuclear
development is an essential project for the unification of the nation.” After
the war, Dr. Lee re-established a branch lab at Hamhung, a short distance from
the industrial port city of Hungnam, where some 200 Soviet and foreign advisors
worked. It is now clear, however, that nuclear activities in the
Hamhung/Hungnam area of North Korea began decades earlier when Korea was a
Japanese colony (1910-1945).
Following the
Tohoku earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011, the Fukushima Number One Power
Plant in Japan suffered a series of equipment failures, a partial meltdown, and
the release of radioactive material. In an article by the former editor of the Japan Times Weekly, Yoichi Shimatsu
described how Japan’s next nuclear accident might become another Nagasaki, the
city that was devastated during WWII by “Fat Man,” a plutonium atomic bomb.
Shimatsu then reminded his readers that Japan was no stranger to atomic energy:
During the Second World War, the Allies and the Axis
competed for an exotic new energy source — uranium. While the Manhattan Project
was secretly crafting the atomic bomb in New Mexico, Japan opened uranium mines
in Konan, North Korea, which now are the source of Pyongyang's nuclear energy
program.
During WWII,
Konan — now Hungnam, North Korea — was the home of the largest fertilizer and
chemical complex in the Far East. The electric power required to operate
Konan’s electro-chemical and non-ferrous metal installations — about 400,000
kilowatt per day — was obtained primarily from two hydro-electric plants some
forty miles north of the city. This region of North Korea, characterized by a
mountain chain which rises abruptly from the Sea of Japan’s coast, slopes
gently westward to the Yalu River, the boundary between North Korea and the
northeast region (Manchuria) of China. Dams on the northwest-flowing Fusen and
Chosen branches of the Yalu River created large storage reservoirs of
year-round generation of more than 500,000 kilowatts. Tunnels carried the water
south from each reservoir through a mountain divide in the Josen River basin,
emptying out into the Sea of Japan at Konan. The electrical power network in
northern Korea during WWII — with a capacity of more than 1.5 million kilowatts
— supplied Konan and the industrial districts in and around Pyongyang and
Seoul.2 In addition to
electric power, North Korea had enormous uranium reserves. According to a
recent South Korean government report on Pyongyang’s nuclear and strategic
weapons, North Korea is “known to have about four million tons of uranium3
in recoverable deposits,” although some have called that number exaggerated.
Rather than uranium, the “four million tons” figure may refer to monazite, a
mineral containing thorium and small amounts of uranium oxide. Australia, for
example, exports 10,000 metric tons of monazite per year. According to a 1967
U.S. geological report, North Korean monazite contains 0.15% (or 6,000 tons) of
uranium oxide. In 1931, Kenjiro Kimura
and Sakae Shinoda discovered monazite near P’yongwon in western Korea, just south of the Ch’olsan Mines where it was first
discovered in 1919. Prior to 1940, however, monazite was mined, not for its
thorium or uranium content, but rather for its unique ability to burn brightly
when ignited without burning out. For that reason,
it was widely used in incandescent gas mantles and mining lamps. But in 1943,
during Japan’s search for uranium for use by their nuclear weapons programs in
Tokyo (Ni-go) and Kyoto (F-go), monazite was discovered in veins
by Hideki Tsuda when large crystals were found on the
Ch’olsan Peninsula.
Surprisingly, in Tsuda’s 1953 report entitled “The Monazite Deposits in Korea,”
he failed to mention monazite’s thorium/uranium content.
Today, the Ch’olsan Mines provide North Korea with a wide array of rare
earth elements (REE’s) such as terbium, dysprosium, ytterbium, thulium, and
lutetium. REE’s, the most obscure elements in the periodic table, have hundreds
of high-tech applications including critical military-based technologies such
as precision-guided weapons and night-vision goggles. In
1988, North Korea formed the Korea International Chemical Joint Venture Company
to produce REE’s from monazite. The Hamhung plant can reportedly process 1,500
tons of monazite per year from which 400 tons of rare earth metals, as well as
thorium and uranium oxide, can be extracted. According to the U.S. Geological
Survey, the Hamhung plant was reportedly designed to use solvent extraction
technology acquired from China's Yue Long Chemical Plant near Shanghai.
Production began in 1991.
Nuclear Research at Konan
During WWII, General Leslie Groves, the
director of the Manhattan Project, believed that Japan lacked the industrial
capacity, scientific manpower and the “essential raw material” — uranium. “We
did not make any appreciable effort during the war to secure information on
atomic developments in Japan,” Groves wrote in his 1962 memoir Now It Can Be Told. “First, and most
important,” Groves said, “there was not even the remotest possibility that
Japan had enough uranium or uranium ore to produce the necessary materials for a
nuclear weapon.” “In other words,” Deborah Shapley later wrote in the journal Science, “[Groves] had far less
intelligence about Japan than he had about Germany.”
Then in 1997,
according to AP reporter Richard Benke in a Los
Angeles Times article entitled “New Details Emerge About Japan's Wartime
A-Bomb Program,” journalist Robert K. Wilcox and researcher Charles W. Stone
discovered U.S. Army documents that referred to
“consistent rumors from the
Hungnam (Konan) area” which dealt with the possibility of atomic research being
conducted there. According to one report, the actual
experiments on atomic energy were conducted in Japan but the “practical application of atomic energy to a bomb or
other military use” was carried out at Konan. “It is unclear,” Benke said, if
President Truman was aware of a Japanese atomic program when he ordered the
atomic bombing of Japan; unlikely, since several Manhattan Project scientists
said in interviews they knew nothing of a Japanese atomic program until after
the war.
Ironically, the full extent of nuclear
activities in Japanese-occupied northern Korea first came to light in 1999
following the publication of a story in the Japanese newspaper Tokyo Shimbun entitled “Atom Bomb
Experiment Undertaken by Former Japanese Armed Forces in Korean Peninsula Just
Prior to the End of the War, According to Secret Investigation by GHQ.”
According to Tokyo Shimbun, a secret,
300-page GHQ/SCAP report was discovered at a U.S. archive by the Washington
D.C. Bureau of JiJi Press, the Japanese
news agency. According to that GHQ (General Headquarters, U.S. Army) report,
Japan tried to develop the atomic bomb at the Chosen Nitrogen Fertilizer
Factory at Konan during the war. And on August 12, 1945, Japanese scientists at
Konan conducted an explosive test at sea, shortly before Soviet forces occupied
the city, which, according to eyewitnesses, was “like an A-bomb.” After the
war, the report said, GHQ prohibited research on atomic energy by the Japanese
and impounded uranium compounds hidden at various locations.
When a
censored version of that 1947 GHQ/SCAP report appeared three months earlier in
the Atlanta Constitution [with
“names, dates, facts and figures” redacted], the author, David Snell, a young
reporter from Minden, Louisiana, was universally condemned: Dr. Yoshio Nishina, the head of Japan’s atomic program in
Tokyo (Ni-go), called him a liar; the
Russians called him a provocateur; and the U.S. Secretary of War categorically
denied the story. “There was no [atomic] experiments in Chosen [Korea],”
Nishina told the press corps. “However, there was a fertilizer factory in
Konan.”
Snell, an agent
with the Criminal Investigation Detachment (CID) of the U.S. Army’s XXIV Corps
(U.S. occupation forces in Korea), said he obtained his information during an
interview in Seoul with the head of security and counter-intelligence at the
Konan plant who was awaiting repatriation back to Japan. “He was advised, and
understood thoroughly, that he was speaking for publication,” Snell said. Although
Snell had previously been given permission to file stories to his “old paper,”
he was specifically asked to avoid highly controversial stories. So when he
showed his 8-page typewritten manuscript — concerning a Japanese atomic program
at Konan — to the head of U.S. Army intelligence in Seoul, he was told, “We
cannot possibly clear this…We know about the Konan project, of course.”
When
Snell returned to the States, his article, “Japan Developed Atom Bomb; Russians
Grabbed Scientists,” was
published as a front-page, headline story in the Atlanta Constitution. According to Snell, Japanese scientists had
developed and successfully tested an atomic bomb off the coast of Konan. “With the advance units of the Russian Army only hours
away,” Snell wrote, “the final scene of this gotterdammerung began.” Japanese destroyed unfinished atomic
bombs, secret papers and her atomic bomb plans, and “dynamite
sealed the secrets of the cave,” Snell wrote. But the Russians arrived quickly
before the Japanese scientists could manage to escape. Those Japanese
scientists are now in Moscow, Snell said, “prisoners of the Russians, tortured
by their captors seeking atomic ‘know-how’.” According to the 1947 GHQ/SCAP
report, all secret Japanese units were impounded by Soviet forces after the
occupation of Konan, followed by joint Soviet-Japanese research.
Verification of Snell’s story came four years
after publication of his 1946 Atlanta
Constitution article when U.S. Intelligence officers revealed the existence
of a Soviet atomic research project at Hungnam, North Korea. According to
declassified CIA and U.S. Air Force reports, B-29’s with the Far East
Air Force (FEAF) out of Okinawa demolished an ore refinery adjacent to the
fertilizer factory at Hungnam, a refinery which was said to produce materials
of possible use in “nuclear fission projects.” According to the Nippon Times, an English-language
Japanese newspaper, U.S. Naval Headquarters in Tokyo announced its
participation in a campaign to destroy North Korean “industrial facilities with
possible links to the Russian atomic program.” Then in April 1951, General C.J.
Bondley, Jr. (Air Force) awarded Capt. James R. Cole of Green Acres, Maryland
with the Distinguished Flying Cross for “extraordinary achievement” as lead
crew bombardier on the highly successful bombing attack on a “thorium
production plant…at Konan, North Korea.”
Following the
attack. Lt. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer, the FEAF Commander, made note of the Nippon Times article in his diary.
Although the story was released through the International News Service, it was
Stratemeyer’s impression that “this type of information was of the very highest
classification.” Only later was it learned that North Korea had shipped
enormous quantities of monazite, gold and silver to the Soviet Union in
exchanged for Soviet artillery, ammunition, engineering equipment, aircraft,
and medical supplies in advance of their June 25, 1950 attack on South Korea.
Dr. Fritz J. Hansgirg, electro-chemist
“North Korea
has a Soviet-era heavy water nuclear plant capable of producing plutonium, a
radioactive element essential for making an atomic bomb. Under
a 1994 accord, Pyongyang agreed to scrap the plant in exchange for light-water
reactors built and paid for by the Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization, a consortium comprising the United States, South Korea and Japan.” - Oct. 6,
1997
North Korea was
blessed with the majority of the mineral resources on the Korean peninsula. The
value of those mineral reserves are estimated to be about thirty times greater
than South Korea’s. In addition to thorium and uranium (from monazite), North Korea
possesses some 200 minerals of economic value including iron ore, graphite,
lead, zinc, tungsten and magnesite, the ore of magnesium. North Korea’s
magnesite reserves, for example, are the second largest in the world, second
only to China.
According to
Henry S. Lowenhaupt, a technical sergeant in the U.S. Army’s Counter
Intelligence Corps (CIC), who was assigned to the Manhattan Project during WWII
and later a CIA specialist on nuclear intelligence, the Russians were set to
dismantle and ship the large magnesium plant at Bitterfeld, German to the
Soviet “atomic people” in 1945. They were also “intensely interested” in the
Hansgirg magnesium process plant at Konan when it fell to the Russians at the
end of WWII. Another facet of the problem, “investigated thoroughly,”
Lowenhaupt said, was that the Russians might eventually turn from calcium to
magnesium, just as the Manhattan Project had done. Magnesium, like calcium, can
be used to reduce uranium oxide to pure uranium metal for use in nuclear
weapons.
The magnesium
plant at Konan was designed and built in the 1930’s by a brilliant,
Austrian-born chemical engineer by the name of Dr. Fritz J. Hansgirg. Born in
Graz, Austria, Hansgirg helped develop a less-costly method of mass-producing
magnesium of extremely high purity. After a pilot plant at Radentheim, Austria
was up and running, Hansgirg’s senior partner, Emil Winter, the vice-president
and director of Pittsburg Steel, felt he was too old to help build a new
magnesium plant on his own, so he suggested that Hansgirg sell the patent
rights to the highest bidder. So in the fall of 1934, Hansgirg sailed from
Austria to Japanese-occupied Manchuria, and later to Konan, where he lived and
worked for six years before the war.
At Konan,
Hansgirg helped the Japanese design a magnesium plant, and “in my spare time,”
Hansgirg said, an ingenious method of mass-producing heavy water. According to
the 1999 Tokyo Shimbun article
concerning nuclear research at Konan, the U.S. ordered a thorough investigation
— following publication of David Snell’s article in the Atlanta Constitution — which concluded that the Chosen Nitrogen
Fertilizer Plant at Konan “produced heavy water jointly with the Japanese
Navy,” since “pre-war times.” While it is not known for certain if the Japanese
at Konan later used Hansgirg’s magnesium process to extract uranium from
monazite or his heavy water process to produce weapons-grade plutonium from
uranium in an atomic pile, it is entirely possible.
When Hansgirg
returned to Manchuria from overseas in February 1940, he found the Japanese to
be completely pro-Axis and hostile to all foreigners, so he left Japan for
good, arriving in the United States in May of that year. There, he struck a
deal with Henry Kaiser to help design a magnesium plant in California. By the
start of WWII, Hansgirg said, the first unit at Kaiser’s Permanente
carbothermic magnesium plant was producing about five tons of magnesium per
day, or roughly one-half of the designed capacity. Shortly after Hansgirg
arrived in the U.S., however, the FBI began receiving tips that Hansgirg had
cavorted with a highranking Nazi official in Manchuria, that he had signed his
letters “Heil Hitler!,” and later expressed joy over Japanese victories and
U.S. defeats. By December 1941, Hansgirg’s FBI file was substantial.
Then on
December 16, 1941, about ten days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
Hansgirg was arrested by the FBI on a Presidential Warrant, accused of being
“potentially dangerous to the public peace and safety of the United States,” At
the time of his arrest, TIME magazine said that Hansgirg was “high on the FBI
roundup list,” employed at Henry Kaiser’s magnesium plant in “confidential U.S.
defense work.” At once, rumors spread that the
Permanente’s magnesium-making plant might have to
cease. “They were false,” TIME said.
After his arrest, Hansgirg was held temporarily at Santa Clara County
Jail, and later at enemy alien internment camps in San Antonio, Texas and
Stringtown, Oklahoma. When Attorney General Biddle denied permission for
Hansgirg’s wife, Josephine Marie, to visit her husband at Stringtown, she wrote
a lengthy, hand-written letter to Eleanor Roosevelt, “womanto-woman,” in which
Mrs. Hansgirg explained that she refrained from criticizing Hitler for fear it
would jeopardize her son. Although he is “a scientist, not a soldier,” Mrs.
Hansgirg explained,
“he is compelled to wear the uniform of the Hitler
army.” The letter ended with an appeal:
If it is within your jurisdiction to aid in
reinstating my husband to his rightful place of usefulness, that his loyalty
and integrity may again be recognized in this country, you may know you will
have the undying gratitude of his wife.
A copy of Mrs.
Hansgirg’s letter was forwarded to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover who, in turn,
forwarded a copy to the Director of the Alien Enemy Control Unit. Eventually,
Hansgirg was paroled into the custody of the President of Black Mountain
College, a small private college in North Carolina, where he taught physics and
chemistry during the war years, and beyond. Then in July 1949, Hansgirg died
“unexpectedly” at the age of 58. His cause of death is unknown. However, since
Fritz Hansgirg had worked with magnesium for decades, he may have suffered from
acute magnesium ingestion, resulting in Hypermagnesia, an electrolyte
disturbance in which there is an abnormally elevated level of magnesium in the
blood. Hypermagnesia may cause various ailments including CNS depression, a
physiological depression of the central nervous system that can result in a
decreased rate of breathing, decreased heart rate, and loss of consciousness
which can led to coma or death.
THE END
CITATIONS (in approximate order of publication)
1. “Business:
Hansgirg Detained,” TIME, Dec. 29, 1941.
2. Air
Objective Folder (WWII) – Konan region, U.S. Army Air Corps.
3. Intelligence
Summary of North Korea (ISNK) #12, May 21, 1946.
4. Snell,
David. “Japan Developed Atom Bomb; Russians Grabbed Scientists,” Atlanta Constitution, Oct. 3, 1946, p.
1.
5. “Says
Soviets Hold Japs Who Turned Out Atomic Bomb,” The Day (New London, CT), AP, Oct. 3, 1946, p. 1.
6. Journal
of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, Vol. 66, No. 2, December 1950.
7. “Citations
Given Six Fairchild [Air Force Base] Men,” The
Spokesman-Review, Apr. 28, 1951, p. 6.
8. Tsuda,
Hideo. “The Monazite Deposits in Korea,” Tokyo, Japan: The Branch, 1953.
9. Groves,
Leslie R. Now It Can Be Told, Harper, 1962.
10. Overstreet,
William C. “Geological Occurrence of Monazite,” Geological Survey Professional
Paper 530, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967.
11. Lowenhaupt,
Henry S. “Chasing Bitterfeld Calcium,” CIA’s Historical Review Program,, Vol.
17, Spring 1973.
12. Shapley,
Deborah. “Nuclear Weapons History: Japan’s Wartime Bomb Projects Revealed,” Science, New Series, Vol. 199, No. 4325,
(Jan. 13, 1978).
13. “North
Korea’s Expanding Nuclear Efforts,” CIA, May 26, 1988.
14. Benke,
Richard. “New Details Emerge About Japan's Wartime A-Bomb Program,” Los Angeles Times, June 1, 1997.
15. “N.
Korea Increases Troops by 92,000 Despite Famine,” Deseret News, Oct. 6 1997.
16. Mobley,
Richard A. “North Korea: How Did It Prepare for the 1950 Attack?,” Army
History, Spring 2000, p. 5.
17. “N.
Korea Weapons Program Prompts Diplomatic Flurry,” USA Today, AP (Washington), Oct. 17, 2002.
18. Kim,
Young-sik. “A Physicist Defector's Account of North Korea's Nuke Labs,” Korean
Web Weekly, Oct. 2002; kimsoft.com (defunct)
19. “Defector
Leaked Details of N. Korea’s N-Program,” The
Daily Yomiuri, Dec. 18, 2002.
20. Greenlees,
Donald. “How North Korea Fulfilled Its Nuclear Dream,” International Herald Tribune, Oct. 23, 2006.
21. Kang
Ho-je. "Father of North Korean Nuclear Physics Received the Appellation
'People's Scientist'," (in Korean) Institute for Modern Historical
Research, No. 111, June 1, 2010.
22. Hurst,
Cindy A. “China's Ace in the Hole: Rare Earth Elements,” National Defense University
Press: Joint Force Quarterly, Issue
59, 4th Quarter 2010.
23. Yoon,
Edward. “Status and Future of the North Korean Mineral Sector,” University of
San Francisco Centre for the Pacific Rim, Jan. 6, 2011.
24. Shimatsu,
Yoichi. “The Next Nagasaki: Nuclear Fears Stalk The World,” Mar. 19, 2011.
25. Choi,
Kyung-soo. North Korea’s Mining Prospects, NKRI, Aug. 30, 2011.
26. Ministry
for Unification and Institute for Unification Education,” Understanding North
Korea, ROK Government, 2012.
27. Song
Sang-ho, "North Korea Conducts 3rd Nuclear Test," Korea Herald, Feb. 12, 2013.
28. Dougherty,
Jill and Benson, Pam. “Material in North Korea's Nuclear Test Unclear, Worrying
For U.S.,” CNN, Mar. 13, 2013.
29. Various
undisclosed sources including the female defector’s answers to thirteen questions
(in Japanese), a Tokyo Shimbun
article (in Japanese), and Dr. Fritz J. Hansgirg’s extensive FBI file.
Special Thanks
Special thanks to Minoru Kawamoto (A Japanese-American
in Tokyo), Ken Ricci (an American applied nuclear physicist), Irek Sabitov (a
Russian journalist), and Sang So Nam (A Japaneseborn Korean in Seoul).
1 チュンオク in
Japanese. An alternate English spelling was confirmed by the Korean Embassy in
Tokyo.
2 During
WWII, all towns, cities, rivers and mountains were known by their Japanese
names.
3 The figure
“four million tons” may refer a 1964 report concerning an extensive nationwide
survey of recoverable uranium reserves by North Korea with the assistance of
China.
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