Full Report from www.reuters.com
Footage of a
North Korean submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) test released
by Pyongyang two days after it announced it had conducted the country's
fourth nuclear test last week was faked, according to an analysis by a
California-based think tank.In
defiance of a U.N. ban, the isolated country has said it has ballistic
missile technology which would allow it to launch a nuclear warhead from
a submarine, although experts and analysis of North Korean state media
cast doubt on the claim.
North
Korean state television aired footage on Friday of the latest test,
said to have taken place in December. Unlike a previous SLBM test in
May, it had not been announced at the time.
"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 Center for Nonproliferation Studies
(CNS).
South Korea's
military said on Saturday North Korea appeared to have modified the
video and edited it with Scud missile footage from 2014 although an
official told Reuters that the ejection technology might have improved
since the May test.
The CNS
analysis shows two frames of video from state media where flames engulf
the missile and small parts of its body break away.
"North Korea used heavy video editing to cover over this fact," Hanham said in an email.
"They used
different camera angles and editing to make it appear that the launch
was several continuous launches, but played side by side you can see
that it is the same event".
North
Korean propagandists used rudimentary editing techniques to crop and
flip old video footage of a more successful ejection test from May and a
Scud missile launch from June last year, the video analysis showed.
The North's claim
that its fourth and most recent nuclear test, conducted last Wednesday,
was of a more advanced and powerful hydrogen bomb has drawn scepticism
from the U.S. government and experts.
It is also unclear if North Korea has developed a nuclear device small enough to mount on a missile.
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