Burma-North Korea Ties: Escalating Over Two Decades
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Burma

Burma-North Korea Ties: Escalating Over Two Decades


By WAI MOE Wednesday, July 7, 2010


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The UN experts also said that the Korea Kwangson Banking Corporation has handled several transactions involving millions of dollars directly related to deals between Burma and the Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation.
 
With this string of events and the suspicions surrounding them as a dramatic lead in, on June 4, Al Jazeera aired a news documentary prepared by the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) which was written by Robert Kelley, a nuclear scientist and former director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). The DVB report claimed that the ruling military junta in Burma is "mining uranium, converting it to uranium compounds for reactors and bombs, and is trying to build a reactor and/or an enrichment plant that could only be useful for a bomb."

The IAEA wrote to Burma’s agency representative, Tin Win, on June 14 and asked whether the information provided in the DVB report was true. Burma, which is a member of the IAEA, a party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a signatory to the Southeast Asia Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty, responded with a letter stating that the DVB report allegations are “groundless and unfounded.”

"No activity related to uranium conversion, enrichment, reactor construction or operation has been carried out in the past, is ongoing or is planned for the future in Myanmar [Burma]," the letter said.

The letter also noted that Burma is a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the agency's so-called safeguards agreement. "As stated in the safeguards agreement, Myanmar will notify the agency if it plans to carry out any nuclear activities," the letter said.

The regime, however, has not signed the IAEA's Additional Protocol, meaning that the agency has no power to set up an inspection of Burma's nuclear facilities under the existing mechanism known as the Small Quantities Protocol.

Previously, on June 11, Burma’s state radio and television news had reported the Foreign Ministry's denial of the allegations in the DVB report. The denial claimed that anti-government groups in collusion with the media had launched the allegations with the goal of "hindering Burma's democratic process and to tarnish the political image of the government."

The Foreign Ministry denial also addressed Nyapyidaw’s relationship with Pyongyang. “Following the re-establishment of diplomatic relations, Myanmar [Burma] and the DPRK, as independent sovereign states, have been engaging in promoting trade and cooperation between the two countries in the same way Myanmar is dealing with others,” the ministry said in its statement.

The regime did acknowledge that the Chong Gen docked at Thilawa Port near Rangoon in April. But the statement said the North Korean vessel was involved in importing cement from North Korea and exporting rice from Burma.

But in an article for Asia Times online, Burma analyst Bertil Linter noted that, “if carrying only innocuous civilian goods, as the statement maintains, there would seemingly have been no reason for authorities to cut electricity around the area when the Chong Gen, a North Korean ship flying the Mongolian flag of convenience, docked on the outskirts of Yangon.”

“According to intelligence sources, security was tight as military personnel offloaded heavy material, including Korean-made air defense radars. The ship left the port with a return cargo of rice and sugar, which could mean that it was, at least in part, a barter deal. On January 31 this year, another North Korean ship, the Yang M V Han A, reportedly delivered missile components also at Yangon's Thilawa port,” Linter said.

Strategypage.com, a military affairs website covering armed forces worldwide, said, “Indications are that the North Korean ship that delivered a mysterious cargo four months ago, was carrying air defense radars (which are now being placed on hills up north) and ballistic missile manufacturing equipment. Dozens of North Korean technicians have entered the country in the last few months, and have been seen working at a military facility outside Mandalay. It's unclear what this is for. Burma has no external enemies, and ballistic missiles are of no use against internal opposition.”

In his Asia Times online story, Lintner noted that on June 24, the DVB reported that a new radar and missile base had been completed near Mohnyin in Myanmar's northern Kachin State, and he reported that work on similar radar and missile bases has been reported from Kengtung in eastern Shan State,160 kilometers north of the Thai border town of Mae Sai.



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plan B Wrote:
10/07/2010
Ko Wai Moe
The only opposing view can be found in other posts, albeit by least of all the ShweBoMin II protege.
Think that Buddhism might be a deterrent to a spiritual Myanmar becoming N. Korealike.
No more! Considering the treatment and subsequent control of the Sanga.
Even today this article here might seem to chime in with your view:
http://irrawaddy.org/opinion_story.php?art_id=18908
However, you absolutely miss the focus.
As the author views Human Rights as the foundation of all US policy should be.
A near future of Myanmar with so-called Human Rights based approach: constant vilifying and sanctions. A Myanmar as pariah, a state as N. Korea, awaits.
It will only take N. Korea to sign a nuclear cooperation understanding with the SPDC.
Then the embassies rather the consulates in Yangon will be asked to vacate.
This writing is now on the wall.

plan B Wrote:
09/07/2010
Ko Wai Moe,
You might think truth will prevail. The lack of comment to this piece of news just conclusively proves some important points;
1) Dignifying this exposé will mean revising every past policy of the west.
2) The West's attitude of "damn the plight of Myanmar citizenry as long as I do what I think is right that is fine with me".
3) Rather deal with a N. Korea like Myanmar than otherwise. After all, their present policies towards Myanmar are already geared for another N. Korean-like country.
Unfortunately, a N. Korea like Myanmar is not only one more problem but will make the real N. Korea problem even more dangerous.
Given the fact that absolutely antiwest icy N.Korea now do not have to worry about feeding their citizenry.
Myanmar now can supply unlimited amounts of fuel, food and all other needed material through simple bartering.
Therefore giving Kim and his generals to freely concentrate on upsetting the west in ways that were not possible because of limited resources.

plan B Wrote:
08/07/2010
Anyone with common sense will tell you that "You will be defined by whom you associate with"
The SPDC not only proves that adage but supplanted by " fast becoming" whom they are associated with!
The irony is the SPDC is fast becoming what the west vilified them for before.
Now that this is being proven true is this case considered:
The cart leading the horse?
Or rather plain old "You are so stupid you should have seen it coming"?
Be that as it may does nothing for the Myanmar Citizenry Plight.
A truthful article that will be ignored by the anti SPDC entity as well as the western media.
Ko Wai Moe are you prepared to suffer the consequences of telling the truth?
No good deed went unpunished?

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