North Korea unveils a new plant to produce fuel for nuclear weapons
[June 04, 2026]
By HYUNG-JIN KIM and KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea on Thursday unveiled a new
facility to produce nuclear bomb fuels, with leader Kim Jong Un
announcing plans to bolster the country’s nuclear forces “at an
exponential rate.”
Some experts still question whether North Korea has functioning nuclear
missiles that can reach the U.S. mainland. But the nuclear plant's
disclosure implies that Kim is eager to cement his country's status as a
nuclear power and has no intentions of placing his bomb program on a
negotiating table.
After visiting the site on Wednesday, Kim said he and other top
officials “confirmed the order of priority for implementing the
ambitious future plan designed to beef up our state’s nuclear forces at
an exponential rate,” according to the official Korean Central News
Agency.
The site is likely a uranium enrichment plant
KCNA said the facility used “more sophisticated technology” but didn’t
provide further details like its location. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of
Staff assessed the site as a uranium enrichment plant and said it was
closely coordinating with the United States to monitor North Korean
nuclear activities.
KCNA photos showed Kim walking through narrow aisles lined with dense
rows of silver tubes and pipes, in what appeared to be a centrifuge
hall. Another image showed him speaking with senior officials in a
meeting room, where a blurred graphic depicting a cone-shaped object was
spread across a table. It wasn’t immediately clear whether the graphic
showed a warhead design.
It's the third time that North Korea has disclosed a uranium enrichment
site. In 2010, North Korea showed one at its main Yongbyon nuclear
complex to visiting American scholars, and in 2024, North Korea released
photos of another covert uranium-enrichment plant, which experts believe
was at its Kangson complex.

Experts say the newly disclosed site is likely an additional uranium
enrichment facility that North Korea is suspected to have been building
at Yongbyon.
“Based on a preliminary analysis, it appears that this facility is
likely the newly added Yongbyon enrichment facility. It appears to have
two levels and represents a substantial expansion of enrichment
capability,” said Ankit Panda, an expert with the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.
“North Korea’s ongoing nuclear expansion does not have a near-term end
in sight," he said.
Last September, South Korean Unification Minister Chung Dong-young said
that North Korea was operating a total of four uranium enrichment
facilities including the Yongbyon complex, and that they were running
everyday.
Kim wants nuclear weapons state
During his plant visit, Kim said the urgency for bolstering up the
country’s nuclear war deterrent, both in quality and quantity, has grown
because of confrontations with “the most ferocious enemies,” an apparent
reference to the U.S. and South Korea.
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In this photo provided by the North Korean government, its leader
Kim Jong Un, front right, visits a new facility to produce nuclear
bomb fuels at an undisclosed place in North Korea Wednesday, June 3,
2026. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the
event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean
government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be
independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as
provided by source reads: "KCNA" which is the abbreviation for
Korean Central News Agency. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News
Service via AP)

Kim said exercising “the position of a nuclear weapons state” is his
country's “invariable” stand. He said North Korea’s nuclear
materials production capacity has more than doubled compared with
five years ago, a claim that cannot be verified independently.
Experts say Kim wants an international recognition as a nuclear
state so that he could demand the lifting of U.N. economic
sanctions. They say Kim would ultimately push for arms reductions
talks with the U.S. as a way to win concessions in return for a
partial surrender of his nuclear capability.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly expressed his desire to resume
diplomacy with Kim, but the North Korean leader responded the
Americans must first drop its demand for North Korea to denuclearize
as a precondition for talks.
Some question North Korea's nuclear program
Since his first round of nuclear diplomacy collapsed in 2019, Kim
has performed a provocative run of weapons tests and vowed
repeatedly to “exponentially” expand the country’s nuclear arsenal.
This led to many experts believing North Korea now likely has
nuclear missiles capable of striking the U.S. mainland. But some
still note North Korea hasn't proved it mastered last-remaining
technological hurdles to obtain such missiles, including ensuring
its warheads survive the conditions of atmospheric reentry. They say
North Korea also need to perfect technologies to place multiple
nuclear warheads on a single missile to defeat U.S. missile shields.
A senior South Korean official told lawmakers in 2018 that North
Korea was estimated to have manufactured between 20 and 60 nuclear
weapons, but some experts now put the size of the North’s arsenal at
more than 100 warheads.
In 2023, North Korea unveiled a type of battlefield nuclear
warheads. Some analysts speculated the warhead’s unveiling might be
a prelude to a nuclear test. But North Korea hasn't carried out a
test, which would be its seventh detonation overall and the first
since September 2017.
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