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LONDON – Hours after North Korea was removed from the Bush administration's list of the "axis of evil," agents for the British intelligence agency MI6 warned prime minister Gordon Brown that the Pyongyang regime had positioned 10 missile sites overlooking the Yellow Sea "which can be fired at any time, either singly or as a salvo," according to a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.
The missiles were transported from the Yongbyon nuclear complex, the site from which the International Atomic Energy Agency has been banned. The agency wanted access to monitor North Korea to determine what stage its agreed decommissioning had reached.
The decision to remove North Korea from its pariah-state rating as part of the "axis of evil" was conveyed to Gordon Brown by President Bush shortly before the announcement was made in Washington this past weekend.
LONDON – Hours after North Korea was removed from the Bush administration's list of the "axis of evil," agents for the British intelligence agency MI6 warned prime minister Gordon Brown that the Pyongyang regime had positioned 10 missile sites overlooking the Yellow Sea "which can be fired at any time, either singly or as a salvo," according to a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.
The missiles were transported from the Yongbyon nuclear complex, the site from which the International Atomic Energy Agency has been banned. The agency wanted access to monitor North Korea to determine what stage its agreed decommissioning had reached.
The decision to remove North Korea from its pariah-state rating as part of the "axis of evil" was conveyed to Gordon Brown by President Bush shortly before the announcement was made in Washington this past weekend.
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