The Central Intelligence Agency said on Wednesday that it opened a
mission center at an undisclosed location that's sole task is to monitor
North Korea.
Many of the details about the center is not yet
known. It is led by an unnamed CIA veteran, who was tapped as the new
assistant director for Korea. The CIA offshoot will work closely with
the intelligence and national security community, the agency said.
“Creating the Korea Mission Center allows us to more
purposefully integrate and direct CIA efforts against the serious
threats to the United States and its allies emanating from North Korea,”
CIA Director Mike Pompeo said in a statement. “It also reflects the dynamism and agility that CIA brings to evolving national security challenges.”
The opening of the mission center comes as tensions between the U.S. and North Korea increased over the last few months.
The U.S. sent a strike group, led by the USS Carl
Vinson, to the Pacific near the Korean Peninsula last month – a move
that was met with fiery rhetoric from Kim Jong Un’s regime.
Last week, North Korea accused the U.S. and South Korea of an assassination against its leader.
The country’s state-run newa agency said “a hideous terrorists’ group”
directed by CIA and South Korean spies “ideologically corrupted” a North
Korean dissident identified as “Kim” and paid the man more than $20,000
to carry out the attack.
SOURCE: FOXNEWS
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