N. Korea Leader Wants Nuclear Deterrent as Proof against Downfall
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-Un is afraid of sharing the fate of slain dictators Saddam Hussein, Moammar Gadhafi and Al-Qaida's Osama bin Laden, and is working on a nuclear deterrent for this purpose, a former Japanese defense minister said Friday.
"Kim is very afraid to be killed like (Iraq's) Saddam Hussein, (Libya's) Moammar Gadhafi or Osama bin Laden," Satoshi Morimoto, who is now a national security expert, told a conference in Athens.
"So as long as they maintain nuclear capability they think they can survive," said Morimoto, a professor at Tokyo's Takushoku University who served as defense minister in 2012.
North Korea says it tested a miniaturized hydrogen bomb on January 6 -- a claim largely dismissed by experts who argue the yield was far too low for a full-fledged thermonuclear device.
Morimoto argued that given available data, the weapon tested was likely a "small bomb with a launch missile."
He recalled a similar situation in 1953, when the Soviet Union said it had tested a hydrogen bomb, but the United States considered it a smaller-scale thermonuclear weapon.
Moscow's first 'true' hydrogen bomb test came two years later.
North Korea "is in the process of developing a hydrogen bomb, but not yet," Morimoto said.
"Despite sanctions, they never gave up nuclear development and ballistic missiles," he said.