The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

Special Report

Pyongyang Proliferation

Bill Triplett is dead right to call North Korea the Rogue State.

WASHINGTON — While the American public, insofar as it is concerned with international affairs, remains preoccupied with Iraq, the two other members of the Axis of Evil have not moved from the top of the U.S. foreign policy agenda. United Nations nuclear inspectors continue to dither in Iran even as U.S. and other Western diplomats have provided the International Atomic Energy Agency with evidence of a covert nuclear weapons program run by Tehran, but even that crisis seems manageable when compared to the trouble brewing another half a world away in North Korea.

That a rogue state will sell a nuclear weapon to a terrorist group has become the foremost security threat for the United States and for the world. In his “Worldwide Threat 2004” analysis, CIA Director George Tenet says his “deepest concern” is that terrorist organizations remain intent “on obtaining, and using catastrophic weapons.”

If such a nightmare scenario were to become a reality, the suspect list for the supply-side of the equation would be short. And North Korea would lead it.

Vice President Dick Cheney, traveling in Asia last month, told a Chinese audience, “We worry that, given what they’ve done in the past and given what we estimate to be their current capability, that North Korea could well, for example, provide this kind of [nuclear weapons] technology to someone else or possibly to a terrorist organization.”

In weeks prior to Cheney’s trip, the two senior U.S. military commanders in that part of the world gave the House Armed Services Committee the same warning.

“They’re a known proliferators of missiles, missiles technology, narcotics and other illegal activities,” said Army Gen. Leon LaPorte, commander of U.S. forces in Korea. “What’s to prevent North Korea from deciding to sell to other nations or terrorist organizations weapons-grade material? Given the history of North Korea relative to selling missiles and missile technology it’s a concern we must address,” he added.

“I think our largest concern would be if nuclear material was sold to al-Qaeda, clearly,” said Navy Adm. Thomas Fargo, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command. “They have the will and the skill, obviously, to carry out a devastating terrorist attack. … That is a kind of nightmare scenario, and that’s why we feel so strongly about a non-nuclear Korean Peninsula,” he added.

Also within the past month, even the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, traveled to Washington to express his alarm over North Korea. He said the situation there is the highest-level crisis facing his agency because North Korea “has the most advanced capability.”

And over the course of the past year, information has been trickling in regarding the now notorious Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan, who reportedly confessed to transferring Pakistani nuclear technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea. He told his Pakistani interrogators that he provided North Korea with both the designs for uranium enrichment centrifuges and a small number of the actual machines, as well as a “shopping list” of what was necessary to mass-produce the centrifuges, according to U.S. officials who have reviewed the Pakistani intelligence reports.

“We think they’ve pretty much bought everything on the list, with the possible exception of a few components,” said one U.S. official when additional news of Khan’s confessions provided by Pakistani authorities broke in the New York Times last month.

WILLIAM TRIPLETT, IN HIS recently released book Rogue State: How a Nuclear North Korea Threatens America (Regnery, 272 pages, $27.95), catalogues intelligence from recent years that we can combine with these latest developments to form a clearer picture of international terrorism. Among the most notable examples:

* The North Koreans and Osama bin Laden have an existing arms sales relationship. This was discovered in 2000 when bin Laden financed a shipment of North Korean conventional arms to a Philippine Islamic terrorist group.

* In 1998, Pakistan set off a nuclear test which scientists at the Los Alamos National Laboratory now suspect may have been a North Korean nuclear weapon or a joint venture between the two countries, due to the fact that it was a plutonium rather than uranium weapon, which Pakistan’s nuclear research is exclusively comprised of.

* According to a defector report, the North Koreans have been training “Arab terrorists” for the past decade at the Kim Jung-Il Political and Military University.

With the missing link of A.Q. Khan discovered and now shedding light on the operations of his nuclear black market, there is ample evidence that the Axis of Evil, minus Iraq, continues to pursue both terror and nuclear weapons.

Page: 1 2  

topics:
Foreign Policy, Islam, Abortion, Military, Iraq, Iran, Russia, Pakistan, United Nations, North Korea, Socialism, Nuclear Weapons, Energy

Letter to the Editor View all comments (1) |

Related Articles

More Articles by Marina Malenic

More Articles From Special Report

http://spectator.org/archives/2004/05/04/pyongyang-proliferation

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

FLASHBACK TO: 1995

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

Obama and the IRS: The Smoking Gun?

Jeffrey Lord | 5.20.13

The Inoperative Jay Carney

Jeffrey Lord | 5.23.13

Holding AWOL Obama Accountable

Betsy McCaughey | 5.23.13

Obama's Imbroglios

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.23.13

Lerner's Plea

Ray V. Hartwell | 5.23.13

Time to Go for the Kill

Peter Ferrara | 5.22.13

Laying Down My Pen

Quin Hillyer | 5.23.13

ADVERTISEMENT