North Korea, which in recent weeks has conducted a nuclear test and fired a long-range rocket in defiance of United Nations sanctions, has also resumed its efforts to produce weapons-grade nuclear material, National Intelligence Director James Clapper told Congress Tuesday.
A North Korean uranium enrichment facility has been expanded and a plutonium reactor, closed in 2007, is back up and running, Clapper testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee. The reactor could begin to recover plutonium “within a matter of weeks to months,” he said.
The dictatorship’s growing threat also includes an expansion of the “size and sophistication of its ballistic missile forces,” and a commitment “to developing a long-range, nuclear-armed missile that is capable of posing a direct threat to the United States, Clapper said.
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Delivering his annual assessment of worldwide threats — or, as he described it, a “litany of doom” — Clapper also said ISIS has outgrown Al Qaeda to become “the preeminent global terrorist threat.” He also named Iran as the “foremost state sponsor of terrorism.”
The wave of migration out of Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East and Africa are a worrisome potential source of terror attacks, Clapper warned.
He also said the group’s use of sophisticated encryption technology have had a “negative impact on intelligence gathering.”









