Home North Korea Confusion Over North Korea Site Claim Tests U.S.-South Korea Ties

Confusion Over North Korea Site Claim Tests U.S.-South Korea Ties

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South Korea’s Unification Ministry said Friday it was unaware of any U.S. objections or limits on intelligence sharing after reports that United States officials were unhappy over the disclosure of an unconfirmed North Korean nuclear site.

The ministry said it had told Washington that Minister Chung Dong-young’s remarks on a facility in Kusong were based on publicly available information, and that the explanation had been accepted.

U.S. Displeasure

The Dong-A Ilbo reported that the U.S. had conveyed its displeasure to Seoul after Chung said at a parliamentary hearing on March 6 that North Korea had a uranium enrichment facility in Kusong, alongside well-known sites in Yongbyon and Kangson.

The newspaper, citing sources in South Korea and the United States, said Washington had indicated it would partially restrict the sharing of North Korea-related intelligence with Seoul, with Chung’s remarks serving as the trigger amid broader accumulated U.S. frustration over a series of bilateral foreign and security disagreements.

Confusion Over Nuclear Site Claims

A ministry spokesperson said at a press briefing that it had “sufficiently explained the background” on Chung’s remarks after an inquiry from the U.S. embassy in South Korea and understood that “the U.S. side had accepted” the explanation.

The spokesperson also said the ministry was not aware of any protest or measures to restrict intelligence-sharing from the United States.

In separate comments to Reuters, the ministry said that if there had been any U.S. measures, it did not believe they were directly related to the minister’s comments.

The U.S. embassy in Seoul gave no immediate comment.

Chung told the parliamentary committee in March that North Korea had been enriching weapons-grade uranium at Yongbyon, Kangson and Kusong, citing remarks by International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi at a board of governors meeting that month.

The IAEA transcript of Grossi’s introductory statement shows he mentioned only facilities at Yongbyon and Kangson, with no reference to Kusong.

(With inputs from Reuters)