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osoab
21st July 2011, 08:29 PM
North Korea and Iran 'jointly working on building nuclear missile', report claims (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/8653171/North-Korea-and-Iran-jointly-working-on-building-nuclear-missile-report-claims.html)


North Korea and Iran are jointly working on weapons programmes designed to build a long-range missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead, a leading British security think tank has said.

According to a study by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), North Korea's (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea) weapons programmes are now benefiting from technology from Iran (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/).

In return, Pyongyang is supplying technology to Iran's uranium enrichment programme that would allow it to increase its output.

The disclosure marks a disturbing escalation in the race for nuclear weapons technology by the two states which are seen to present the biggest threat to global security.

Mark Fitzpatrick, the IISS expert on weapons proliferation, said North Korea possessed a technological edge over Iran in making nuclear equipment.

It was capable of manufacturing high strength steel that Iran has been unable to manufacture. Iran has instead relied on carbon fibre materials that are less reliable.

"What previously had been a one way flow of North Korean nuclear sales to Iran is now going two ways," he said. "North Korea may be self-sufficient in its uranium programme and there are some areas where Iran can't produce equipment that North Korea has the capacity to produce."

The emergence of a North Korean "comparative advantage" over Iran in uranium enrichment has caught experts by surprise. Iran has been working for 20 years on manufacturing advanced centrifuges that enrich uranium to weapons grade. However North Korea has make the breakthrough to produce advanced machines where Iran had failed.

The IISS's fears over North Korea's activities are widely shared by defence experts.

"North Korea has been assisting Iran in going forward with its nuclear programme," said Bruce Bennett, the senior defence analyst at the Rand Corporation, a US think tank. "North Korea has been providing help to Iran with missile technology and testing (nuclear) triggering devices while Iran has only more recently done that kind of thing."

North Korea's weapons technology is the regime's main source of foreign earnings and the country has supplied Iran, Syria, Burma and Libya with its latest equipment.

"Not only has it developed nearly the full array of weapons of mass destruction, it has been willing to sell them and its missiles and conventional arms to any would-be buyer," Mr Fitzpatrick said.

The report said it also appeared that Iran has been able to develop more sophisticated versions of North Korea's No-dong long range missiles.
Recent television broadcasts of Pyongyang military parades showed North Korean No-dong 2 missiles with the same "baby-shaped" nose cone that Iran has fitted on its Ghadr-1.

The modified nose on the Ghadr-1 has been at the root of fears that Iran was attempting to develop nuclear capable missiles.

North Korea herditary Communist leadership has growing increasing reliant on its weapons arsenal and nuclear capabilities to secure its future. A regime that has traditionally defied UN sanctions and diplomatic pressure to supply defence equipment to rogue states is now facing an unstable future as its leadership passes to a new generation.

Kim Jong-il, the country's ageing leader has said he would pass power to his son, Kim Jong-un in an open-ended transistion that has increase uncertainty in surrounding countries.

The younger Kim's lack of military experience and the promotion of other senior members of the ruling family, including the Dear Leader's sister, Kim kyong-hui and her husband Jang Song-thaek, has raised the rise of a power struggle breaking out.

"North Korea is a failing state. Its economy is very poor, it is not producing enough to feed its people, a refugee problem of people trying to flee to China - all at the same time as it is trying to turn over to another dynastic succession," Mr Bennett said. "It is a dangerous state and one capable of taking large risks."
The IISS said the danger that the regime could unravel should not be ignored.
The most benign scenario was that China would take the regime on as protectorate and engineer Chinese style economic reforms.

Under that scenario, the best case outcome was that Beijing would engineer an eventual reunification with South Korea.

Mouse
21st July 2011, 09:31 PM
I can't believe they let hacks publish such poorly written articles over there at the Telegraph. Who runs that place? Other than being written by an embicile and then further failure to edit the poor writing, the article contains not one single verifiable fact.

mightymanx
22nd July 2011, 12:11 AM
Blatent fear mongering

Should be titled "Non-central bank countries will be invaded soon under the guise of WMD's"

osoab
22nd July 2011, 03:31 AM
Blatent fear mongering

Should be titled "Non-central bank countries will be invaded soon under the guise of WMD's"

Oh yeah. If we had a joke section, this article should probably be posted there.

keehah
22nd July 2011, 04:39 AM
Looks like one of the core propaganda networks of the beast controlling governments.
Linked in psychopaths can be groomed from this sociopath attracting flame.

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=International_Institute_for_Strate gic_Studies

The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), according to the organization's web site, "is the primary source of accurate, objective information on international strategic issues for politicians and diplomats, foreign affairs analysts, international business, economists, the military, defence commentators, journalists, academics and the informed public."

It further states: "Because of its network, international reach, and high-level contacts with governments throughout the world, the IISS, more than any other institute of its kind, has tremendous 'convening power', and regularly brings together ministers and government officials from different countries in order to discuss problems that divide or unite them. Indeed, the Institute's increasing 'paradiplomatic' activity has made it an actor in discreet international relations."

"The Institute has 3,000 members drawn from the government, business and academic élites of over 100 countries. Its current roster of around 200 Corporate and Institutional Members includes some 55 research centres and institutes, 25 media organisations, 35 government ministries and agencies and 40 commercial organisations along with numerous military staff colleges and university departments.

ximmy
22nd July 2011, 05:05 PM
Rumor has it the Palestinians will be joining them shortly... ::)

gunDriller
30th July 2011, 07:34 AM
the G-S.us think tank says the Axis of Evil runs through Israel, the US, and England.

and they already have nuclear weapons !

maybe we should email the Telegraph & offer them an interview.