Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Reception Given by Iranian Charge d’ Affaires

Monday, April 16th, 2007

KCNA
4/14/2007

Esmaeil Babaei Ragheb, Iranian charge d’affaires ad interim here, arranged a reception on April 13 on the occasions of the Day of the Sun and the 14th anniversary of Kim Jong Il’s election as chairman of the DPRK National Defence Commission.

Present on invitation were Yang Hyong Sop, vice-president of the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly, Rim Kyong Man, minister of Foreign Trade, Jong Yong Su, minister of Labour, and officials concerned.

Staff members of the Iranian embassy here were on hand.

The Iranian charge d’affaires said in his speech that President Kim Il Sung who liberated the Korean people from the foreign domination made an immortal contribution to strengthening and developing the non-aligned movement.

He noted that the election of Kim Jong Il as chairman of the DPRK National Defence Commission provided a sure guarantee for the accomplishment of the revolutionary cause of Juche pioneered by Kim Il Sung.

The Iranian government and people extend full support and solidarity to the Korean people in their struggle against imperialism and for achieving the country’s reunification, he stressed.

Yang Hyong Sop in his speech noted that the revolutionary cause of Juche pioneered by Kim Il Sung has been successfully carried forward by Kim Jong Il, adding that the Korean people would wage a dynamic struggle under the Songun revolutionary leadership of Kim Jong Il.

He said that the friendly and cooperative relations between the DPRK and Iran provided by Kim Il Sung together with the top leaders of Iran have grown stronger under the deep care of the leaders of the two countries.

He noted that the Korean people would as ever boost the friendly and cooperative relations with the Iranian people in their efforts to reinforce the national defence power to cope with the U.S. high-handed and arbitrary practices and develop the national economy.

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DPRK and Iran discuss trade options

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

Yonhap
11/16/2006

N. Korea’s assembly chairman holds talks with Iranian FM

Choe Tae-bok, chairman of North Korea’s Supreme People’s Assembly, held a meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Manucherhr Motaki in Teheran on Wednesday and discussed ways of promoting bilateral cooperation, Iran’s state-controlled media said Thursday.

Choe visited Teheran to attend the 7th general assembly of the Asian Parliaments for Peace.

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U.S. puts the brakes on N.K. missile sales

Sunday, September 10th, 2006

From the Korea Herald:
9/10/2006

The United States has had some success in limiting North Korea’s export of missiles by persuading other countries not to buy them, a senior administration official says.

Washington has long sought to stop such sales and stepped up its initiative after Pyongyang tested a string of missiles in July, including a long-range missile.

“As a direct result of our policies, we have cut off North Korea from several of its customers for ballistic missiles,” Robert Joseph, the Bush administration’s top nonproliferation official, told Reuters.

“We have made it more difficult for the North to ship missiles and have made it more likely that these shipments will be exposed. The risk of exposure further turns off customers,” he said in a recent interview.

He said Yemen committed not to buy more North Korean missiles after taking delivery of a shipment of 15 Scuds in 2002 and Libya promised to forgo North Korean missiles as part of a 2003 agreement in which it abandoned its weapons of mass destruction and missile programs.

Some U.S. officials say Pakistan and Egypt also are no longer buying from Pyongyang, leaving Iran and Syria as the major missile customers.

Some other U.S. officials and experts are skeptical of the effectiveness of the Bush administration policy.

Jonathan Pollack, chair of the Asia-Pacific Studies Group at the U.S. Naval War College in Rhode Island, welcomed the close scrutiny the U.S.-led program had brought on North Korea’s activities but said the results were difficult to measure and it was probably too soon to draw firm conclusions.

The U.S. strategy includes a crackdown on banks that aid the North’s illicit activities and the “proliferation security initiative” in which some 88 member nations share intelligence and practice interdicting weapons shipments.

In addition, potential buyer nations now may find their U.S. aid curtailed if they buy weapons from North Korea. Pakistan, Iraq and Egypt are major recipients of U.S. assistance.

After Pyongyang tested seven missiles in July, the United Nations called on countries to avoid supporting the missile program. Missile sales earn the impoverished state hundreds of millions of dollars in hard currency.

One long-range missile crashed soon after launch during the July tests, but the other medium range missiles hit their target areas, U.S. officials and experts said.

U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has said North Korea – which claims itself to be a nuclear weapons power – is more dangerous as a proliferator than as a military threat to neighbor South Korea.

Pyongyang has been working on missile production for three decades and is the leading supplier of ballistic missiles to the developing world, experts say.

The chief exports are variations of Soviet-origin Scud missiles, regarded as fairly reliable and accurate but based on technology advanced military powers would consider obsolete.

North Korea’s oldest and most loyal customer has been Iran, which helped finance Scud development, according to various U.S. studies. The connection dates to the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s when Pyongyang tested and shipped missiles to Tehran.

North Korea, as well as China, provided ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and their production facilities to Iran, Iraq, Syria and Egypt, U.S. government reports say. Libya and Pakistan have also been missile customers.

Arms connections between North Korea and Iran are very strong, with the former regime being the main supplier of ballistic missile technologies to Tehran, a senior U.S. nonproliferation official said Wednesday.

Undersecretary of State Robert Joseph, in charge of arms control and international security, was cautious about going into intelligence.

“But I can say that the connections between North Korea and Iran are very strong,” he said at a news conference with the foreign press.

“And North Korea has been, I think, the principal supplier to Iran of ballistic missile technologies,” he said.

Suspicions about exchanges of personnel, technology and equipment between Pyongyang and Tehran on missile development date back decades. Joseph noted that a number of revelations about such ties have already been made public.

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