Miami Herald

North Korea stokes arms concerns by sending a rare delegation to Iran

- BY SOO-HYANG CHOI AND JON HERSKOVITZ Bloomberg News

North Korea sent its highest-level delegation to Iran in about five years as the U.S. raised concerns that arms sales from Pyongyang and Tehran have helped fuel conflicts in the Middle East and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

In a rare public report of the trip, the official Korean Central News Agency said in a one-sentence dispatch that the North Korean delegation, led by External Economic Relations Minister Yun Jong Ho, left Pyongyang for Tehran on Tuesday.

Yun had traveled to Russia earlier in April and has featured prominentl­y in state media as a key player in trade between Pyongyang and Moscow.

While North Korea is unlikely to disclose further details about the trip, it highlights the military cooperatio­n between the two countries and their defiance of the U.S. over the years. North Korea last sent a top member of its parliament to Iran in 2019.

“The Ukraine war has paved the way for cooperatio­n between North Korea and Iran,” said Ban Kil

Joo, a research professor at Korea University. “North Korea is sending an economic delegation now, but it will be the beginning of a wider military cooperatio­n to follow between the two.”

The U.S. has long accused Iran and North Korea of military cooperatio­n in the missile and nuclear fields that ran from the 1980s and into the first decade of the 2000s. It had tapered off in recent years because of sanctions as well as the developmen­t of domestic weapons production in both countries.

Washington has accused the two of sanctions violations in sending arms to Russia for its war in Ukraine, During a visit to South Korea this month, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said that in return for the arms, Moscow is offering support that aids the weapons programs of both North Korea and Iran.

The State Department’s senior official for North Korea, Jung Pak, said in an interview this week that

A TV screen Monday at a rail station in Seoul, South Korea, shows file footage of a North Korean missile test.

there is now a real risk that the high-profile nature of North Korea’s relationsh­ip with Russia could make its armaments more appealing to other groups around the world.

South Korea’s spy agency issued a rare warning last week about cooperatio­n between Iran and North Korea, saying it is possible that Pyongyang helped Iran in its attack on Israel.

South Korea previously said North Korean weapons have been used by Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist group, against

Israel as the war in Gaza drags on.

While there have not been any specific allegation­s of recent arms transfers between North Korea and Iran, there are items that each could want from the other.

Energy-strained North Korea could benefit from Iran’s oil and might be looking to acquire drones like those Tehran has sent to Russia, arms expert Lami Kim said, adding that Iran’s nuclear program could receive a boost from North Korean technology.

“Further military cooperatio­n between the two countries is very likely,” said Kim, a professor of security studies at the Daniel K. Inouye AsiaPacifi­c Center for Security Studies.

Despite a recent leak of hacked documents that indicates otherwise, Iran has repeatedly denied selling drones to Russia for use in Ukraine but said it had sent a “small number” before the February 2022 invasion.

Moscow and Pyongyang have denied the accusation­s of arms transfers despite a multitude of satellite photos released by research groups and the U.S. government showing the flow of weapons from North Korea to Russia and then to munitions dumps near the border with Ukraine.

“It appears to be part of broader efforts to build a coalition against the U.S.,” said Koo Gi Yeon, a research professor at Seoul National University’s Asia Center, referring to the trip by the North Korean delegation.

 ?? JUNG YEON-JE AFP/Getty Images/TNS ??
JUNG YEON-JE AFP/Getty Images/TNS

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