
New details have emerged on a nuclear test by the Iranian regime.
The German Die Welt daily wrote:
The regimes of Iran and North Korea cooperated in a number of nuclear tests in early 2010. The Iranian regime has at least conducted one nuclear weapons test with North Korea in early 2010. Citing “Western security sources”, this German newspaper wrote these nuclear tests reject the US intelligence community’s assessment on Iranian regime not pursuing nuclear weapons production.
Evidence regarding nuclear tests conducted by the Iranian regime on North Korean soil was revealed for the first time by Nature magazine in early February. Based on this report, a nuclear physicist in Sweden has analyzed the relevant evidence showing traces of isotope rays in North Korean soil, which usually result from uranium bomb explosions.
After a 12-month long investigation, the Swedish scientist reached this conclusion that in the months of May and April of 2010, two small nuclear explosions were conducted in North Korean soil, with explosive power equivalent to 50 to 200 tons of dynamite.
In another section of this report, Die Welt emphasizes the type and ratio of the isotope ray found in these cases shows North Korea’s objective in conducting these tests were to strengthen the destructive power of its nuclear weapons.