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The Iran-North Korea Connection The nuke talks with North
Korea that are about to restart is only the first step on a long road
that will test how deep is the Korea-Iran
axis and if it can be broken. More than a year ago two able
political-military analysts, former general officers Paul Vallely and
Tom McInerney, wrote about a "web of terror" that crossed the
artificial boundaries of nation, movement, organization, ideology, or
geographical area. This concept of a vast network of deadly
connections was outlined in their excellent work, Endgame: The
Blueprint for Victory in the War on Terror. It was a startling
concept in large measure because the notion of such a deadly global
network is contrary to America's cultural, organizational, and
political stereotypes.

North Korea has a several-year old relationship with the mullah
regime in Iran that includes a technological spectrum of evil: medium
range missiles, nuclear weapons, poison gas, and warhead guidance
systems. It is possible, but not verified at this time, that the Kim
Jong Il regime is also using the mullah's Italian crime contacts to
launder heroin. Regardless, the known degree of cooperation is
sufficiently serious to warrant concern. There is one strand of the
web of terror that must be addressed. Other deadly connections
stretch from Pyongyang across the globe to Venezuela and to other
Islamofascist or autocratic states like Syria, Egypt, and Libya.
These challenges are global in nature. We must address them with
global solutions that until now have been lacking.
ANI_____________________ We Americans are
accustomed to labeling and categorizing: we like to say "a place for
everything and everything in its place." Such artificial
organization - by ideology, nation, or locale - is dangerous when it
obscures the reality of the strategy and tactics that our country's
enemies use against us. We ignored the Saddam-al Qaeda connection
because we said they couldn't work together. One was sectarian the
other religious. We think that Shia and Sunni will not cooperate,
that Arabs and Europeans produce different breeds of terrorist, and
that non-Muslim Asians will have little or nothing to do with Islamic
countries or movements. All this is patent nonsense. Unless we accept
the reality of the situation and act accordingly, we are in big
trouble.
We need to particular attention to the North Korean demarches to the
Islamofascist world and into the Western Hemisphere. The facts are
that these linkages are much more extensive that previously thought.
It may – as in the Oil for Food scandal in Iraq – take regime change
and exposure of secret files before we ever understand the incredibly
complex, comprehensive nature of the collaboration between and among
these states, organizations, and movements. Of one thing we can be
absolutely certain: the web of terror is bound together by a glue
of total hatred directed at America, at our freedoms, and at the
culture of the West. All terror masters are allied in that goal; they
will settle differences among themselves after we are defeated.
Corroborating this deadly trend are the latest reports from
Iran that detail how North Korea has supported Iran's nuclear weapons
program. Again, because of our cultural blinders, we have been
reluctant to look much further east than Pakistan to seek those who
are assisting Iran with its nuclear R&D. Sure, some observers say, we
know that the North Koreans are there, but because of the differences
we minimize the effectiveness of the collaboration. But think for a
minute how ridiculous that concept sounds. Who, for example, are our
two most solid treaty partners in Asia? Japan and South Korea share
out geopolitical goals and participate in joint defense projects. Why
can we handily bridge cultural gaps to produce credible results, but
discount the notion that our enemies are capable of doing something
similar? North Korea has a several-year old relationship with the
mullah regime in Iran that includes a technological spectrum of evil:
medium range missiles, nuclear weapons, poison gas, and warhead
guidance systems. It is possible, but not verified at this time, that
the Kim Jong Il regime is also using the mullah's Italian crime
contacts to launder heroin. Regardless, the known degree of
cooperation is sufficiently serious to warrant concern. A recent
report cited in World News Daily, notes that reliable intelligence
sources have revealed that Iran has received plutonium components
from North Korea. Supposedly these components are sufficient to allow
Iran to assemble a plutonium-based nuclear weapon. The CIA heard as
far back as 1994 about a North Korea-Iran plutonium connection but it
was unverified until recently. That seems an extraordinarily long
time to verify such as essential element of information, and is
another indicator of how serious our lack of human intelligence
gathering capability is inside both hostile countries. Given the
reports coming out of Gadhafi's Libya that North Korea was a major
supplier of partially processed uranium ore to the dictator's weapons
program, we ought not be shocked that Iran was in on the action also.
According to Bill Gertz's Geostrategy Direct, President Bush
was "stunned" by the news that the North Korean plutonium supply had
advanced Iran's program dramatically. Not to be unnecessarily
redundant, but these continual, repeated poor performances by CIA and
State intelligence services are singularly unhelpful to the president
and to the country. Drastic reform is overdue, especially at State.
Not to be outdone by US agency ineptitude, UN atomic "watchdog"
Mohamed El Baradei issued a report – presumably from near Pluto where
he maintains a house – praising Iran for its announced Wednesday
decision "to continue suspension of its uranium enrichment program."
The crack UN inspector – last caught flatfooted over Libya's
announcement that it too had a nuclear program – also congratulated
Iran for continuing talks with the "EU-3," France, Germany, and the
UK. With this level of performance why would we need a tough
ambassador at the UN?
Making things even more unpleasant in the region is the caution by
the CIA that Iran "could immediately assemble several nuclear
warheads" for the mullah's Shahab-3 intermediate range missile
[emphasis added]. And where did this mysterious missile originate?
From North Korea, of course. A series of reports from as far back as
the late 1980s (the tail end of the brutal Iraq-Iran wars) tell that
Iran has had serious interest in acquiring medium and intermediate
range missiles. Confirmed reports place Iranian scientists and
engineers inside North Korea in 1993 when the Nodong class missile
was first tested and unveiled. Disquieting data provided by Iranian
resistance members details extensive cooperation between Iran and
North Korea in warhead development. The Shahab class missile is
simply Iran's version of the North Korean Nodong. With improvements
the Shahab-3 is rated at a 1,000 mile range with almost a one-ton
payload. That is a tweak in capability over the Nodong's originally
announced 800 mile range. Even more troubling is that Iran is working
with North Korea to extend missile capabilities into the Taepodong
class. This could double the range albeit with a smaller payload. But
how large does a nuclear warhead or a poison gas warhead have to be
to cause unacceptable casualties? These latest revelations
concerning the Iran-North Korea connection raise extremely difficult
diplomatic and political-military issues. Further complicating the
entire issue is that this is simply one strand of the web of terror
that must be addressed. Other deadly connections stretch from
Pyongyang across the globe to Venezuela and to other Islamofascist or
autocratic states like Syria, Egypt, and Libya. These challenges are
global in nature. We must address them with global solutions that
until now have been lacking. Story Credits : Lt.
Col. Gordon Cucullu writing in the FrontPageMagazine.com
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