(electronic beeps and tones)
- [Narrator] This site right here
is what the international community
has long been worried about.
The Yongbyon Nuclear
Scientific Research Center
is North Korea's most
important nuclear facility.
This is where the country
produces plutonium
and highly-enriched uranium,
chemical elements that make nuclear bombs
so dangerous and powerful.
(missile whooshing)
North Korea said it conducted
its latest nuclear tests
in 2017,
at a time when tensions with
the US were running high.
- They will be met with fire and fury.
- [Narrator] And then, everything changed.
Since that historic
Singapore summit last year,
President Trump has been courting
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
- He's a very talented man.
- [Narrator] It raised
hopes all around the world.
Would North Korea really be willing
to surrender its nuclear arsenal?
But analysts say satellite
images of the isolated country
suggest a very different story.
Despite Kim Jong-un's summit diplomacy,
his scientists have aggressively
ramped up production
of nuclear material and
long-range missiles.
- Kim Jong-un gets to share
the stage with world leaders
like US President Donald Trump.
On the other hand, he also gets to develop
his nuclear missile arsenal.
You could say he's getting to
have his cake and eat it too.
- [Narrator] So, what
exactly is North Korea doing
right now?
Let's take a closer
look at satellite images
from the last 12 months.
(target beeping)
The Yongbyon nuclear complex is massive.
Hundreds of buildings spread
over three square miles.
It's located next to a
river that cools down
the facility's nuclear reactors.
- [Jenny] At the uranium
enrichment facility,
we see continued activity around it.
- [Narrator] Jenny Town is
a North Korea specialist
who works with former CIA
operatives and security experts
all over the world.
Her team has been analyzing
satellite images of Yongbyon
for the last seven years,
and their opinion is unanimous.
North Korea has been
producing nuclear material
for the past year.
- Here they've left this cylinder
which looks like it could be
a liquid nitrogen container
that would be necessary
for an enrichment process.
At first, when it's still
on the truck bed, it's here.
Later on, you'll see it closer
to the centrifuge building itself.
- [Narrator] Experts have
noticed other signs of activity.
Here, you see crowds of
employees around the facility.
This may be a shipping
container delivering materials.
Winter also reveals other details.
- You see, specially in
the centrifuge building,
there's no snow there
while there is snow on the
rooftops of other buildings.
And so that can be an indicator
that this building is being
used, that it's heated,
and that it's hotter
than the other buildings.
- [Narrator] The Yongbyon nuclear complex
has been at the center
of denuclearization talks
for a long time.
(explosion booms)
- During the six-party talks,
blowing up the cooling tower was a sign
of North Korea's commitment
to denuclearization.
However, it proved so far
that the North had no
intention to denuclearize
because since then they
have further developed
their nuclear weapons arsenal.
Their nuclear weapons are
much more sophisticated now
than they ever were before.
- [Narrator] At the
Vietnam summit in February,
Kim Jong-un offered to
dismantle this nuclear center
in exchange for lifting US-led
sanctions on his country.
But the Trump administration refused, why?
Because Washington said
Pyongyang needed to dismantle
more than just Yongbyon.
There is a sophisticated
and complex supply chain,
including several clandestine sites
which defense analysts believe
are just as dangerous as Yongbyon.
(target beeping)
45 miles from Yongbyon is a factory
that experts say manufactures missiles.
They essentially carry nuclear warheads
to the intended target.
The ones produced in this facility
are the famous North Korean
intercontinental ballistic
missiles, or ICBMs,
that can reach the US.
(missile whooshing)
You can see signs of activity,
like these trucks, shipping
containers, and cranes
around the facility.
- At the beginning of the year last year,
Kim Jong-un told his
scientists and engineers
to mass produce nuclear
warheads and ballistic missiles,
and to accelerate efforts for
deploying them for action.
- [Narrator] International sanctions
have blocked North Korea's
access to some materials
needed to build its advanced missiles.
- And Pyongyang has actually found a way
to get around a lot of the sanctions
that have been imposed on it.
A lot of analysts now believe
that North Korea can
produce some of the parts
for the heavy trucks that it
now launches missiles from.
And Japan is concerned that
Pyongyang is able to import
some fine chemicals that can be used
to make smartphone screens
but also can be used for
weapons of mass destruction.
- [Narrator] So, what kind of weapons
does North Korea have at
its disposal right now?
Analysts at the US Defense
Intelligence Agency say
it could've produced 12 nuclear weapons
since the first Trump-Kim
handshake in Singapore last year.
In total, analysts say
Pyongyang could possess
between 20 and 60 nuclear
weapons right now.
These could be mounted on one
of its new Hwasong-15 rockets,
developed in 2017,
which are capable of reaching the US.
In front of the international community,
it appeared North Korea
had made a concession.
Before talks, Pyongyang
had not only conducted
a nuclear test but also
frequently tested its missiles,
including intercontinental
ballistic missiles.
But around the time of Kim's meeting
with Trump in Singapore,
the tests came to a halt.
Right after the first face-to-face meeting
with President Trump,
North Korea even dismantled
a long-time test site,
the Sohae Satellite Launching Station.
- This concession was actually
relatively easy for them to make
because North Korea in many ways
has moved beyond these
old fixed launch sites,
and they're firing a lot of missiles now
from the back of trucks.
And if North Korea's no
longer focused on testing,
that's only because they're busy
producing a lot of these weapons,
they're making more of them.
- [Narrator] After the failed Hanoi summit
in February of this year,
satellite images showed North
Korea rebuilding the site.
It was widely viewed as
an act of provocation
for reaching no deal with the US.
And that moratorium on testing?
Well, that didn't last too long either.
In May and June, North Korea
fired two short-range rockets
into the sea between Korea and Japan.
Despite the evidence gathered
by security analysts,
the Trump administration
has been downplaying
North Korea's continuing
nuclear operations.
- Do you think he's still
building nuclear weapons?
- I don't
know.
I hope not.
He promised me he wouldn't be.
- [Narrator] And
Pyongyang hasn't commented
on whether its nuclear
operations are still ongoing.
So, while Trump and Kim keep talking,
North Korea appears to
be quietly doubling down
on its nuclear arsenal,
right under the nose of
the rest of the world.
(gentle music)
