The desire to engage in nuclear blackmail and possibly slaughter untold numbers of people makes strange bedfellows. North Korea, which trumpets its Juche ideology of national self-reliance (despite abject dependence on foreign food aid), needs a little help from its friends in Tehran. Iran, for its part, has to accept the help of a bunch of infidels who worship a bouffant-haired mortal in platform shoes and a dismal synthetic-fiber track suit as a god.
If either had the power they wanted, they would obliterate the other, quite possibly with nuclear weapons. But for now, each has something the other needs to get the bomb in the first place.
First things first. “North Korea and Iran ‘jointly working on building nuclear missile’, report claims,” by Damien McElroy for the Telegraph, July 21:
According to a study by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), North Korea’s weapons programmes are now benefiting from technology from 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.…