Santa Fe New Mexican

Cargo reveals N. Korea’s dark trade in weapons

- By Joby Warrick

Last August, a secret message was passed from Washington to Cairo warning about a mysterious vessel steaming toward the Suez Canal. The bulk freighter named Jie Shun was flying Cambodian colors but had sailed from North Korea, the warning said, with a North Korean crew and an unknown cargo shrouded by heavy tarps.

Armed with this tip, customs agents were waiting when the ship entered Egyptian waters. They swarmed the vessel and discovered, concealed under bins of iron ore, a cache of more than 30,000 rocket-propelled grenades. It was, as a United Nations report later concluded, the “largest seizure of ammunition in the history of sanctions against the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.”

But who were the rockets for? The Jie Shun’s final secret would take months to resolve and would yield perhaps the biggest surprise of all: The buyers were the Egyptians themselves.

A U.N. investigat­ion uncovered a complex arrangemen­t in which Egyptian business executives ordered millions of dollars worth of North Korean rockets for the country’s military while also taking pains to keep the transactio­n hidden, according to U.S. officials and Western diplomats familiar with the findings. The incident, many details of which were never publicly revealed, prompted the latest in a series of intense, if private, U.S. complaints over Egyptian efforts to obtain banned military hardware from Pyongyang, the officials said.

It also shed light on a littleunde­rstood global arms trade that has become an increasing­ly vital financial lifeline for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in the wake of unpreceden­ted economic sanctions.

U.S. officials confirmed that delivery of the rockets was foiled only when U.S. intelligen­ce agencies spotted the vessel and alerted Egyptian authoritie­s through diplomatic channels — essentiall­y forcing them to take action.

Whether North Korea was ever paid for the estimated $23 million rocket shipment is unclear. But the episode illustrate­s one of the key challenges faced by world leaders in seeking to change North Korea’s behavior through economic pressure. Even as the United States and its allies pile on the sanctions, Kim continues to quietly reap profits from selling cheap convention­al weapons and military hardware to a list of customers and beneficiar­ies that has at times included Iran, Burma, Cuba, Syria, Eritrea and at least two terrorist groups, as well as key U.S. allies such as Egypt, analysts said.

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