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KIM NUKE FEARS

Shocking new satellite photos show North Korea’s nuclear missiles are MORE powerful than world feared and could soon hit the US

Kim Jong-un could soon have long-range weapons capable of reaching Alaska and Hawaii

SATELLITE images of Kim Jong-un's main missile test site reveal North Korea's weapons are far more powerful than first thought.

Fears are mounting that Kim could soon have long-range weapons capable of reaching Alaska and Hawaii after the photos showed increasingly large scorch marks from missiles.

 Newly released satellite images show activity at the nuke site
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Newly released satellite images show activity at the nuke siteCredit: Planet/ Quartz
 The same site before last October's controversial tests
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The same site before last October's controversial testsCredit: Planet/ Quartz

Careful analysis of North Korean tests sites, using images from Planet, reveal the regime has gradually been building up the size of its missiles.

Scorch marks and ground damage shown in the photos suggest the rockets must be must larger than previously thought.

It is believed the North Korea may now be testing the Hwasong-12 rocket - capable of flying 4,500miles.

That would put the US military base at Guam, Hawaii and Alaska within range, reports .

North Korean missiles are designed to take-off from mobile launchers in order to hide developments from enemies and spies.

But the detailed satellite images are so precise that a private plane believed to whizz Kim around the country to watch missile tests is clearly visible.

The plane was photographed on the runway before a recent test.

 The satellite images are so precise that a private plane believed to whizz Kim around the country to watch missile tests is clearly visible
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The satellite images are so precise that a private plane believed to whizz Kim around the country to watch missile tests is clearly visibleCredit: QUARTZ

Such detailed images and analysis of the scorch marks were made possible because the pictures were captured on consecutive days around the test.

Experts are not convinced a series of failed tests mean the programme is failing.

Joseph S. Bermudez Jr, analyst an US firm Allsource Analysis, told the : “What’s more concerning is not an individual test or two individual tests, it’s that they’re approaching their missile development in a very pragmatic way.

“What they’re doing is exactly right. They are testing, and they are testing often.

“This is the way you really learn how to develop a ballistic missile, and that’s what worries me.”

Vladimir Putin yesterday waded into the North Korea crisis and told Donald Trump: ‘Stop bullying Kim.’

Russia’s ironman leader warned the “intimidation” of Kim Jong-un’s regime must end.

He said: "We must stop intimidating North Korea and find a peaceful solution to this problem.";

But Vlad also had words of warning for the wannabe nuclear state - telling Kim he must not build his nuclear arsenal.

One test landed within 60 miles of Russia's Far Eastern coast on Saturday night.

At a meeting on his state visit to China, Putin added: "We are categorically against the expansion of the club of nuclear powers.

"We consider [the missile test] counter-productive, harmful and dangerous."

Despot Kim is trying to fit a nuclear warhead to one of his ballistic missiles - the largest of which it is feared could hit the US.

Following the latest test, a White House statement said: "With the missile impacting so close to Russian soil – in fact, closer to Russia than to Japan – the President cannot imagine that Russia is pleased.

“North Korea has been a flagrant menace for far too long. South Korea and Japan have been watching this situation closely with us.

“The United States maintains our ironclad commitment to stand with our allies in the face of the serious threat posed by North Korea.

“Let this latest provocation serve as a call for all nations to implement far stronger sanctions against North Korea.”


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