U.S. Nuke Sniffer Plane Reportedly Makes Emergency Flight Past Korea

April 20, 2017 Topic: Security Region: Asia Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: North KoreaMilitaryTechnologyWorldNuclear WeaponsNuclear Test

U.S. Nuke Sniffer Plane Reportedly Makes Emergency Flight Past Korea

Is North Korea getting ready to test a nuclear weapon? 

The U.S. military reportedly dispatched a nuclear sniffer plane to airspace off the east coast of Korea.

“The WC-135 Constant Phoenix, a special-purpose U.S. plane, made an emergency sortie today over the East Sea (Sea of Japan),” a government source told Yonhap News Agency Thursday.

(This first appeared in The Daily Caller here.)

The plane arrived at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa, Japan two weeks ago, Stars and Stripes reported. The plane was deployed to the area as tensions with North Korea surged over the possibility of a sixth nuclear test.

Nuclear sniffer planes are used to detect and identify radioactive debris in the aftermath of a nuclear weapons test.

Whether Thursday’s flight was an operational readiness exercise or an attempt to determine whether or not the reclusive regime is experimenting with nuclear weaponry remains unclear.

The Punggye-ri nuclear test site is reportedly “primed and ready” for another nuclear test, however, North Korea has provided no specific indications that it intends to conduct a test in the immediate future.

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