http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/05/breaking2453445.0395833333.ht
 ml
 U.S. catches China transferring WMD tech to Iran
 
 SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
 Tuesday, March 15, 2005
 
 WASHINGTON  The United States has charged that
 China continues to supply
 unconventional weaponry and dual-use technology to
 Iran, despite numerous
 appeals.
 
 China has transferred components and expertise to
 Iran's weapons of mass
 destruction and missile programs, officials said.
 They said some of the
 Chinese components have arrived via Pakistan,
 another key ally of
 Beijing.
 
 "Unacceptable proliferant activity continues,"
 Assistant Secretary of
 State for Arms Control Stephen Rademaker told the
 U.S.-China Economic and
 Security Review Commission on March 10. "We are
 particularly concerned
 about continued transfers of CBW- and
 missile-related technology by
 Chinese entities to Iran, despite the imposition of
 sanctions."
 
 The components were said to have included dual-use
 missile components,
 raw materials, and expertise to Iran's solid-fuel
 missile program.
 Officials said Beijing has also supplied dual-use
 chemical
 weapons-related production equipment and technology
 to Iran.
 
 A key Chinese supplier to Iran has been identified
 as Q.C. Chen, a
 Chinese national under U.S. sanctions since 1997.
 Officials said Beijing
 has failed to stop Chen, who has sold components to
 Iran's chemical
 weapons program.
 
 Another leading Chinese proliferator to Iran and
 Sudan has been
 identified as China North Industries Corp., or
 Norinco. Officials said
 Beijing has not taken any steps to stop missile and
 WMD exports by
 Norinco to the Middle East.
 
 Officials said China has sold major weapons and
 components to
 oil-producing countries in the Middle East banned
 from receiving Western
 defense systems. They said Beijing has rebuffed U.S.
 appeals to halt the
 weapons supplies.
 
 In 2000, Congress formed the commission to
 investigate and report on
 national security implications of trade and economic
 relations between
 the United States and China. Since 2001, the United
 States has imposed 60
 sanctions on Chinese entities in connection with
 missile and WMD sales to
 Iran.
 
 Norinco was said to have supplied advanced weapons
 systems to Sudan as
 well as military training to quell the rebellions in
 the south and in the
 Darfour province. Norinco was a leading exhibitor at
 IDEX-2005, which
 took place in the United Arab Emirates in February.
 
 "Norinco has been particularly active in WMD-related
 transfers to Iran,
 resulting in the imposition of U.S. sanctions five
 times," Rademaker
 said.
 
 In 2004, China became a member of the Nuclear
 Suppliers Group and
 announced the imposition of penalties on two
 companies that violated
 Beijing's missile export regulations. China has also
 pledged to refrain
 from providing nuclear supplies to any country that
 does not honor
 safeguards of the International Atomic Energy
 Agency.
 
 "China needs to do a consistently better job in
 identifying and denying
 risky exports, seeking out potential violators, and
 stopping problematic
 exports at the border," Rademaker said. "These
 issues matter to us
 because China's success in ending proliferation by
 Chinese entities is
 critical to ensuring that weapons of mass
 destruction do not end up in
 the hands of terrorists or rogue states prepared to
 use them."
 
 

 



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