U.S. Navy Turns Back North Korean Ship
A North Korean cargo ship suspected of violating UN sanctions turned back to
The New York Times reported June 12 that the United States suspected the ship was carrying short-range missiles to Myanmar (Burma), adding to long-standing concerns about military cooperation between the two Asian countries that may include North Korean aid to a possible illicit Myanmar nuclear program. (See ACT, July/August 2010.)
Two sets of UN sanctions prohibit
U.S. officials said that they sought cooperation from countries in the region to prevent the cargo ship M/V Light from reaching its destination and that a U.S. warship intercepted it in late May in the South China Sea to request an inspection. After repeatedly refusing requests to board, the Light turned back toward
“Since we had alerted the Singaporean and Malaysian authorities, there might have been concern [in Pyongyang] whether it could pass through the straits without action by either of those countries,” White House Coordinator for Arms Control and Weapons of Mass Destruction Terrorism Gary Samore told The Wall Street Journal June 14. Samore said
The
UN Security Council Resolution 1874, adopted by the council in June 2009 in response to a second North Korean nuclear test, also calls on states to inspect vessels suspected of violating sanctions against
Choosing to board the Light may have carried some risks, given the uncertainty regarding the vessel’s actual cargo.
Department of State spokesman Mark Toner told reporters June 13 that “the ship’s master refusing us permission to board it, as well as the fact that it turned and headed back to
In several ways, the incident echoes a June 2009 interception of a North Korean vessel by a
According to a recent unreleased report, obtained by Arms Control Today, by a UN panel overseeing sanctions against
In the report, the UN panel said that
The report also said that only a fraction of North Korean cargo vessels sailed under a foreign flag, which suggests that
The vessel that trailed the Kang Nam was named after McCain’s father and grandfather.
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