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North Korea's nukes are nearing the 'point of no return' — and the US may have one last chance to act

The US continues to try to enforce sanctions that ultimately fail to stop North Korea's nuclear-weapons program because the other options are much worse.

A test of a Korean-style high-thrust engine.

North Korea recently doubled the size of its uranium-enrichment plant and pushed through with the testing of rocket engines that could soon power intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of hitting the US with a nuclear payload, analysts say.

The test came one day after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told the Independent Journal Review: "The threat of North Korea is imminent. And it has reached a level that we are very concerned about the consequences of North Korea being allowed to continue on this progress it's been making on the development of both weapons and delivery systems."

Nuclear-proliferation experts have told Business Insider that North Korea's eventual goal for its weapons program is to create an ICBM with a thermonuclear warhead that can reach the US mainland.

North Korea does not yet have that capability, and likely won't for years, but its latest high-profile tests show steady progress in that direction.

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Omar Lamrani, a senior military analyst at Stratfor, told Business Insider that the world would change if North Korea achieved its goal of building a weapon that could threaten Americans on US soil.

"North Korea has been perceived in the past as engaging in a nuclear-weapons program as a way to trade for concessions from the US and South Korea," Lamrani said. "But that paradigm doesn't hold anymore — North Korea decided to invest in a nuclear-missile program not to trade it away, but as the ultimate security guarantee and the ultimate deterrent against outside attacks."

As it stands, the US and its allies would face a tremendously difficult task in disabling the North Korean nuclear-weapons program, as hundreds of mobile missile launchers scattered across secret locations in a densely forested, mountainous peninsula would make it nightmarishly complicated to remove in one swift blow.

But Lamrani said the ability to threaten the US with not just one but a salvo of nuclear missiles would represent a loss for the US and further limit options for outsiders to influence Kim Jong Un's regime. North Korea's latest progress toward this feat has deeply troubled US officials and observers.

"North Korea has made such progress now that the US feels that it does not have time anymore," Lamrani said. He added that an ICBM in the hands of Kim would mean the US could no longer credibly threaten North Korea with nuclear force, representing a "point of no return" in multilateral relations.

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But although a war with North Korea would be disastrous and potentially cost millions of lives, the window for US intervention is closing fast.

If North Korea developed credible ICBMs, as it may in coming years, the US would be left with three options, according to Lamrani:

The US currently employs the first option simply because it's the least-worst choice, but Tillerson recently said the US's "strategic patience" with North Korea had ended.

Additionally, recent reports from Arms Control Wonk and Reuters uncovered a complicated network of businesses and obfuscation that the Kim regime uses to rake in millions by selling military radios and other goods, despite sanctions.

Another Reuters report quoted North Korean officials as saying it did not fear or care about US sanctions and that it was planning a preemptive first strike, while its recent tests suggest it's closer than ever to being able to overwhelm US missile defenses.

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While the US can build up all the defenses it wants, "missile defense is not a surefire way to negate the threat posed by another country's nuclear-capable ballistic missiles," Kelsey Davenport, the director of nonproliferation policy and a North Korea expert at the Arms Control Association, told Business Insider in January.

The second option would be to cave to perhaps the most brutal regime on Earth and cement the failure of decades of diplomacy.

The third option is patently unthinkable and unacceptable.

"Every single one of them is not a great option," Lamrani said.

So as North Korea creeps closer to an ICBM, the US must quickly decide whether to act now or to potentially admit diplomatic defeat down the road.

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