Lost amid rumors that Kim stroked out has been mounting evidence that North Korea might test another ballistic missile.

That isn’t a surprise — what is a surprise is some excellent sleuthing by Tim Brown and Joe Bermudez to dig out North Korea’s new missile/space launch facility. They have a new article (subscription only) out in Jane’s Defence Weekly on the facility that they are calling the Pongdong-ni Missile and Space Launch Facility:

Located on the west coast of North Korea, several kilometres southwest of the village of Tongch’ang-dong, a base has been under construction for the past eight years and will be capable of launching both the Taepodong 2 ballistic missile and the Taepodong 2 space launch vehicle. The facility also has a rocket engine test stand, which is capable of supporting test firings of all known North Korean rocket motors.

[snip]

The installation is small by Western standards but large by North Korean standards. The launch facility consists of a moveable launch pad and a 10-storey-tall umbilical tower capable of supporting North Korea’s largest ballistic missiles and space launch vehicles. About 1 km south of the launch pad there is a rocket engine test stand, which is very similar to the Shahid Hemmat test facility east of Tehran, Iran. The North Korean and Iranian governments have been collaborating on ballistic missile programmes since the early 1980s. A recent example of this was Iran’s use of a Safir (Messenger) space launch vehicle to launch its Omid (Hope) satellite. The Safir is closely based on North Korea’s indigenous Nodong missile.

Pamela Hess with AP and the Beeb both have stories. Here is the annotated location in GoogleEarth — or you can click the pic.