Missile Proliferation 
Iran:  Tehran Attempting to Recruit Iraqi Weapons ScientistsFull Story
North Korea:  Iran Importing North Korean Missiles By AirFull Story
North Korea:  Japanese Company Provided Additional Equipment in 1994 Export, Sources SayFull Story


Recent Stories: Missile Proliferation

From June 16, 2003 issue.

Iran:  Tehran Attempting to Recruit Iraqi Weapons Scientists

Iran has begun an effort to recruit Iraqi weapons scientists, especially those involved in ballistic missile efforts, the London Sunday Telegraph reported yesterday (see GSN, June 12).

A pro-Iran Iraqi militia group known as the Badr Brigade has been helping Iraqi scientists travel across the border to meet with senior Iranian military and clerical officials in Tehran, according to the Sunday Telegraph.  Iran is especially interested in Iraqi scientists with experience in solid missile propellants, an area where Iraq held an advantage over Iran, the Sunday Telegraph reported.  Iran allegedly wants to develop solid propellant technology to improve its long-range Shahab ballistic missiles (see GSN, Jan. 28).

A senior U.S. Defense Department official said Iran tops the list of countries believed to be recruiting Iraqi missile scientists.  The list also includes Libya, Syria, and possibly North Korea, according to the Sunday Telegraph.  Former senior employees of the Iraqi Military Industrialization Commission have also said that foreign countries are attempting to recruit Iraqi scientists.

“Do not be surprised when some of these people start turning up in Tehran,” said Brig. Marouf al-Chalabi, former director general of the commission.  “If the Americans do not find work for MIC’s employees soon, and if they continue to rule out all of the Baathists, then many of our best scientists will leave.  Some want to go to the West, but others will go to Iran,” he said (Philip Sherwell, London Sunday Telegraph, June 15).


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From June 16, 2003 issue.

North Korea:  Iran Importing North Korean Missiles By Air

North Korea has begun exporting ballistic missiles to Iran via air — a move triggered by the U.S. interception of a North Korean ship en route to Yemen last year, U.S. and South Korean intelligence sources said yesterday (see GSN, Dec. 16, 2002).

The United States has detected Iranian IL-76 cargo aircraft leaving Pyongyang’s Sunan Airport at least six times since April, intelligence officials said.  Until last year, Iranian aircraft were detected visiting North Korea only about twice a year, an intelligence source said.

The aircraft are believed to have carried disassembled Nodong ballistic missiles, according to the South Korean newspaper JoongAng Daily (Lee Chul-hee, JoongAng Daily, June 16). 


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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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