Spectre
of N. Korean atmospheric nuclear test prompts emergency plans in
Seoul & Tokyo
RT,
28
September, 2017
South
Korean banks and utility companies are drawing up plans to construct
shielding and potentially move operations overseas to protect against
North Korea as further provocation from Pyongyang is expected on
October 10.
South
Korean banks and vital infrastructure facilities, including nuclear
power plants and government ministries, havereportedly been
hacked by Pyongyang in the past. And as tensions in the region
escalate, many now fear the North Korean regime will conduct an
atmospheric nuclear test to coincide with the 72nd anniversary of the
founding of the Workers' Party of Korea on October 10.
The
South Korean government warned Thursday that its northern neighbor
was "highly
likely" to
continue military provocations in the build up to the October
celebrations.
"Current
regulations prohibit the transfer of client information overseas, so
we are discussing ways to revise those rules so we can set up data
back-up centres abroad," a
Financial Supervisory Commission official said as cited by Chosun.
“I
understand it is an important anniversary for North Korea. We would
like to maintain a sense of urgency,” Japanese
defence minister Itsunori Onodera said Friday as cited by The
Japan Times.
A
nuclear blast or a specifically designed electromagnetic pulse device
can create current and voltage surges in electronic devices while
corrupting digitally stored data, posing a huge risk to financial
institutions based in the South.
High
altitude nuclear weapons are harder to intercept than weapons
designed to strike targets on the ground and produce a giant wave of
electrons which spreads outward through the Earth's magnetic field,
creating an electromagnetic pulse which can, in turn, lead to surges
of 10,000 volts or more within the electric grid.
UN
sanctions, which the North Korean regime has dubbed “the
dirty excrement of the reactionaries of history,” have
been ramped up over the past few months following a series of nuclear
and intercontinental ballistic missile tests by the reclusive nation.
However,
security and nuclear energy experts warn that the North may not yet
have the technically capability to perform an atmospheric nuclear
test, further amplifying the threat posed given the quantity of
variables.
“We
are talking about putting a live nuclear warhead on a missile that
has been tested only a handful of times. It is truly terrifying if
something goes wrong,” Vipin
Narang, a nuclear expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
said as cited by the AP.
For
context, a nuclear blast at an altitude of 60 miles will affect
a 700-mile
radius which
ups the ante significantly should the North decide to follow through
on threats to exercise their military muscle in response to abrasive
rhetoric from Donald Trump and increased international pressure on
Pyongyang.
An
atmospheric nuclear test would also pose a huge threat to aircraft
and shipping in the region as the North Korean government is unlikely
to issue prior warning.
“Although
I am sure such a launch would be very alarming to people in Japan,
there is little the United States or Japan could do,” said
Jeffrey Lewis, a US arms control expert at the Middlebury Center of
International Studies at Monterey, as cited by AP
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