Missile Proliferation 
North Korea:  Japanese Company Provided Additional Equipment in 1994 Export, Sources SayFull Story
Iran:  Japanese Authorities Arrest Five for Selling Missile EquipmentFull Story
U.S. Response:  New Regulations Ignite Complaints From Model RocketeersFull Story


Recent Stories: Missile Proliferation

From June 13, 2003 issue.

North Korea:  Japanese Company Provided Additional Equipment in 1994 Export, Sources Say

Five Japanese executives arrested yesterday for selling missile technology to Iran worked for a company that has long been suspected of helping North Korea’s missile program as well (see GSN, June 12).

Japanese authorities believe that Seishin Enterprise Co. exported a jet mill to Pyongyang in 1994.  The mill can be used to manufacture solid rocket fuel, the Daily Yomiuri reported today.

Along with the jet mill, Seishin sent North Korea several additional pieces of equipment that could be used to develop missiles, such as a dryer to quickly dry powdered materials and a mixer to blend powdered materials using centrifugal force, according to the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department’s Public Safety Bureau (see GSN, Feb. 6).  The additional equipment was necessary to process ammonium perchlorate into missile fuel after it is ground in the jet mill, sources close to the Metropolitan Police Department said.

Seishin Enterprise will not be prosecuted for its exports of missile-related equipment to North Korea, however, because the statute of limitations for such charges has expired, the Daily Yomiuri reported (Daily Yomiuri, June 13).


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From June 12, 2003 issue.

Iran:  Japanese Authorities Arrest Five for Selling Missile Equipment

Japanese authorities today arrested five employees of Seishin Enterprise Co., including the company’s president, for allegedly exporting equipment to Iran that could be used to produce ballistic missiles, according to the Associated Press (see GSN, Feb. 6).

Seishin Enterprise is believed to have sold two industrial grinders, which can be used to produce solid missile fuel, to Iran in 1999 and 2000 without an export license, a Tokyo Metropolitan Police spokesman said.  The export of the grinders is restricted under the Missile Technology Control Regime, police said.  The five Seishin employees could face up to five years in prison if convicted of conspiring to violate Japan’s Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Control Law, a police official said (Associated Press/Kansas City Star, June 12).


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From June 12, 2003 issue.

U.S. Response:  New Regulations Ignite Complaints From Model Rocketeers

U.S model-rocket hobbyists are angered over new U.S. homeland security regulations that require a background check and permit to purchase certain types of model engines, which are feared to be attractive to terrorists seeking to build bombs, the Associated Press reported today.

Under the regulations, which took effect last month, anyone purchasing or handling rocket engines that contain more than 2 1/4 ounces of ammonium perchlorate composite propellant are required to first obtain a permit.  Permit applicants must agree to have their storage areas inspected every three years, according to AP.

People have been required to obtain permits for years to transport ammonium perchlorate composite propellant across stateliness, said Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives spokesman Andrew Lluberes.  He added that 90 percent of rocket engines used by model-rocket hobbyists were smaller than those being regulated.

“This is nowhere near the onerous regulation or situation that it’s being painted out to be,” Lluberes said.

Model rocket fans, however, do not believe that the engine propellant would be of much use to potential terrorists, AP reported.

“I can walk down to the local gun store and buy a case of bullets and have immensely more power than one of these rockets,” said Randy Kastl, manager of the Hobby Shop in Dayton, Ohio, which discontinued its line of high-powered rockets because of the new regulations (James Hannah, Associated Press/Philadelphia Inquirer, June 12).


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