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U.S. Says Pakistan Gave Technology to North Korea

October 18, 2002
By DAVID E. SANGER and JAMES DAO 




 

WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 - American intelligence officials have
concluded that Pakistan, a vital ally since last year's
terrorist attacks, was a major supplier of critical
equipment for North Korea's newly revealed clandestine
nuclear weapons program, current and former senior American
officials said today. 

The equipment, which may include gas centrifuges used to
create weapons-grade uranium, appears to have been part of
a barter deal beginning in the late 1990's in which North
Korea supplied Pakistan with missiles it could use to
counter India's nuclear arsenal, the officials said. 

"What you have here," said one official familiar with the
intelligence, "is a perfect meeting of interests - the
North had what the Pakistanis needed, and the Pakistanis
had a way for Kim Jong Il to restart a nuclear program we
had stopped." China and Russia were less prominent
suppliers, officials said. 

The White House said tonight that it would not discuss
Pakistan's role or any other intelligence information. Nor
would senior administration officials who briefed reporters
today discuss exactly what intelligence they showed to
North Korean officials two weeks ago, prompting the North's
defiant declaration that it had secretly started a program
to enrich uranium in violation of its past commitments. 

The trade between Pakistan and North Korea appears to have
occurred around 1997, roughly two years before Gen. Pervez
Musharraf took power in a bloodless coup. However, the
relationship appears to have continued after General
Musharraf became president, and there is some evidence that
a commercial relationship between the two country's
extended beyond Sept. 11 of last year. 

A spokesman for the Pakistan Embassy, Asad Hayauddin, said
it was "absolutely incorrect" to accuse Pakistan of
providing nuclear weapons technology to North Korea. "We
have never had an accident or leak or any export of fissile
material or nuclear technology or knowledge," he said. 

The suspected deal between Pakistan and North Korea
underscores the enormous diplomatic complexity of the
administration's task in trying to disarm North Korea, an
effort that began in earnest today. 

In Beijing, two American diplomats, James A. Kelly and John
R. Bolton, pressed Chinese officials to use all their
diplomatic and economic leverage to persuade North Korea to
give up its nuclear weapons program. The subject is
expected to dominate a meeting next week between President
Bush - who a spokesman said today "believes this is
troubling and sobering news" - and President Jiang Zemin of
China, at Mr. Bush's ranch in Texas. 

Mr. Bush did not address the North Korean revelation at
appearances in Atlanta and Florida today. Secretary of
Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld did talk about the disclosures
at the Pentagon, but one official said the effort to play
down the topic was part of an administration strategy of
"avoiding a crisis atmosphere." 

At the same time, White House and State Department
officials argued that what they called North Korea's
"belligerent" announcement to a visiting American
delegation two weeks ago demonstrated the need to disarm
Iraq before it enjoys similar success. 

"Here's a case in North Korea where weapons have
proliferated and put at risk our interests and the
interests of two of our great allies," Japan and South
Korea, Richard L. Armitage, the deputy secretary of state,
said today. "It might make our case more strong in Iraq."
Some Democrats agreed, while opponents of a military strike
against Iraq argued the reverse, saying the
administration's muted reaction to North Korea, and its
announcement that it wanted to solve the problem
peacefully, should also apply to Baghdad. 

There were conflicting explanations today about why the
administration kept the North Korean admission quiet for 12
days. 

The White House said it simply wanted time to consult with
Japan, South Korea and other Asian nations, and with
members of Congress, before deciding its next step. But
some of the administration's critics suggested that the
real reason was that the administration did not want to
complicate the debate over Iraq in Congress and the United
Nations. 

On Capitol Hill, conservative Republicans argued that the
1994 accord that froze North Korea's nuclear program - an
agreement the North Koreans now say is "nullified" - should
be scrapped, and talked about new efforts to isolate North
Korea. But within the Bush administration, it has been a
matter of some controversy whether to abandon the
Clinton-era accord. Hard-liners have argued that it should
be scrapped. 

But other officials, including some at the State Department
and the National Security Council, are warning that walking
away from the accord carries a major risk: it could free
North Korea to remove from storage "canned" nuclear fuel
rods with enough plutonium to produce upwards of five
nuclear weapons. 

American officials said their suspicions about North
Korea's new nuclear program only came together this summer.
Mr. Bush fully briefed Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi of
Japan on American suspicions when the two leaders met in
New York in September, according to Japanese and American
officials. But it is unclear how strongly Mr. Koizumi
raised the issue later with Kim Jong Il during his visit to
North Korea. 

Today, several of Mr. Bush's top aides argued that North
Korea and Iraq were separate cases - and while North Korea
might have more advanced weapons, it could be contained
through diplomacy and the 37,000 American troops stationed
in South Korea. Appearing on ABC's "Nightline" tonight,
Condoleezza Rice, Mr. Bush's national security adviser,
said that "Saddam Hussein is in a category by himself, as
still the only leader to have actually used a weapon of
mass destruction against his own people, against his
neighbors." She said that Mr. Kim was also a dictatorial
leader, and that North Korea had a record of exporting
missiles and other weaponry around the world. But she said
"we do believe that we have other ways to deal with North
Korea." 

While the action the United States would seek against North
Korea was still being debated, one senior official said
that Mr. Bush and his aides would ask Russia and China to
exercise some "direct leverage" against North Korea by
restricting trade. 

In 1998, a commission on missile threats led by Mr.
Rumsfeld, then still in private life, concluded that North
Korea was "a major proliferator" of missile technology to
Pakistan and Iran, among other countries. It said that in
1998, Pakistan tested its version of a North
Korean-designed missile called the Nodong, which has a
range of more than 700 miles. But Clinton administration
officials say they could not figure out how Pakistan,
virtually broke at the time, could afford the purchases. 

Exactly when North Korea received equipment from Pakistan
is still unclear. But today American officials estimated
that North Korea's highly enriched uranium project started
sometime around 1997 or 1998 - roughly the same time
Pakistan tested the missiles it received from North Korea.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/18/international/asia/18KORE.html?ex=1035944950&ei=1&en=bbe3a3c109af90b8



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