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Getting to grips with North Korea

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Getting to grips with North Korea in 15 graphics
Navigate through a visual history of nuclear missile launches, culminating in the most recent tests by Pyongyang. Take a look at North Korea’s natural resources and its trading partners, and see what shelter is available in South Korea
The 6.3 magnitude earthquake recorded at the Punggye-ri test site on September 3 led US geological survey experts to estimate the hydrogen bomb had a load of 100 kilotons. According to Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency: “The H-bomb test was carried out to examine and confirm the accuracy and credibility of the power control technology and internal structural design of the weapon”
The visualisation below shows the power of every nuclear explosion carried out between 1945 and 1998. This includes all test programmes and explosions for peaceful purposes, as well as the US atomic raid over Japan
Click country names to toggle nuclear tests
Punggye-ri is situated on mountainous terrain and is the world’s only active nuclear test site. The sixth North Korean nuclear test was carried out in a tunnel system under Mount Mantap. Seismic activity produced by the explosion could be felt in Chinese cities near the border
Sources:
Sipri,
US Nuclear Test
China stopped importing coal from North Korea in February 2017 in line with the United Nations sanctions set out in March 2016. [UN Resolution] As Pyongyang’s largest commercial partner, the move came as a blow. But China continued to trade certain goods such as seafood, using the “humanitarian exemption” clause, until August 2017
Source: Observatory of Economic Complexity, MIT
Most of the world’s trade with North Korea is based around minerals, coal, iron and copper. Pyongyang has given this industry top priority since the 1970s. But the UN trade ban, on top of 30 years of low-grade equipment and insubstantial infrastructure, means there is a rich vein of deposits waiting to be tapped [Center for Strategic & International Studies]
Value of coal imports from North Korea
Source: Observatory of Economic Complexity, MIT
North Korea’s coal deposits are owned by the government, but foreign overtures had become increasingly frequent in recent years
Russian proposal
In return for access to the country’s mineral reserves, Russia proposed a US$25 billion investment to improve North Korea’s railway network in 2014. That project didn’ t make any progress but it didn’ t get taken off the table, either
The Jongju desposit
In late 2014, Pacific Century Rare Earth Mineral Limited announced the discovery of about 216.2 million tonnes of rare earth minerals. That’s double the world’s current reserves of minerals such as fluorite, apatite, nepheline, feldspar and ilmenite. These rare earth minerals are a fundamental part of electronic screens and mobile devices. Today, China leads the world in the extraction and consumption of these minerals, mainly from Inner Mongolia, where 95 per cent of the world’s known reserves are concentrated
The veracity of this discovery has been questioned by many who see it as little more than attention-seeking propaganda by North Korea
South Korea has plans of its own
Ever since the civil war broke out on June 25,1950, South Korea has kept the idea of reunification utmost in mind. A unified Korea would need huge investments to modernise the North’s long neglected infrastructure, motorways, railways, electricity networks and so on, which would take trillions of dollars. Seoul would hope to fund much of the reunification out of profits from the mining industry
The remains of missiles launched by the Kim Jung-un regime have fallen close to flight routes. The map shows paths near North Korea used by commercial aviation – including many within Japanese airspace
Airlines have been advised to avoid flying over North Korean airspace since 2016. A missile launched on June 28 passed within 10 minutes of the route used by Air France flight 293
TThe latest missile tests conducted by North Korea have used different angles of flight and re-entry into the atmosphere
The chances of impact with a plane are the same as with any space debris, or solid, entering the atmosphere from outer space
Source: Flight Service Bureau, SkyVector
South Korea has deployed two anti-missile defence systems known as Terminal High-Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) . Although these would not be effective against attacks on Seoul, they are capable of destroying long-distance missiles set on a parabolic trajectory travelling beyond the Korean peninsula
Source: Lockheed Martin Corporation
If North Korea triggered a conflict, those in the south would likely be the first victims. Nuclear weapons aside, single cannon artillery and small missiles could reach crowded cities very quickly, causing wide-scale damage
Pyongyang has been amassing artillery near the border since the cold war era. Targets in South Korea, 40km from the border, could be practically annihilated in less than five minutes
In the city of Seoul alone, there are 3,249 shelters; across the country there are about 16,000 more
While it is true that bomb shelters provide security during an attack, people would have less than four minutes to find one. And for those who aren’ t prepared, conditions inside would be rudimentary at best. According to government data, most shelters are basic car parks with little, if any, facilities and without basic supplies like water or medicine [Reuters]
Pyongyang has embedded these sites by digging into mountain slopes, where large items of artillery can be stored along with ammunition, while permanently housing troops. The preferred place for an artillery battery is on a reverse slope. North Korean artillery can supposedly fire numerous projectiles from these positions directly on defences near the demilitarised zone (DMZ) and as far south as Seoul

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