Nuclear Testing: North Korea Breaking Ban

Knoema
Knoema
Published in
2 min readOct 17, 2017

On 11 September, the UN Security Council adopted its 8th sanction resolution against North Korea in response to the country’s nuclear test on September 3 in violation of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty of 1996 (CTBT) banning nuclear explosions regardless of purpose.

The test was the sixth violation by North Korea. Previously, North Korea conducted nuclear tests in 2006, 2009, 2013, and twice in 2016.

FEach time North Korea has conducted nuclear tests, the UN Security Council has responded by adopting new sanction resolutions against the country. A total of eight sanction resolutions have been adopted, including two additional resolutions after North Korea’s successful satellite launches in 2012 and 2016.

Except for North Korea, only India and Pakistan have violated the moratorium; each conducted nuclear tests twice in 1998.

Although the UN has now imposed a variety of sanctions on North Korea, the sanctions primarily restrict the export and import of specific products.

  • Exports. The full list of North Korea exports embargo now includes all weapons, copper, nickel, silver, zinc, lead and lead ore, iron and iron ore, coal, seafood, textile, helicopters, and statutes. Excluding weapons, helicopters, and statutes for which no data is available, the covered products constitute about 74 percent of North Korea’s exports, with coal and textile the major export products. The UN added these products, except weapons, to the embargo list in 2016 and 2017.
  • Imports. Restrictions on imports include weapons, luxury goods, nuclear and missile dual-use technologies, crude oil and all refined petroleum products, and all condensates and natural gas liquids. Petroleum products are the country’s primary imported products, accounting for about 6 percent of the country’s total imports.

You could say, “they” started, they being the United States and the former Soviet Union, and the world is certainly watching to see how they (and others) will end it now that North Korea increasingly dismisses all overtures for reigning in its military ambitions. Nuclear testing began in July 1945 when the United States tested its first atomic bomb. Up until the signing of the CTBT, more than 2,000 nuclear detonations occurred worldwide.

  • The United States detonated 1,032 nuclear explosions from 1945 to 1992; the Soviet Union, 715 during roughly the same time period. A distant third in total detonations is France with 210, followed by China and the UK with 45 detonations each.
  • During the five decades between 1945 and 2006, countries used more than 60 locations to detonate nuclear devices. For some cases, the testing assists researchers to understand how such weapons act in different conditions and estimate the threat such detonations pose to the public. For others, like North Korea, nuclear testing is more political, allowing a country to announce its military, scientific, and national preeminence.

View original infographics, live dashboard and download data at knoema.com.

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