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Northeast Asia Peace and Security Network DAILY REPORT For Thursday, June 4, 1998, from Berkeley, California, USA |
1. DPRK Agricultural Reform
The Associated Press (Robert H. Reid, "N.KOREA TAKES FREE MARKET STEPS," United Nations,
06/03/98) reported that, in a plan developed by the DPRK and the UN Development Program (UNDP), the
DPRK has agreed to relax central control of its agriculture industry and allow small farmers to sell some of
their crops in a free market. The DPRK is asking for US$300 million to implement the plan. Christian
Lemaire, the UNDP representative to the DPRK, stated, "It's a different picture which is emerging. [The
DPRK] acknowledge changes they have to make." Lemaire said that the reforms include allowing
agricultural cooperatives to trade among themselves, developing a system of small-scale credits, and
permitting private households to develop small-scale commerce. He added that the degree of cooperation
between DPRK and UN officials had improved dramatically over the last two years as more international
attention has been directed at the DPRK.
2. Korean-American Arrested in DPRK
The Associated Press ("PASTOR MAY FACE N.KOREA SPY CHARGES," Seoul, 06/03/98) reported
that the ROK's Joongang Daily News on Thursday quoted an unidentified ROK official as saying that Lee
Kwang-duk, a 73-year-old Korean-American Christian minister from Los Angeles, was arrested on spy
charges shortly after entering the DPRK by way of the PRC on May 20. Lee was visiting his relatives in
the Rajin-Sonbong free trade area when he was arrested.
3. ROK Financial Crisis
The Associated Press ("S KOREA'S PRES KIM ORDERS CRACKDOWN ON CONGLOMERATES,"
Seoul, 06/04/98) reported that ROK President Kim Dae-jung on Thursday ordered bankers to include the
most heavily indebted subsidiaries of chaebols in a list of companies that will be forced to close later this
month. The government had ordered the country's leading banks to come up with a list of companies so
deeply in debt they are no longer viable and then shut them down by calling in their old loans and refusing
to provide new ones. The banks on Thursday submitted a list of 20 companies to be liquidated, all of them
relatively small and none owned by a chaebol.
4. PRC Arms Sales to Pakistan
The Washington Times (Bill Gertz, "CHINESE SHIP ARMS PARTS TO PAKISTAN," 06/04/98) reported
that US intelligence agencies are tracking a Chinese ship carrying weapons materials and electronics for
Pakistan's major nuclear weapons laboratory. The arms materials include special metals and electronics
used in the production of PRC-designed anti-tank missiles made by the A.Q. Khan Research Laboratories.
An anonymous US government official was quoted as saying, "This shows the Chinese are continuing to
sell weapons with little regard for their impact on the region. China is acting as a force for destabilization."
Another unnamed US official stated, "This is part of continuing Chinese military assistance to the
Pakistanis and is for long-term use of indigenous weapons production." He added that the metal and
electronics are part of Pakistan's program to build the Baktar Shikhan anti-tank missiles, a wire-guided
missile that is virtually identical to the PRC's Red Arrow 8 guided-missile weapon. US officials said they
do not believe that the current PRC shipment is related to Pakistan's nuclear arms program.
5. PRC-Indian Relations
Reuters ("INDIA SAYS NOT SEEKING CONFRONTATION WITH CHINA," New Delhi, 06/04/98)
reported that an unnamed Indian foreign ministry spokesman said on Thursday that India was not seeking a
confrontation with the PRC. However, he added, "India has legitimate security concerns. There are
nuclear weapons and missiles in our region. The clandestine proliferation in our neighborhood has a well-
documented history." The spokesman said that India's tests posed no threat to any country and that India
was committed to the total elimination of nuclear arms in "a time-bound framework on a comprehensive,
universal, non-discriminatory and effectively verifiable basis."
6. Five-Power Meeting on South Asian Nuclear Tests
Reuters (Carol Giacomo, "ALBRIGHT LAYS OUT US GOALS AT NUCLEAR MEETING," Geneva,
06/04/98) and the Associated Press (John Diamond, "DIPLOMATS MULL INDIA-PAKISTAN NUKES,"
Geneva, 06/04/98) reported that US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on Thursday arrived in Geneva
for talks with the foreign ministers from the four other traditional nuclear powers on the recent South Asian
nuclear tests. Albright planned separate bilateral discussions with her counterparts from the PRC and
Russia ahead of the multilateral meeting. US officials said that a key concern of Albright is making sure
that traditional Russian support for India and PRC support for Pakistan do not prevent the five powers from
producing a strong joint statement. She stated, "Our message to India and Pakistan must be that there
should be no further nuclear testing; no deployment or testing of missiles; no more inflammatory rhetoric;
and no more provocative military activity." She said that the world must "walk a fine line" in condemning
the actions of India and Pakistan without isolating them.
Reuters ("POWERS TO REFUSE INDIA, PAKISTAN NUCLEAR STATUS-US," Geneva, 06/04/98)
reported that an unnamed senior U.S. official said that the five traditional nuclear powers will reject calls
for India and Pakistan to be formally acknowledged as nuclear states when they issue a joint communique
following their meeting in Geneva. He added that the communique is also expected to "dramatize" the
problem of the disputed region of Kashmir and urge that "something be done about it in a more clear and
explicit way than has ever been done before." However, he added that while the five are willing to "help
solve this problem," that is expected to come in an offer to work on confidence-building measures between
the two parties rather than a direct mediation role.
The United States Information Service (William B. Reinckens, "EXPERTS AGREE FURTHER
NUCLEAR TESTS SHOULD STOP ON SUBCONTINENT," Washington, 06/03/98) reported that a panel
of South Asian and arms control analysts convened by the Center for Strategic and International Studies
(CSIS) on June 3 agreed on the need for a "cooling-off period" between India and Pakistan and expressed
hope that the five permanent members of the UN will be able to make progress in that direction. Dr. Gary
Samore, Special Assistant to the President and National Security Council Director for Nonproliferation,
stated, "The Perm 5 can use their particular diplomatic advantages to pursue a common objective." He
added that inducing India and Pakistan to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) "would be a
very effective first step." Samore argued, "The need is to reinforce the perception that India and Pakistan
will suffer a net loss [through nuclear testing]. It will tarnish their image and put them in the International
doghouse." Kurt Campbell, deputy assistant secretary of Defense for East Asian and Pacific Affairs,
stated, "We have entered into a new era in the discussion about nuclear matters." He added that for
diplomacy to work in the Indo-Pakistan nuclear context, it has to be worked out through coalition building
and that a unilateral approach would not work. US Senator Charles S. Robb, the ranking Democrat on the
Foreign Relations subcommittee on Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, said that "over the longer term,
I believe a series of confidence building measures, designed to restore a semblance of order and stability in
the region, ought to be aggressively pursued by the [Clinton] administration to stem the tide of growing
discord between India and Pakistan."
7. Pakistani Nuclear Policies
Dow Jones Newswires ("PAKISTAN FOREIGN MIN WANTS MEDIATION IN INDIA TALKS -
KYODO," Islamabad, 06/04/98) reported that Pakistani Foreign Minister Gohar Ayub Khan told Japan's
Kyodo News Agency Thursday that Pakistan would prefer talks with India on the Kashmir issue through
mediation by a third party rather than bilaterally. Khan stated, "Our experience of bilateral talks with India
is not good. India has a history of breaching bilateral agreements." He said Japan was in a good position
to play a role in the talks. Khan also ruled out the possibility of Pakistan unilaterally signing the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and noted Pakistani intelligence reports that India was planning to carry
out another nuclear test. He said that Pakistan has not yet reached a decision about fitting nuclear
warheads to missiles but said the devices that were tested May 28 and 30 were compatible with Pakistan's
delivery system. He also denied reports that Pakistan had received cooperation and technology from the
PRC and the DPRK for its missile and nuclear program.
8. US-Russian Confidence-Building Measures
The Associated Press ("U.S. MISSILE CHIEF TOURS RUSSIAN WEAPONS SITES," Moscow,
06/04/98) reported that US General Eugene Habiger and Russian Colonel General Vladimir Yakovlev, the
commanders of their countries' respective strategic nuclear forces, toured a Siberian missile facility
together on Thursday as part of a week-long confidence-building trip. The tour follows a similar visit to
Russia by Habiger last October, and a visit to the US by Yakovlev in March. The trips are designed to
foster trust between the two strategic commands.
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The Center for Global Communications, Tokyo,
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