Glenn Kessler reported in the Washington Post yesterday that the US Intelligence Community has revised its estimate of the amount of plutonium separated at Yongbyon.


U.S. intelligence analysts have prepared a fresh estimate of the size of North Korea’s stockpile of plutonium—larger than previous assessments—that will be compared with the information contained in 18,822 pages of reactor production records turned over by North Korea last week, according to U.S. officials.

North Korean officials have said about 30 kilograms of plutonium was produced at their five-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon, at the low end of most private and government estimates. The new U.S. estimate is expected to be from 35 to 40 or 50 to 60 kilograms, though sources would not detail how much it had increased from the last government estimate.

The US estimate is divided into two blocks: either 35—40 kg or 50—60 kg but not in between. The reason for the two blocks, as it says later in the article, is presumably uncertainty about whether the reactor was used and unloaded prior to 1990. I’m also assuming (although it’s not 100% clear) that these figures refer to separated plutonium (not the total amount of unseparated Pu present in the fuel at the time of unloading).

The 35—40 kg part comes from the fuel which was unloaded in 1994 and 2005 and subsequently reprocessed. This lies within the ISIS estimate of 33—45 kg.

The 50—60 kg part of the estimate is more interesting. We know that none of the plutonium from the current unloading has been separated so the US IC must be assuming that if the North Koreans used their reactor before 1990, they produced 15—20 kg of plutonium.

This is a lot; much more than the 1—10 kg figure given by Albright. (All of this neglects the Pu that may have been extracted from the IRT reactor but that’s only a kg or two at most.)

This is also odd. The US IC seems to be uncertain about whether the reactor operated at all before 1990, yet is certain that if it did operate it produced at least 15 kg of plutonium.

One other observation: The North Korean 30 kg apparently excludes the material used in the test, whereas the US figures don’t—so it is just possible they are consistent.

In any event, the verification is going to be interesting.