From the Los Angeles Times
N. Korea-Iran Ties Seem to Be Growing Stronger
Weapons
sales and joint observations of missile test launches have been
reported. VIPs visiting Pyongyang celebrate 'cooperative relations.'
By Barbara Demick
Times Staff Writer
July 27, 2006
SEOUL — North Korea and Iran, two fiercely anti-American regimes,
appear to be bolstering their military and diplomatic cooperation,
including the possible sale of missiles to the Tehran government,
intelligence sources said.
An
Iranian parliamentary delegation visiting Pyongyang was given a VIP
welcome with a reception Monday at the North Korean Supreme People's
Assembly to celebrate, as the North Korean news service put it, the
"friendly and cooperative relations growing strong in various fields"
between the two countries.
Israeli intelligence believes North
Korea recently sold 18 intermediate-range missiles to Tehran. Some
accounts also place Iranian observers in North Korea when the Pyongyang
regime test-fired seven missiles over the Sea of Japan this month.
"The
Iranians are looking to North Korea for their new designs," said Uzi
Rubin, a former head of the Israeli missile defense program. "Of
course, we are worried. Whatever North Korea makes eventually ends up
in the Middle East."
Rubin says Iran is particularly interested
in North Korea's multistage missile, the Taepodong, because it can be
used to launch a satellite. The missile was one of the seven test-fired
recently, but it failed after 42 seconds, splashing into the sea not
far from the test site.
Another missile that Rubin believes
might have been among those tested was an intermediate-range missile
based on an old Soviet design for a submarine-launched nuclear missile.
These newly manufactured missiles are estimated to have a range of
1,550 miles, which would enable them to reach Israel and much of
southern Europe from Iran.
Israeli intelligence chief Amos
Yadlin said in April that Israel had evidence that the North Koreans
had shipped 18 of these missiles — known alternately as the SS-N-6 or
the BM-25 — to an Iranian missile base at the port city of Bandar Abbas.
"What
the Iranians bought was a missile in a box. It is an unproven missile,"
said Israeli defense analyst Alon Ben-David, who said there was great
curiosity about whether the new missile was among those tested.
A
Japanese newspaper reported recently that 10 Iranians were invited to
North Korea to observe the missile tests. A South Korean military
expert, who asked not to be quoted by name, said he heard that Iranians
were stationed at two launch sites along North Korea's east coast and
on a boat in the Sea of Japan.
Testifying before a Senate
committee last week, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill
confirmed that Iranians were present for the tests. At a news
conference the following day, however, he retracted his remarks, saying
he was unsure.
North Korea "has had a great interest in
commercializing their missile production," and "one of the customers is
Iran," Hill said.
Iranians are believed to have observed a 1998
test flight of the Taepodong, and many South Korean analysts are
convinced that their fingerprints eventually will be found on these
latest tests.
Kim Tae-woo, a South Korean analyst with the
governmental Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul, said,
"There is a high probability of Iranian involvement in these missile
tests, but we don't have hard evidence."
There is a natural
affinity between North Korea and Iran today, as they are the two
remaining members of President Bush's "axis of evil," which once
included Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Both have strained relations with the
rest of the international community — North Korea over its claim of
having nuclear weapons and Iran because of suspicions that it is
developing weapons-grade uranium.
"There are strong incentives
for cooperation between the two in terms of weapons of mass
destruction," said Daniel Pinkston, a North Korea specialist with
Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Monterey, Calif. "They are both
insecure countries that don't have a lot of friends and have many
enemies. They have a shortage of weapons suppliers so it makes sense
for them to share data and set up a division of labor for research and
development."
The relationship dates to the 1980s, when North
Korea sold missiles and launchers to Tehran for use in the war against
Iraq. Later, they cooperated on the joint development of Iran's Shahab
missiles. Iranian cargo planes were frequently seen at Pyongyang's
Sunan Airport.
On at least one occasion, U.S. intelligence
believed that Iran conducted a missile test on North Korea's behalf,
taking advantage of its vast expanses of desert.
Iran is thought
to be North Korea's best customer since pressure from the Bush
administration has forced others — mostly notably Pakistan, Libya,
Yemen and Nigeria — to sever most ties with Pyongyang. Syria also
remains a customer. South Korean analysts say that military equipment
often is shipped to Iran via Damascus, the Syrian capital.
Military
analysts say that North Korean missiles have not been detected in the
latest conflagration between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas fighting
in Lebanon, but that there is evidence that small arms and mobile
rocket launchers from North Korea have been used.
The North
Koreans have made clear their views on the conflict. In a statement
Tuesday carried by the official news agency KCNA, an unnamed North
Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman demanded that the U.S. and Israel
"halt their reckless military aggression" in Lebanon.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times