[A two-hour closed session of
the Security Council on Wednesday afternoon ended with a pledge to “begin to
work immediately” on a resolution containing additional measures to rein in
Pyongyang. It did not specify what those measures could be, and in the past, China and Russia have usually objected to steps
that could threaten the North’s survival. The most obvious would be a
prohibition on loading or unloading North Korean ships around the world, or on
financial transactions with the nation.]
UNITED NATIONS — The United
Nations Security Council condemned North
Korea for its nuclear
test on Wednesday, but there was no evidence yet that the North’s most powerful
backer, China, was willing to stiffen sanctions in a way that could push the
unpredictable country to the point of collapse or slow its nuclear progress.
As the question of how the
international community should respond remained
unanswered, White House officials, eager to undercut whatever propaganda value
the North saw in claiming its first success in detonating a thermonuclear
device, said that initial data from its monitoring stations in Asia were “not
consistent” with a test of a hydrogen bomb.
A
two-hour closed session of the Security Council on Wednesday afternoon ended
with a pledge to “begin to work immediately” on a resolution containing
additional measures to rein in Pyongyang. It did not specify what those
measures could be, and in the past, China and Russia have usually objected to steps
that could threaten the North’s survival. The most obvious would be a
prohibition on loading or unloading North Korean ships around the world, or on
financial transactions with the nation.
A hydrogen bomb would be far more powerful, and more fearsome,
than the type of nuclear weapon the North has tested three times since 2006,
when it conducted its first test during George W. Bush’s administration.
The seismic wave left by the explosion was smaller than what most experts would expect
from the detonation of a true thermonuclear weapon. Some experts said it was
possible the North had increased, or boosted, the yield of a more traditional
device by using tritium, a common technique, in the 70-year history of nuclear
weapons.
A South Korean Defense Ministry
official, who requested anonymity to speak about a national security matter,
said Thursday that the ministry believed that even if the device was a boosted
fission bomb, the test was probably a failure. The explosive yield was even
smaller than that from the North’s last and third nuclear test, in early 2013,
he said.
“Even a boosted fission bomb
produces a yield bigger than this, so we don’t think this is a successful test
of a boosted fission bomb either,” he added.
But the true nature of the test may not be revealed until
results are back from atmospheric testing, usually conducted by Air Force
planes that run along the North Korean coast “sniffing” for byproducts of an
explosion. Yet after the test in 2013, such inquiries were inconclusive.
“We may never know,” said one intelligence
official involved in the testing. “The technology is pretty hit-and-miss.”
Gary Samore, Mr. Obama’s top nuclear adviser in the president’s
first term, said Wednesday that the timing of the test was strange, with North
andSouth
Korea discussing
restoring some economic ties and the North trying to reach out to the Chinese.
Even
China used unusually strong
language, probably because it also appeared to have been given no
warning about the test, which the North claimed — against considerable evidence
to the contrary — was its first effort to detonate a hydrogen bomb. The Chinese
said they were “strongly against this act,” and their ambassador to the United States met with Susan E. Rice,
President Obama’s national security adviser, at the White House.
President Obama said nothing in public about the test, in
contrast to Mr. Bush, who responded to the first North Korean test in 2006 by
declaring that the North would be held responsible if its bomb technology were
found anywhere else in the world.
Advisers
said Mr. Obama was calculating that Mr. Kim was looking to get a rise out of
him. “He’s not going to give him the satisfaction,” one aide said.
On Wednesday evening, the White House said
that Mr. Obama had spoken by telephone with President Park
Geun-hye of
South
Korea
and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan , reassuring both of America ’s support.
Some American officials,
declining to speak on the record, speculated that a dust-up last month over the treatment of an
all-female band that North Korea sent to Beijing might have so angered Mr. Kim
that he ordered the test to go ahead.
Just before the band was supposed to perform, Mr. Kim declared
that the North possessed hydrogen bomb technology. The Chinese, with no
explanation, downgraded the level of officials scheduled to attend the
performance, and the band then headed home without performing.
“I know this sounds like a
crazy reason to set off a nuclear test,” one American intelligence official
said. “But stranger things have provoked North Korean action.”
But
it is far from clear that all the major players with a stake in what the North
does are willing to take the kind of risks, and impose the kind of sanctions,
that might prompt Pyongyang to back down or, alternatively, to lash out.
Kelsey
Davenport, director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association
in Washington , argued that stiffening
existing sanctions, while sending a political message, would be insufficient.
“Ratcheting up sanctions pressure demonstrates that there is a
cost to violating Security Council resolutions,” she said in an email.
“However, sanctions alone are not going to change Pyongyang ’s behavior. North Korea has complex illicit
trafficking networks for evading sanctions, and not all countries in the region
are adequately enforcing existing measures.”
The
one time the United States did clearly get the North’s attention was when it
cut off bank accounts in Macau that Kim Jong-il, the father of the current
leader, used to finance the lifestyle of the North Korean elite. But
eventually, the Bush administration had to lift that sanction, partly under
pressure from allies.
On Wednesday, American allies engaged in a
now-familiar set of rituals. Ms. Park convened an urgent meeting of her top
national security aides in Seoul .
The American ambassador,
Samantha Power, called for a “tough, comprehensive and credible package of new
sanctions.”mFor Mr. Kim, there was some domestic politics in all this. His
Workers’ Party is scheduled to hold its first full-fledged congress since 1980
this May. With no big improvements in the lives of his people, he needs
something else to show for his four-year rule.
“The biggest achievement Kim
Jong-un can offer ahead of the party congress is his nuclear program,” said
Choi Kang, vice president of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies. “It also
means that things don’t look good in the economic sector.”
Somini
Sengupta reported from the United Nations, David E. Sanger from Washington and Choe Sang-Hun from Seoul , South Korea . Gardiner Harris contributed reporting from Washington,
Javier C. Hernández from Beijing , and Jonathan Soble from Tokyo .