Sunday, April 26, 2009

North Korea's Nuclear Dance Party


With North Korea sticking out it's tongue and saying "I'll party all I want to,
North Korea's list, with Obama as their new dance partner, is bound to grow ever longer.


North Korea begins extracting plutonium

SEOUL (Reuters) North Korea has started to extract plutonium from spent fuel rods at its nuclear arms plant, its foreign ministry said on Saturday, further raising regional tensions already stoked by its defiant rocket launch this month.

The announcement came hours after a U.N. Security Council committee on Friday placed three North Korean companies on a U.N. blacklist for aiding Pyongyang's missile and nuclear programs, eliciting a sharp rebuke from a North Korean envoy.

Reclusive North Korea has lashed out at being punished for the April 5 launch, widely seen as a disguised long-range missile test that violated U.N. resolutions, saying it would boycott six-way nuclear talks and bolster its nuclear deterrent.

"The reprocessing of spent fuel rods from the pilot atomic power plant began as declared in the Foreign Ministry statement dated April 14," North Korea's official news agency KCNA quoted a foreign ministry spokesman as saying.

"This will contribute to bolstering the nuclear deterrence for self-defense in every way to cope with the increasing military threats from the hostile forces," it said.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wish we had the ability to reverse the trajectory of N. Korean rockets and send them back to base!

Christine said...

Now that would be the miracle weapon of the 21st century!

Of course, it would have the capability to be used against other countries, as well.

midnight rider said...

Oh oH! Yes Yes! Send a Nork rocket off course to Tehran!