Kim Jong-nam killed by nerve agent, Malaysian police say, putting spotlight on chemical weapons
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Kim Jong-nam, the North Korean Supreme Leader鈥檚 estranged and exiled half-brother, was killed by a VX nerve agent, which听is classified by the United Nations as a weapon of mass destruction,听Malaysian police said on Friday.
This latest development in Mr. Kim鈥檚 assassination, which South Korean and US officials have said they believe was decreed by Pyongyang, is another reminder of the regime鈥檚 secretive chemical weapons program, often overshadowed by its nuclear missile testing.
鈥淭he reported use of VX reminds us that not only is the North鈥檚 nuclear-missile threat serious but , including biochemical weapons and cyber that are all part of the regime鈥檚 Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) tool kit,鈥 Duyeon Kim, a fellow at Georgetown University鈥檚 Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, told The New York Times on Friday.
The VX nerve agent, or S-2 Diisopropylaminoethyl methylphosphonothioate, was found on swabs taken from the victim鈥檚 face and eyes, according to Malaysian police. With two women suspects 鈥 one Vietnamese and the other Indonesian 鈥 and a North Korean man in detention, local authorities are still investigating whether this nerve agent was brought into Malaysia or made inside the country.
"If the amount of the chemical brought in was small, it would be difficult for us to detect," police chief Khalid Abu Bakar told reporters, according to Reuters.
VX, which is tasteless and odorless, is believed to be the most deadly known nerve agent, and is banned globally, except for research. It was infamously used by Saddam Hussein鈥檚 forces in a 1988 poison gas attack on the Kurdish city of Halabja, where it killed several thousand Iraqis; several thousand more have died from complications since.
By using it in such an usually high-profile murder at an international airport, North Korea 鈥 if its involvement is confirmed 鈥 sent a clear message to the world, turning the incident 鈥渋nto an event of potentially huge strategic ramifications,鈥 biochemical weapon expert Hamish de Bretton-Gordon said in an opinion piece for The Guardian on Friday.
鈥淚n a single act the North Korean regime appear to be saying: we can kill anybody we want to anywhere in the world, and we do have chemical weapons 鈥 so, international community, ,鈥 Mr. de Bretton-Gordon, who is currently a director of the NGO Doctors Under Fire, wrote. 鈥淲e, North Korea, are in the WMD club and a world player and expect to be treated as such.鈥
The scale of the regime鈥檚 chemical and biochemical weapons programs has always been difficult to nail down. The North could have up to 5,000 tons, South Korea said in a biennial defense white paper.
"The biggest weakness of chemical weapons is that their effectiveness expires soon and new supplies need to be made constantly, so North Korea maintaining a stockpile of up to 5,000 tons indicates a very strong production capability," Kim Dae Young, a military expert at South Korea's Korea Defense and Security Forum, told the Associated Press.
North Korea鈥檚 chemical weapons stockpile has raised new concerns in recent years. As former US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel toured the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas in 2013, he warned against the sophistication of North Korea鈥檚 chemical arsenal, saying that 鈥渢his is probably the only place in the world that we have always a risk of confrontation,鈥 as 海角大神 reported at that time. How the world responds to Syria, where the United Nations has found evidence that the military in the country's now nearly six-year civil war, could influence North Korea, Secretary Hagel warned at the time.
Now, with another alarming reminder in hand, some are looking for a stronger response from the international community.
鈥淚t is absolutely essential that we do not see a rerun of the debacle over the Syrian red line, where this crime against humanity went unpunished,鈥 de Bretton-Gordon听wrote, urging the UN Security Council to demand that North Korea sign the Chemical Weapons Convention, which outlaws VX.
鈥淒onald Trump has, in his own inimitable fashion, declared that he would not have allowed the red line issue in Syria to develop as it did,鈥 he concluded. 鈥淭his is the first chance for him to show his mettle and back up his rhetoric with plausible and demonstrative action.鈥
This report includes material from Reuters and the Associated Press.听