North Korea: Pyongyang ‘faked’ submarine-launched missile says California think tank

The “launch” test apparently demonstrated in the footage was critical because it could have indicated that the rogue nation was capable of delivering a nuclear bomb long distances with a missile.

 

But the rocket “ejected, began to light, and then failed catastrophically,” said Melissa Hanham, a senior research associate at the California-based Middlebury Institute’s James Martin Centre for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS).

 

The CNS analysis discovered two frames of video from state media where flames engulf the missile and small parts of its body break away. But North Korea “used heavy video editing to cover over this fact,” Hanham said in an email.

 

They used rudimentary editing techniques to crop and flip old video footage of an earlier test and Scud missile launch to make it appear to be a successful launch, the video analysis showed, Reuters reported.

 

Pyongyang’s claim that it tested a hydrogen bomb on 6 January has also been met with skepticism by experts, though investigations are continuing.

 

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