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NUKEWARS
New N. Korea constitution proclaims nuclear status
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) May 31, 2012

S. Korea police arrest two for spying for North
Seoul (AFP) May 31, 2012 - Two people including a Korean businessman in New Zealand have been arrested on suspicion of collecting intelligence on military equipment for North Korea, police said Thursday.

The pair, arrested in early May, were a 74-year-old man identified only as Lee, and Kim, 56, who acquired New Zealand citizenship and was involved in trading with North Korea.

Lee was sentenced to life in prison on espionage charges in 1972 and was released on parole in 1990, but still retains allegiance to Pyongyang, police said in a statement.

The two had collected information on military equipment and devices capable of disturbing global positioning system (GPS) signals, an investigator told AFP on condition of anonymity.

They also met a suspected North Korean agent last July in China's northeastern border city of Dandong, he said.

"We have secured evidence to prove they collected intelligence on sensitive military equipment, but it's not clear whether they have actually passed the information to the suspected agent," he said.

The South periodically detains people accused of spying for its communist neighbour.

Espionage can carry a maximum penalty of death in the South, although no one has been executed for any crime since 1997.

The latest case followed Seoul's accusations that Pyongyang had transmitted signals designed to jam GPS systems of hundreds of civilian aircraft and ships in South Korea from April 28 to May 13.

Seoul said the signals originated from the North's border city of Kaesong, forcing sea and air traffic to use other navigational equipment to avoid compromising safety.

The North rejected the South's accusations as "sheer fabrication" aimed at slandering the communist state.

The GPS jamming incident came at a time of high cross-border tensions.

The North has threatened "sacred war" against the South in retaliation for perceived insults during Pyongyang's commemoration in April of the centenary of the birth of founding leader Kim Il-Sung.


North Korea's new constitution proclaims its status as a nuclear-armed nation, complicating international efforts to persuade Pyongyang to abandon atomic weapons, analysts said Thursday.

An official website seen late Wednesday released the text of the constitution following its revision during a parliamentary session on April 13.

"National Defence Commission chairman Kim Jong-Il turned our fatherland into an invincible state of political ideology, a nuclear-armed state and an indomitable military power, paving the ground for the construction of a strong and prosperous nation," says part of the preamble.

The text was carried by the "Naenara" (My Nation) website.

The previous constitution, last revised on April 9, 2010, did not carry the term "nuclear-armed state".

Following Kim Jong-Il's death last December, the country revised the charter to consecrate achievements of the late leader, who was succeeded by his son Kim Jong-Un.

The North has been developing nuclear weapons for decades. Its official position has been that it needs them for self-defence against a US nuclear threat, but that it is willing in principle to scrap the atomic weaponry.

Under a September 2005 deal reached during six-nation negotiations, Pyongyang agreed to dismantle its nuclear programmes in return for economic and diplomatic benefits and security guarantees.

But six-party talks on implementing the deal have been stalled since December 2008. The North has staged two nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.

"This makes it clear that the North has little intention of giving up nuclear programmes under any circumstances," Cheon Sung-Whun of the state Korea Institute for National Unification told AFP.

"If there is a demand at the negotiation table to give up nuclear weapons, the North Koreans would say it would be a breach of the constitution," he said.

North Korea has long been in confrontation with the United States and its allies over its nuclear and missile programmes.

Its April 13 long-range rocket launch, purportedly a peaceful mission to put a satellite into orbit, further dimmed prospects for a diplomatic settlement.

The revised constitution "is certainly bad news for participants in the six-party talks", said Professor Kim Keun-Sik at Kyungnam University in Changwon.

"It will make it harder to persuade the North to give up nuclear weapons through diplomacy."

But Kim cautioned against reading too much into what was intended as part of a eulogy for Kim Jong-Il.

"The North has been touting its nuclear status as one of the key achievements accredited to the late leader and the new constitution factors this in," he said.

"This can hardly be interpreted as a message that it will stick to its nuclear weapons no matter what."

Kim also said the North's constitution can easily be amended once its ruler decides to do so, noting it was revised twice in as many years.

The six-party talks which began in 2003 are chaired by China and also include the two Koreas, the United States, Russia and Japan.

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N. Korea's trade reliance on China deepens
Seoul (AFP) May 31, 2012 - North Korea's trade hit a record high by value last year but its reliance on China deepened because of isolation and international sanctions, a South Korean state body said Thursday.

The North's total trade in 2011 rose 51.3 percent from a year earlier to $6.32 billion, the highest since the Korea Trade Investment Promotion Agency began compiling such data in 1990.

Exports increased 84.2 percent to $2.79 billion while imports were up 32.6 percent to $3.53 billion, the agency said.

The cash-strapped communist country exported $1.17 billion worth of coal, up 193 percent, and $400 million worth of minerals, up 61.3 percent, it said.

Trade with China in 2011 jumped 62.4 percent year-on-year to $5.63 billion -- 89 percent of its total trade compared to 78.5 percent in 2009 and 83 percent in 2010, it said.

The impoverished country has allowed Chinese companies to explore its potentially vast mineral wealth, as its dependence on Beijing grows amid the nuclear stand-off with the United States and its allies.

Other nations North Korea trades with include Russia and India.

South Korea suspended most trade links in 2010, apart from products made at a joint industrial estate, after accusing the North of sinking one of its warships with the loss of 46 lives.

"North Korea has reduced its domestic supply of coal, iron ore and other natural resources to export them to China, in an effort to secure foreign currency for major political events," the Korea Trade Investment Promotion Agency said in a statement.

The North has staged a variety of events this year to celebrate the centenary of the birth of its late founding president Kim Il-Sung.

US general admits blunder over N. Korea comments
Seoul (AFP) May 31, 2012 - A US general has admitted he was partly at fault for incorrect news reports that US special forces have been infiltrating communist North Korea.

The US military previously blamed media representatives covering a Florida conference addressed by Brigadier General Neil Tolley, commander of special forces in South Korea.

But Tolley, in a statement late Wednesday, acknowledged he "should have been clearer" in his comments to the conference last month and had not been misquoted.

Current affairs magazine The Diplomat quoted Tolley as saying soldiers from the US and South Korea had been dropped across the border for "special reconnaissance" of North Korean tunnels.

The US military, which bases 28,500 troops in South Korea, denies it has ever sent special forces into North Korea.

Tolley said his comments at a Special Operations Forces Industry Conference were intended "to provide some context for potential technical solutions to our unique requirements" in South Korea.

"In my attempt to explain where technology could help us, I spoke in the present tense. I realise I wasn't clear in how I presented my remarks, leaving the opportunity for some in the audience to draw the wrong conclusions," he said in the statement.

"To be clear, at no time have we sent special operations forces into North Korea."



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NUKEWARS
US military denies parachuting into N. Korea
Seoul (AFP) May 28, 2012
The US military Tuesday vehemently denied a media report that special forces had been parachuted into North Korea on intelligence-gathering missions, saying a source had been misquoted. Current affairs magazine The Diplomat quoted Brigadier General Neil Tolley, commander of special forces in South Korea, as saying soldiers from the US and South Korea had been dropped across the border for "s ... read more


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