Radiation from North Korea’s aging, decaying nuclear test sites could reach northern Japan, a report says.
Dr. Joel Myers, the founder and chairman of the online weather service AccuWeather, says that next week’s wind patterns could blow radiation across the Sea of Japan and over northern parts of the Japanese islands.
Radiation generated by the Sept. 3 nuclear test still lingers around the aging test facilities.
Dr. Myers thinks the communist regime might have specifically chosen test days when the wind would be weak, so the radiation would stay on-site and remain undetected by the outside world.
“We know from other news reports that there has been an accident at the nuclear test site, and the situation that North Korea may have anticipated with radiation being contained within North Korea has changed,” Myers said.
North Korean soldiers and civilians were likely exposed to radiation after the tunnel’s collapse, according to Accuweather.
Myers said the radiation could travel to the Japanese island of Hokkaido and far-northern Honshu—and possibly farther south by the weekend.
Meanwhile, South Korean officials report “active movement” at a Pyongyang missile research facility, indicating Kim Jong Un’s regime may be planning a new missile test.
U.S. President Donald Trump starts a five-nation Asia tour this weekend and is expected to be in South Korea on Nov. 7.