Houston Chronicle

N. Korea aiding Syria’s chem weapons, U.N. says

Report: Pyongyang’s technical help began over a decade ago

- By Joby Warrick and Anna Fifield

North Korea appears to have stepped up its covert assistance to a Syrian government agency responsibl­e for producing that country’s chemical weapons and advanced missiles, a U.N. panel has concluded in a confidenti­al report.

The technical aid from Pyongyang, which began more than a decade ago, included three visits by North Korean weapons experts in 2016, as well as 40 previously unknown shipments of specialize­d materials and equipment used in building chemical manufactur­ing plants, according to a draft of the report seen by the Washington Post.

Dozens of foreign clients

The revelation­s underscore widely held concerns about North Korea’s willingnes­s to market its most advanced weapons technology to foreign clients — including, in this instance, to a Syrian regime notorious for using chemical weapons to kill its citizens. Multiple U.N. investigat­ions have linked President Bashar al-Assad’s forces to mass-casualty attacks on Syrian civilians using sarin, a banned chemical toxin.

“North Korea has a sordid history of supplying rogue states like Syria with weapons of mass destructio­n technology for cash,” Andrew C. Weber, formerly the top Pentagon official responsibl­e for combating the proliferat­ion of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, said of the new findings. “Given its large and growing arsenal of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and missile delivery systems, this is extremely dangerous.”

North Korea’s alleged aid to Syria is detailed in a 70-page report compiled by the U.N. Panel of Experts, a technical body that releases periodical assessment­s about compliance with U.N. resolution­s, including trade sanctions imposed on Pyongyang.

The report, which has not been publicly released yet, describes ongoing efforts by North Korea to circumvent trade restrictio­ns and sell banned military hardware and know-how to dozens of foreign clients, from the Middle East and North Africa to Latin America. Details about North Korea’s alleged shipments to Syria were first reported by the New York Times and Britain’s Express newspaper.

The disclosure­s come amid revelation­s that Joseph Yun, the State Department’s point man on North Korea, will leave his post Friday, a departure said to reflect widespread frustratio­n among U.S. diplomats about the Trump administra­tion’s handling of Korea policy.

President Donald Trump has sought to pressure North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, using personal insults and threats of “fire and fury” if the regime continues its march toward developing a nuclear-tipped interconti­nental ballistic missile capable of striking the United States. But on Monday, Trump hinted that the United States might be willing to join South Korea in talks with the North, but only, in his words, “under the right conditions.”

‘It’s bigger than we knew’

The U.N. Panel of Experts has previously accused North Korea of aiding Syria’s chemicalwe­apons program, asserting in an August report that Pyongyang had secretly delivered gas masks and other protective gear to the Assad government. But the latest report suggests that the assistance was much broader, and included, for example, materials useful in rebuilding Syria’s damaged chemical weapons facilities.

“We’ve known about this activity for a long time, but the report shows that it’s bigger than we knew,” said a Western diplomat briefed on the panel’s findings who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the report has not been released.

Much of the covert aid appears to have been directed toward Syria’s Scientific Studies and Research Center, a government-run agency that employs thousands of scientists and technician­s across several campuses in northern and central Syria. U.N. investigat­ors have identified the center as a primary research facility for the country’s chemical weapons and advanced missiles program. Syria renounced chemical weapons and agreed to the supervised destructio­n of its declared chemical-weapons arsenal in 2013, but the Syrian military has continued to use small amounts of sarin and other toxins in the country’s civil war, apparently from hidden or reconstitu­ted stocks.

Fresh blow to diplomacy

Syria, in a statement to the U.N. panel, said there are “no DPRK technical companies in Syria,” referring to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, adding that the only North Korean citizens in the country were coaches and athletes “confined in the area of sports.”

Meanwhile, the departure of the State Department’s chief envoy on the Korean crisis delivered a fresh blow to U.S. diplomatic efforts to end the stalemate over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests. The retiring Yun, 63, is the special representa­tive for North Korea policy and deputy assistant secretary for Korea and Japan, and has more than three decades of diplomatic experience.

Yun’s departure will leave another hole in U.S. staffing on Korean issues. Washington has still not nominated an ambassador to South Korea, 13 months into the Trump administra­tion. Victor Cha had been in the running for the job, but the administra­tion abruptly scrapped his candidacy last month.

“This is my own personal decision,” Yun told the Washington Post. “Secretary (of State Rex) Tillerson has told me he appreciate­s my service and did not want me to go, but he accepts it reluctantl­y.”

State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert confirmed that Tillerson had “reluctantl­y accepted” Yun’s decision and wished him well.

 ?? Omar Haj Kadour / AFP/Getty Images file ?? Syrian residents of Khan Sheikhun display placards and pictures during an April 2017 protest condemning a suspected chemical weapons attack on their town that killed at least 86 people.
Omar Haj Kadour / AFP/Getty Images file Syrian residents of Khan Sheikhun display placards and pictures during an April 2017 protest condemning a suspected chemical weapons attack on their town that killed at least 86 people.

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