Order Code RL30613
North Korea: Terrorism List Removal?
Updated July 10, 2008
Larry Niksch
Specialist in Asian Affairs
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division

North Korea: Terrorism List Removal?
Summary
The issue of North Korea’s inclusion on the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting
countries has arisen twice in recent U.S.-North Korean diplomacy. In 2000, North
Korea demanded that the Clinton Administration remove North Korea from the
terrorism-support list before North Korea would send a high level envoy to
Washington and accept the Clinton Administration’s proposal to begin negotiations
with the United States over the North Korean missile program. In 2003, multilateral
negotiations involving six governments began over North Korea’s nuclear programs
in the wake of North Korea’s actions to terminate its obligations under the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty and the 1994 U.S.-North Korean Agreed Framework. In
the six party talks, North Korea demanded that in return for a North Korean “freeze”
of its plutonium nuclear program, the United States agree to a number of U.S.
concessions, including removing North Korea from the U.S. terrorism-support list.
On June 26, 2008, President Bush announced that he was officially notifying
Congress of his intent to remove North Korea from the list of state sponsors of
terrorism after the 45 calender-day notification period to Congress as required by
U.S. law. The White House stated that North Korea would thus be removed on
August 11, 2008. This announcement was part of the measures the Bush
Administration took on June 26 to implement a nuclear agreement that it negotiated
with North Korea in September 2007 and finalized details of in April 2008 at a U.S.-
North Korean meeting in Singapore. The President also announced that he was
immediately lifting sanctions on North Korea under the U.S. Trading with the Enemy
Act. North Korea’s obligations under this nuclear agreement are to allow the
disabling of its plutonium facility at Yongbyon and present to the United States and
other government in the six party talks a declaration of its nuclear programs. North
Korea submitted its declaration on June 26, 2008.
The Bush Administration increasingly took the position that the issue of North
Korea’s kidnapping of Japanese citizens was not linked to removing North Korea
from the terrorism list, from the standpoint of U.S. law or policy. The Japanese
government objected to this position. The State Department continued to declare that
North Korea had not committed a terrorist act since 1987. However, reports from
French, Japanese, South Korean and Israeli sources described recent North Korean
programs to provide arms and training to Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Tamil Tigers
in Sri Lanka, two groups on the U.S. list of international terrorist organizations.
Moreover, a large body of reports describe a long-standing, collaborative relationship
between North Korea and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.
For Congress to prevent President Bush from removing North Korea from the
terrorism support list, it would have to pass legislation (not resolutions) that would
be subject to a presidential veto.

Contents
President Bush’s Announcement of North Korea’s Delisting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
U.S.-North Korean Negotiations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
U.S. Responses: The Clinton Administration in 2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
U.S. Responses: The Bush Administration in 2002-2004 . . . . . . . . . . . 4
U.S. Responses: The Bush Administration Moves Toward
Removal, October 2006-May 2008 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Terrorist State Activity Designations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
State Sponsors/Supporters List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Nations Not Fully Cooperating Category . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Adding and Removing Countries on the List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Rationale and Background for DPRK Retention on the Two Lists . . . . . . . . . . . 15
North Korea Previously Cited for Possible Removal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Prospects for Removal Are Set Back . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Process for Removal Moves Forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
New Reports of Support of Terrorist Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Hezbollah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Tamil Tigers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Iranian Revolutionary Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Policy Implications of Removing North Korea from the List of
State Sponsors of Terrorism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

North Korea: Terrorism List Removal?
President Bush’s Announcement of
North Korea’s Delisting
On June 26, 2008, the North Korean government and the Bush Administration
took measures to implement a nuclear agreement that they originally negotiated in
September 2007 and finalized details of in April 2008 at a meeting of the chief U.S.
and North Korean negotiators in Singapore.1 As part of this, President Bush
announced that he had sent to Congress notification of his intent to remove North
Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism after 45 calender days. Under U.S.
law, the President is required to notify Congress 45 days before removing a country
from the list. If Congress does not approve legislation to block North Korea’s
removal during the 45-day period, the President is free to remove North Korea. Any
congressional legislation to block removal would have to be signed by the President
and would be subject to a presidential veto. The White House said that the
President’s intention is to remove North Korea on August 11, 2008, at the end of the
45-day notification period.2
The U.S.-North Korean nuclear agreement consists of two obligations each that
North Korea and the Bush Administration have agreed to fulfill. North Korea is to
allow a process of disablement of its plutonium nuclear facilities at Yongbyon. The
disablement process began in October 2007. The Bush Administration claims that
eight of eleven components of the disablement process have been completed and that
close to 50% of nuclear fuel rods in the Yongbyon nuclear reactor have been
removed.3 North Korea’s second obligation is to provide the United States and other
members of the six party talks on North Korea’s nuclear program with a “complete
and correct” declaration of nuclear programs.
The United States’ two obligations under the agreement are to terminate
economic sanctions on North Korea under the U.S. Trading with the Enemy Act and
remove North Korea from U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism.
1 Bush OKs Singapore agreement: WH [White House], Yonhap News Agency, April 14,
2008. Melanie Lee and Daryl Loo, Nuclear talks with N. Korea make progress, US says,
Reuters News, April 8, 2008.
2 White House Press Spokesman, Fact Sheet: Presidential Action on State Sponsor of
Terrorism (SST) and the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA), June 26, 2008.
3 Ibid.

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Background
U.S.-North Korean Negotiations
Three Stages in Diplomacy over the Terrorism List. The issue of North
Korea’s inclusion on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism has been in U.S.-
North Korean diplomacy since 2000, but three stages are of particular importance:
the first in 2000 in Clinton Administration-North Korean negotiations; the second
during the 2003-2004 Six Party negotiations over the North Korean nuclear issue;
and the third in the diplomacy around the Six Party nuclear agreement of February
2007. Until 2000, the core element of U.S.-North Korean diplomacy was the Agreed
Framework, which Washington and Pyongyang signed in October 1994. It dealt
primarily with North Korea’s nuclear program, but U.S. obligations specified in the
Agreed Framework included economic and diplomatic measures. However, the issue
of removal of North Korea from the U.S. terrorism list was omitted from the
Agreement. The issue appears not to have been a major object of the negotiations in
1994.
In October 1999, the Clinton Administration unveiled the Perry Initiative toward
North Korea. Formulated under the direction of William Perry, former Secretary of
Defense, the Perry initiative primarily sought a new round of U.S.-North Korean
negotiations over North Korea’s missile program. The Perry Initiative report of
October 1999 stated that if North Korea agreed to a “verifiable cessation” of its
missile program, the United States would provide a series of economic and
diplomatic benefits to North Korea leading to normalization of U.S.-North Korean
relations.4
The Clinton Administration sought an early visit of a high level North Korean
official to Washington to obtain substantive negotiations.5 North Korea, however,
began to demand several pre-conditions for a high level visit. Beginning in February
2000, one of these was removal of North Korea from the U.S. list of terrorism-
supporting countries. North Korea reportedly persisted in this demand well into the
summer of 2000 before finally relenting. The high level envoy visited Washington
in October 2000.
The terrorism list issue receded until 2003 when a new round of U.S.-North
Korean diplomacy ensued. This round was precipitated by the Bush Administration’s
assertion that North Korea admitted in October 2002 to U.S. diplomats that it was
operating a secret uranium enrichment program. The Administration declared the
secret program a violation of the Agreed Framework and began to end U.S.
obligations under the Agreed Framework. North Korea retaliated by reopening
nuclear facilities that had been frozen under the Agreed Framework, expelling
monitors of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and withdrawing from the
4 Review of United States Policy Toward North Korea. Report by Dr. William J. Perry,
Special Advisor to the President and the Secretary of State. October 12, 1999.
5 Pomfret, John. “North Korea Threatens To Skip Talks.” Washington Post. March 29,
2000. p. A20.

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Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Multilateral negotiations began in April 2003
hosted by China and ultimately involving six governments (the United States, North
Korea, South Korea, China, Russia, and Japan). At six party talks in August 2003,
North Korea demanded that in return for North Korean concessions on the nuclear
issue, the United States agree to a number of U.S. concessions, including removing
North Korea from the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting countries. North Korea made
its demand more specific in December 2003 when it issued a revised proposal
centered on a “freeze” of North Korea’s plutonium nuclear programs (but not the
uranium enrichment program). This proposal restated North Korean demands for
multiple concessions in return for a freeze. Removal from the terrorism support list
was near the top of the list.6 North Korea reiterated its demand at the six party
meetings in February and June 2004 in the context of its freeze proposal.
The third stage began after North Korea’s test of an atomic bomb in October
2006. Bilateral meetings between Assistant Secretary of State Christopher and North
Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Gye-gwan in November 2006 and January 2007
contained discussions of the terrorism list issue as the two diplomats laid the
groundwork for the nuclear agreement that the six parties announced on February 13,
2007. That agreement created a “working group” on North Korea-U.S. normalization
of relations. The agreement stated
The DPRK and the U.S. will start bilateral talks aimed at resolving bilateral
issues and moving toward full diplomatic relations. The U.S. will begin the
process of removing the designation of the DPRK as a state sponsor of terrorism,
and advance the process of terminating the application of the Trading with the
Enemy Act with respect to the DPRK.
U.S. Responses: The Clinton Administration in 2000. The Clinton
Administration reportedly presented to North Korea in February 2000 four steps that
North Korea would have to take to be removed from the terrorism list: (1) issue a
written guarantee that it no longer is engaged in terrorism; (2) provide evidence that
it has not engaged in any terrorist act in the past six months; (3) join international
anti-terrorism agreements; and (4) address issues of past support of terrorism.7 In
consulting U.S. allies, South Korea stated that the United States need not consider
North Korean terrorism against South Korea in responding to North Korea’s demand
and that the Kim Dae-jung administration in Seoul favored removal of North Korea
from the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting countries.8 Japan, however, strongly urged
the Clinton Administration to make a redress of North Korean terrorist acts against
Japan conditions for removing North Korea from the list. Japan specifically cited
North Korea’s kidnapping of at least ten Japanese citizens and North Korea’s
6 North Korean Foreign Ministry statement on talks. Reuters News Agency, December 9,
2003.
7 Agence France-Presse (Hong Kong) report, February 8, 2000. Yonhap News Agency
(Seoul) report, February 8, 2000.
8 ROK to press US to remove DPRK from terrorism list. Korea Herald, internet version,
June 21, 2000.

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harboring of Japanese Red Army terrorists since the 1970s.9 The U.S. State
Department had cited North Korea’s harboring of Japanese Red Army terrorists as
a reason for North Korea’s inclusion on the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting states.
A State Department official stated on April 25, 2000, that the United States considers
“resolving this issue as an important step in addressing [U.S.] concerns about North
Korean support of terrorism.”10 Moreover, according to informed sources, U.S.
officials began to raise the kidnapping issue with the North Korea in negotiations
over the terrorism list.
Japan intensified diplomacy on the terrorism issue in September and October
2000 as the United States prepared to receive the high ranking North Korean official
and as Japan prepared for bilateral normalization talks with North Korea. Japan
urged the Clinton Administration to raise Japan’s concerns over terrorism in the high
level U.S.-North Korean exchanges of October 2000 and not to remove North Korea
from the terrorism list.11 The visit to Washington of North Korean military leader,
Jo Myong-rok on October 9-12, 2000, produced two general U.S.-North Korean
statements opposing terrorism. However, the State Department’s North Korea policy
coordinator, Wendy Sherman, said on October 12 that Secretary Albright’s planned
visit to Pyongyang did not mean that the Clinton Administration would remove North
Korea from the terrorism list. North Korea, she said, “knows what it needs to do.”12
The impact of Japan’s entreaties were demonstrated during Albright’s visit to
North Korea. In the first ever meeting between an American official and North
Korean leader, Kim Jong-il, Albright raised the issue of the kidnapped Japanese. She
reported to Japanese Foreign Minister Kono Yohei that in her meetings with Kim
Jong-il, “I brought up the [abduction] issue time and again. I told him that this issue
was important not only to Japan but also to the United States as well.” Kono
reportedly expressed satisfaction, saying “She seems to have thought about Japan.”13
The Clinton Administration thus decided in late 2000 to give Japan’s concerns
over terrorism a higher priority in U.S. negotiations with North Korea over the U.S.
terrorism list. This, in effect, lowered the priority of South Korea’s position in U.S.
policy.
U.S. Responses: The Bush Administration in 2002-2004. There were
at least three components to the Bush Administration’s policy regarding North
Korea’s inclusion on the terrorism-supporting list after the Agreed Framework
collapsed and the six party talks began in 2003. The first was the U.S. response to
9 U.S. to question DPRK on kidnappings of Japanese nationals. JIJI News Agency (Tokyo)
report, February 16, 2000.
10 U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing [by James P. Rubin], April 25, 2000. p. 8.
11 Varied Aspects of Japan-North Korean Relations. Mainichi Shimbun (Nikkei Telecom
Database version), October 28, 2000. Jiji Kokkoku Column. Asahi Shimbun (internet
version), October 8, 2000.
12 Carter, Tom. Clinton Plans First-ever Presidential Trip to North Korea. Washington
Times
, October 13, 2000. p. A1.
13 Varied Aspects of Japan-North Korean Relations, Mainichi Shimbun, October 28, 2000.

CRS-5
North Korea’s demand at the six party talks for removal from the list. A second was
the raising by U.S. officials of the danger that North Korea would provide nuclear,
biological, or chemical weapons to terrorist groups like Al Qaeda. The third was the
emphasis given to the Japanese kidnapping in State Department statements on North
Korea’s inclusion on the list of terrorism-supporting countries.
Until June 2004, the Bush Administration took the position that it would not
discuss issues in U.S.-North Korean relations, including the terrorism-support list,
until North Korea agreed to and took concrete steps to dismantle it nuclear programs.
In line with this stance, the Administration refused to submit any comprehensive U.S.
proposal at the six party talks. The Administration’s position changed in June 2004,
apparently because of pressure from U.S. allies, Japan and South Korea, and
heightened criticism of the Administration’s position from China. At the six party
meeting in June 2004, the Administration proposed a detailed plan in which North
Korea would freeze its nuclear programs and submit to international verification
during a three-month preparatory period followed by a full dismantlement of all
nuclear programs. Once North Korea had met the requirements of the preparatory
period, the United States would begin negotiations with North Korea on other issues,
including the terrorism-support list.14
The Bush Administration has linked North Korea’s kidnapping of Japanese
citizens to the six party talks and to the terrorism-support list. When the Bush
Administration took office in 2001, it reportedly assured Japan, including the
families of suspected kidnapping victims, that the United States would continue to
raise the kidnapping issue with North Korea and would not remove North Korea
from the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting countries.15 In the six party talks, U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly stated several times to the North Korean
delegates that North Korea should settle the kidnapping issue with Japan.
In April 2004, the State Department emphasized the kidnapping of Japanese in
its justification for North Korean’s inclusion on the U.S. list of terrorism-supporting
countries, as part of the Department’s annual report on international terrorism.16 The
State Department’s Patterns of Global Terrorism 2003 described Kim Jong-il’s
admission of North Korean kidnapping during his meeting with Japanese Prime
Minister Koizumi in September 2002 and that Japan-North Korea negotiations over
the issue were continuing. Coffer Black, the State Department’s top counterterrorism
official, stated upon the release of the report that the kidnapping issue was a key
factor in the report’s designation of North Korea as a state sponsor of terrorism.17
During this period, President Bush, Vice President Cheney, and National Security
14 Philip P. Pan and Glenn Kessler, U.S. revises proposal at North Korea nuclear talks,
Washington Post, June 24, 2004, p. A17. See CRS Report RL33590, North Korea’s Nuclear
Weapons Development and Diplomacy
, by Larry A. Niksch.
15 National Association for the Rescue of Japanese Kidnaped by North Korea. Report of
Mission to the U.S. from February 25 to March 3, 2001.
16 U.S. Department of State. Patterns of Global Terrorism 2003. p. 92.
17 Washington links N. Korea abductions of Japanese with terrorism, Yonhap News Agency,
April 30, 2004.

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Adviser Condoleezza Rice made public statements pledging to support Japan. At his
summit meeting with Prime Minister Koizumi in May 2003, President Bush stated:
“Abduction is an abominable act. The United States supports Japan completely until
we find out the whereabouts of each and every Japanese citizen who has been
abducted by North Korea.”18 Condoleezza Rice described the kidnapping issue as “a
priority also for the United States, that we abhor what the North Koreans have
done.”19 In April 2004, Vice President Cheney said in Tokyo that Americans shared
Japan’s “outrage” over North Korea’s kidnappings and that the Bush Administration
supported Japan’s demand for a “resolution of all the issues surrounding the criminal
abduction of your citizens by the regime in Pyongyang.”20
In mid-2002, Japan and North Korea went into secret negotiations regarding the
kidnapping issue. In September 2002, Prime Minister Koizumi Junichiro flew to
Pyongyang where North Korean leader Kim Jong-il admitted that North Korea had
abducted 13 Japanese citizens; of these, he claimed that 8 had died and that 5 were
alive. The five subsequently went to Japan. In May 2004, Koizumi again traveled
to Pyongyang and secured the release of 6 children of the 5 Japanese. However, the
issue quickly reached an impasse. Japan harbored doubts about the truthfulness of
North Korea’s claim that 8 of the 13 kidnapped Japanese were dead and that the
remains of all 8 had been washed away by floods and were not available for
identification. In 2006, the Japanese government added 3 other missing Japanese
citizens to its list of Japanese kidnapped by North Korea. In Japan, publicized claims
also emerged that North Korea had kidnapped up to several hundred Japanese.
The Bush Administration supported Koizumi’s efforts but reportedly pressed
the Japanese government not to reciprocate with financial aid to North Korea before
the nuclear and missile issues with North Korea were resolved. The Administration
urged Koizumi prior to each visit to press North Korea for policy changes on the
nuclear issue. Japan reportedly complied with the U.S. urgings.21
These urgings pointed up the overall importance of Japan to U.S. policy toward
North Korea and thus the broader influence of the kidnapping issue. As a participant
in the six party talks, Japan was viewed as crucial in any settlement of the nuclear or
missile issues that involved reciprocal economic or financial benefits to North Korea.
As far back as the Perry initiative in 1999-2000, U.S. officials acted on the
assumption that any settlement of the nuclear and missile issues with North Korea
18 Growing US distrust of South Korea, Tokyo Sentaku, June 2003, p. 6-9.
19 Bush’s National Security Adviser Rice says DPRK abduction issue priority topic,
Mainichi Shimbun (internet version), May 31, 2003.
20 Bill Gertz, “Cheney backs Koizumi on Iraq stance,” Washington Times, April 13, 2004,
p. A3.
21 “Japan, U.S. agree to put pressure on Pyongyang.” Yonhap New Agency, May 1, 2004.
“Japan PM says Bush supportive on North Korea trip.” Reuters News Agency, September
12, 2002. Howard W. French, “Japan-North Korea talks conclude with deep splits,” New
York Times
, October 31, 2002, p. A13. James Brooke, “North Korea’s A-arms project
jeopardizes aid, Japan says,” New York Times, October 22, 2002, p. A6.

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would require a major Japanese financial contribution.22 Japan promised North
Korea billions of dollars in aid as part of a normalization of relations, but Japan
specified that normalization depends on a settlement of the nuclear, missile, and
kidnapping issues.23 The Bush Administration pressed Japan to condition aid first
to the nuclear issue.
At the six party talks in June 2004, the Bush Administration put forth a detailed
settlement proposal under which North Korea would receive heavy oil in the initial
stage of a settlement process, financed by Japan and South Korea. The United States
also offered North Korea negotiations on resolving North Korea’s broader energy and
electricity needs, which also undoubtedly would require a substantial Japanese
financial input. On the other hand, the Bush Administration discussed with Japan the
imposition of economic sanctions on North Korea. Japan joined the Proliferation
Security Initiative in 2003, which President Bush proposed to stifle the proliferation
activities of states like North Korea. In 2006, Japan imposed strong economic
sanctions on North Korea when the United Nations Security Council approved
sanctions in response to North Korea’s missile tests of July 2006 and atomic bomb
test of October 2006.
U.S. Responses: The Bush Administration Moves Toward Removal,
October 2006-May 2008. Although the Bush Administration sought and obtained
U.N. Security Council sanctions after North Korea’s atomic bomb test in October
2006, it changed its policy on the North Korean nuclear issue in more fundamental
ways — one of which was to bring the terrorism list issue more directly into
negotiations. The change was directed by Secretary of State Condaleeza Rice and
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill. There have been three fundamental
changes in Bush Administration policy since the North Korean nuclear test that have
implications for the terrorism list issue. Tactically, the Administration abandoned
its opposition to bilateral talks with North Korea and actively sought bilateral
meetings with Pyongyang. Moreover, Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill
used these meetings, in late November 2006 and mid-January 2007, to negotiate
actively the details of the six party agreement that was announced on February 13,
2007.
The second change under the Rice-Hill strategy has been in the U.S. policy
objective toward North Korea’s nuclear programs and weapons. Dismantlement of
Pyongyang’s nuclear programs and weapons remains as the official Bush
Administration policy goal, but the February 2007 Six Party Agreement says little
about dismantlement. The two phases outlined in the agreement focus on freezing
North Korean nuclear facilities in the first phase, to be completed in 60 days, then
“disablement of all existing nuclear facilities” and disclosure by North Korea of “all
nuclear programs” in the second phase that has no time deadline.” The February
2007 agreement thus signals an apparent policy objective of containment of North
22 Niksch, Larry A., North Korea and Terrorism: The Yokita Megumi Factor. The Korean
Journal of Defense Analysis
. Spring 2002. pp. 14-16.
23 For ex-Prime Minister Koizumi’s statement of these conditions, see Kim, Jack and Kitano,
Masayuki. Japan, S. Korea urge N. Korea to move on crisis. Reuters News Agency, July
22, 2004.

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Korea’s nuclear programs and nuclear weapons development, limiting their size and
scope. The Bush Administration continues to cite full nuclear dismantlement as its
goal for 2008. However, in the limited number of months left of an actively
functioning Bush Administration (prior to the U.S. presidential election campaign
starting in September 2008), the most realistic prospect of success is negotiating and
implementing the two phases of this Six Party Agreement or at least a partial
implementation. The dismantlement issue likely will be left for the U.S.
Administration that comes into office in January 2009. Consequently, this scenario
appears to have influenced the Bush Administration to delink total dismantlement as
a primary condition for removal of North Korea from the terrorism list and to link
removal with lesser North Korean steps in the February 2007 agreement, particularly
“disablement” of the Yongbyon plutonium nuclear facilities and a declaration of its
nuclear programs.
Thus, the third change under the Rice-Hill strategy has been to link removal
from the terrorism exclusively to a successful North Korean implementation of its
obligations under Phase Two of the February 2007 nuclear agreement. Beginning
with the Hill-Kim Kye-gwan meeting of November 28-29, 2006, and especially in
their meeting in Berlin in January 2007, Hill reportedly said that the Bush
Administration would remove North Korea from the U.S. list of state sponsors of
terrorism if North Korea dismantled its nuclear programs.24 In the February 2007
agreement, the Administration agreed to begin the process of removing the DPRK
from the list.25
North Korea also may have increased the incentive for the Bush Administration
to strengthen this linkage. The South Korean newspaper, JongAng Ilbo, quoted “a
diplomatic source knowledgeable on the New York talks” between Hill and Kim
Kye-gwan on March 5-6, 2007, that Kim asserted that if the United States took steps
to normalize relations, North Korea could disable the Yongbyon nuclear installations
within a year (i.e., March 2008). Kim specifically mentioned as a key step the
removal of North Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism.26 Kim repeated
this during the six party meeting in July 2007.
As the Bush Administration moved toward this exclusive linkage, it began to
separate the Japanese kidnapping issue from the terrorism-support list. During
Japanese Prime Minister Abe’s visit to the White House in May 2007, Secretary of
State Rice told him that the Bush Administration had no legal obligation to link the
24 What ‘new ideas’ did Washington offer Pyongyang? Chosun Ilbo (Seoul, internet
version), December 4, 2006. U.S. offered to remove N. Korea from terror list — South
Korea. Dow Jones International News, December 26, 2006. Arimoto Takashi, Six-party
talks: Japan, PRC concerned about US-DPRK pre-talk coordination becoming regularized,
suspect ‘secret deal’, Sankei Shimbun (internet version), August 14, 2007.
25 See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/82736.htm] at p. 147.
26 Yi Sang-il and Chin Se-ku. Yongbyon nuclear facility can be disabled within a year.
JongAng Ilbo (internet version), March 13, 2007.

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kidnapping and terrorism list issues.27 State Department officials subsequently
emphasized this “no legal obligation” position but also that Hill had urged North
Korea to negotiate progress on the kidnapping issue with Japan.28 In a press
conference with foreign correspondents on August 30, 2007, President Bush evaded
a direct answer to a reporter’s question whether progress on the kidnapping issue was
a condition for North Korea’s removal; Bush instead repeated his concern over the
kidnappings and his feelings when he received the families of kidnapped Japanese
at the White House.29
In September 2007 meetings between Assistant Secretary of State Hill and
North Korean negotiator Kim Gye-gwan, they agreed to complete the implementation
of Phase Two of the February 2007 nuclear agreement by December 31, 2007,
including North Korea’s obligations to disable the Yongbyon installations and
declare its nuclear programs. Kim Gye-gwan and North Korea’s Foreign Ministry
asserted that Hill had stated that part of this implementation would be the removal
of North Korea from the terrorism list.30 Hill did not confirm this, but it has been
reported widely and believed by many observers that he made a specific commitment
to Kim Gye-gwan regarding the terrorism list.31
On October 3, 2007, the six parties issued a statement on the implementation
of Phase Two, which included a target deadline of December 31, 2007. The
statement implied a U.S. commitment to remove North Korea as part of the
implementation process. Referencing the U.S. commitments in the February 2007
nuclear agreement to begin the process of removing North Korea from the list of state
sponsors of terrorism and the Trading with the Enemy Act, the statement read that
“the United States will fulfill its commitments to the DPRK in parallel with the
DPRK’s actions based on consensus reached at the meetings on the working group
on normalization of DPRK-U.S. relations.” Christopher Hill stated at an October 25
congressional hearing that fulfilling these commitments “will depend on the DPRK’s
fulfillment of its Second-Phase commitments on providing a complete and correct
declaration and disabling its nuclear facilities, as well as on satisfaction of legal
requirements ... set forth in U.S. law.”32
27 Abductions by N. Korea not related to US terrorist list, Chosun Ilbo (internet version),
May 14, 2007.
28 Pyongyang fallout, The Wall Street Journal Asia, November 16, 2007, p. 12. Statement
by Tom Casey, State Department spokesman.
29 The White House, Roundtable Interview of the President by Foreign Print Media, August
30, 3007.
30 Choe Sang-hun and David E. Sanger, North Korea claims U.S. will remove sanctions,
International Herald Tribune, September 4, 2007, p. 5.
31 Japanese abductions unlikely to stop U.S. from removing N. Korea, Yonhap News
Agency, September 6, 2007. Ser Myo-ja, Kang Chan-ho, Cheong Yong-whan, North: US
ready to lift sanctions, adjust terror list, JoongAng Ilbo (internet version), September 3,
2007.
32 Statement of Christopher R. Hill, Assistant Secretary of State, before the House
Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific and the Global
(continued...)

CRS-10
The October 3, 2007, six party statement represented what might be termed a
“two for two deal” between the Bush Administration and North Korea. The United
States and North Korea undertook two reciprocal obligations toward each other.
North Korea agreed to allow disablement of its Yongbyon nuclear installations and
provide the other six parties with a “complete and correct” declaration of its nuclear
programs. The Bush Administration agreed to reciprocate by removing North Korea
from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism and from the sanctions provisions of
the U.S. Trading with the Enemy Act that have been applied to North Korea since the
Korean War.
The two sides then negotiated the implementation of this deal; they reached an
important agreement in Singapore in April 2008. The Bush Administration has
expressed satisfaction that North Korea has allowed a significant disabling of the
Yongbyon installations. However, implementation of the “complete and correct”
declaration of nuclear programs has been held up by North Korea’s unwillingness to
disclose elements of its plutonium program, its uranium enrichment program, and its
proliferation activities with Syria. The Syria issue arose when Israel bombed a
facility in Syria that the Bush Administration and most informed experts concluded
was a nuclear reactor under construction with North Korean assistance.33 The Bush
Administration has dealt with the declaration issue by lowering the requirements for
the information that North Korea must supply in the declaration, limiting the
requirements to certain elements of North Korea’s plutonium program.34
The Bush Administration reaffirmed its intension to proceed with its two
obligations, including removal of North Korea from the list of state sponsors of
terrorism, once its reaches an agreement on a declaration with North Korea and the
six parties approve the declaration.35 The State Department’s annual Country
Reports on Terrorism
, issued in April 2008, stated: “As part of the six-party talks
process, the United States reaffirmed its intent to fulfill its commitments regarding
the removal of the designation of the DPRK as a state sponsor of terrorism in parallel
with the DPRK’s actions on denuclearization and in accordance with criteria set forth
in U.S. law.” On January 22, 2008, the State Department’s coordinator for counter-
terrorism stated that “it appears that North Korea has complied with those criteria”
for removal from the terrorism support list because North Korea had not committed
an act of terrorism for the past six months. He added that despite the unresolved
32 (...continued)
Environment, and Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade, October 25,
2007.
33 David E. Sanger, Video links North Koreans to Syria reactor, U.S. says, New York Times,
April 24, 2008, p. A16. Arshad Mohammed and Tabassum Zakaria, White House: North
Korea gave Syria nuclear help, Reuters News, April 24, 2008.
34 Demetri Sevastopulo, US softens demands on North Korea, Financial Times, April 14,
2008, p. 6. Nicholas Kralev and Jon Ward, N. Korea’s nuclear past stays sealed,
Washington Times, April 18, 2008, p. A1.
35 Abduction not an issue for terror list removal: Vershbow, Yonhap News Agency, May 14,
2008. Statement by U.S. Ambassador to South Korea, Alexander Vershbow. Nicholas
Kralev, N. Korea told not to delay deal, Washington Times, March 19, 2008, p. A1.

CRS-11
Japanese kidnapping issue, “we think that even with that on the table that they still
comply with the ... delisting criteria.”36
A potential obstacle to the Administration’s plan is a provision of H.R. 5916,
the Security Assistance and Arms Export Control Reform Act of 2008, passed by the
House of Representatives in May 2008. It provided that North Korea shall not be
removed from the list until the President certifies to Congress that North Korea is no
longer engaged in the transfer of nuclear technology to Iran, Syria, or any country that
is a state sponsor of terrorism.
Terrorist State Activity Designations
In April 2007, the Department of State released its annual global terrorism
report to Congress, Country Reports on Terrorism, 2006 [Country Reports, 2006].37
North Korea is prominently mentioned in the yearly report, which include data on
terrorist trends and activity worldwide and serves as the basis for the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terrorism that are subject to U.S. sanctions. Emerging, or ongoing,
problem areas “areas of concern” are identified as well.
In addition to data on terrorist trends, groups, and activities worldwide, Country
Reports provide a description as to why countries are on the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terrorism that are subject to U.S. sanctions. Thus, included in Country
Reports
are detailed data on the five countries currently on the “terrorism list”: Cuba,
Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria.38 U.S. Administration officials maintain that
36 Arshad Mohammed, N. Korea seems to meet US criteria on terror listing, Reuters News,
January 22, 2008.
37 Country Reports (formerly Patterns of Global Terrorism; hereinafter, “Patterns”) is an
annual report to Congress required by Title 22 of the United States Code, Section 2656f(a).
See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/].
38 The degree of support for, or involvement in, terrorist activities typically varies
dramatically from nation to nation. For 2005 and 2006, of the five on the U.S. terrorism list,
Iran continued to be characterized on one extreme of the spectrum of terrorist list states as
an active supporter of terrorism: a nation that uses terrorism as an instrument of policy or
warfare beyond its borders. Closer to the middle of the spectrum is Syria. Although not
formally detected in an active role since 1986, Country Reports asserts that the Assad
regime reportedly uses groups in Syria and Lebanon to export terror into Israel and allows
groups to train in territory under its control. On the less active end of the spectrum, one
might place countries such as Cuba or North Korea, which at the height of the Cold War
were more active, but in recent years have seemed to settle for a more passive role of
granting ongoing safe haven to previously admitted terrorists. Also at the less active end of
the spectrum, and arguably falling off it, is Sudan, which reportedly has stepped up counter-
terrorism cooperation with the United States. An area of concern for some observers is the
impact DPRK removal from the state sponsors list may have on prospects for Cuba’s
removal.
Note that Libya was certified by the Secretary of State as being eligible for removal
from the list on May 12, 2006. See Presidential Determination No. 2006-14, May 12, 2006,
(continued...)

CRS-12
the practice of designating and reporting on the activities of the state sponsors of
terrorism list and concomitant sanctions policy has contributed significantly to a
reduction in the overt — and apparently overall — activity level of states supporting
terrorism in the past decade. Libya and Sudan are frequently cited as examples of
such success, but to date, not North Korea. North Korea is also included on a
concomitant list of states “not fully cooperating” with U.S. anti-terrorism efforts.
This list includes the five state sponsors of terrorism currently on the Department of
State’s list and Afghanistan.
State Sponsors/Supporters List
North Korea remains one of five countries currently on the list that the Secretary
of State maintains have “repeatedly provided support for acts of international
terrorism.”39 Data supporting this list are drawn from the intelligence community.
Listed countries are subject to severe U.S. export controls — particularly of dual-use
technology and selling them military equipment is prohibited.40 Providing foreign
aid under the Foreign Assistance Act is also prohibited. Section 6(j) of the 1979
Export Administration Act stipulates that a validated license shall be required for
export of controlled items and technology to any country on the list, and that the
Secretaries of Commerce and State must notify the House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, and the Senate Committees on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, and
Foreign Relations at least 30 days before issuing any validated license for goods and
services that could significantly enhance a nation’s military capability or its ability
to support terrorism as required by this act.41 In addition, Section 509(a) of the 1986
Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Antiterrorism Act (P.L. 99-399) bars export of
munitions list items to countries on the terrorism list.
A restriction potentially related to North Korea is found in Section 1621 of the
International Financial Institutions Act (P.L. 95-118). Entitled “Opposition to
Assistance by International Financial Institutions to Terrorist States,” Section 1621
states: “The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States executive
director of each international financial institution to use the voice and vote of the
United States to oppose any loan or other use of the funds of the respective institution
to or for a country for which the Secretary of State has made a determination under
38 (...continued)
which went into effect June 28, 2006 [http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/05/
20060515-5.html] with the end result of Libya’s designation as a state sponsor of terrorism
being rescinded on June 30, 2006. Sanctions against Iraq pursuant to its inclusion on the
terrorism list were suspended on May 7, 2003, by Presidential Determination No. 2003-23
(Federal Register of May 16, 2003), Vol. 68, No. 95, p. 26459). Iraq was removed from the
list by a recision of determination on October 7, 2004 (Federal Register, October 20, 2004,
Vol. 69, No. 202, p. 61702).
39 U.S. Department of State, Country Reports on Terrorism, 2006.
40 See CRS Report RL31696, North Korea: Economic Sanctions, by Dianne E. Rennack.
41 The interpretation of these “significant dual use items,” especially when items such as
aircraft parts are involved, is often the subject of considerable discussion within the
executive branch as well as the subject of informal consultations with Congress.

CRS-13
section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act of 1979 or section 620A of the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961.” In short, the United States must oppose financial assistance
from institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to any
state on the U.S. terrorism list. Given the influence of the United States in these
institutions, U.S. opposition would constitute a huge obstacle to any proposals for
financial aid to North Korea. Section 1621, however, does not require the United
States to oppose North Korean membership in the IMF and World Bank. North
Korean membership is the near term goal of the South Korean government, which
views this as an initial step toward financial aid.
P.L. 109-58, the Energy Policy Act of 2005 prohibits the export, re-export,
transfer or retransfer of U.S. nuclear materials and technologies to any country
identified by the Secretary of State as a sponsor of terrorism. This provision, in
Section 632 of the act, was authored specifically to foreclose the possibility of
civilian nuclear cooperation between the United States and North Korea, either
directly or through third countries that have access to U.S. nuclear technology.42
Nations Not Fully Cooperating Category
The DPRK also remains on a list (required by P.L. 104-132), which prohibits,
absent a presidential waiver, the sale of arms to nations not fully cooperating with
U.S. anti-terrorism efforts.43
Adding and Removing Countries on the List
In late January each year, under the provisions of Section 6(j) of the Export
Administration Act of 1979, as amended, the Secretary of Commerce, in consultation
with the Secretary of State, provides Congress with a list of countries supporting
terrorism. Compilation of the list is the result of an ongoing process. Throughout
the year the Department of State gathers data on terrorist activity worldwide, and then
beginning about November, the list is formally reviewed. Each new determination
under Section 6(j) of the act must also be published in the Federal Register.
Congressional report language provides guidelines for designation. A House
Foreign Affairs Committee report approving the Anti-Terrorism and Arms Export
Amendments Act of 1989 (H.Rept. 101-296) included as criteria (1) allowing
territory to be used as a sanctuary; (2) furnishing lethal substances to
individuals/groups with the likelihood that they will be used for terrorism; (3)
providing logistical support to terrorists/groups; (4) providing safe haven or
headquarters for terrorists/organizations; (5) planning, directing, training or assisting
42 Letter from Representative Edward J. Markey to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
October 3, 2007. Representative Markey was a principle author of Section 632.
43 Periodically, discussions have been held under differing administrations to provide for
graduated sanctions within this category to make it a more effective tool, but no substantive
action, to date, has been taken on this issue. Note that P.L. 104-132 also requires the
withholding of foreign assistance to nations providing lethal military aid to countries on the
list of state sponsors.

CRS-14
in the execution of terrorist activities; (6) providing direct or indirect financial
support for terrorist activities; and (7) providing diplomatic facilities such as support
or documentation to aid or abet terrorist activities. A Senate report had similar
criteria (S.Rept. 101-173).
Paragraph 6(j)(4) of the Export Administration Act prohibits removing a country
from the list unless the President first submits a report to the House Committee on
Foreign Affairs, and the Senate Committees on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs, and Foreign Relations. When a government changes (i.e., a government is
significantly different from that in power at the time of the last determination), the
President’s report, submitted before the proposed rescission would take effect, must
certify that (1) there has been a fundamental change in the leadership and policies of
the government of the country concerned (an actual change of government as a result
of an election, coup, or some other means); (2) the new government is not supporting
acts of international terrorism; and (3) the new government has provided assurances
that it will not support acts of international terrorism in the future.
When the same government is in power, the current situation with North Korea,
the President’s report — submitted at least 45 days before the proposed rescission
would take effect — must justify the rescission and certify that (1) the government
concerned has not provided support for international terrorism during the preceding
six-month period; and (2) the government concerned has provided assurances that it
will not support acts of international terrorism in the future. Congress can let the
President’s action take effect, or pass legislation to block it, the latter most likely
over the President’s veto. Since enactment of this procedure in 1989, the Bush
Administration has removed two countries from the list of state sponsors of terrorism
— Libya and Iraq. The Administration has stated that in the case of North Korea,
it will adhere to the legal requirement of providing Congress with a 45-day notice
before removal that would include the required certification.44
Congress has passed several resolutions on North Korean support for terrorism
since 2005. In January 2005, the entire Illinois delegation in Congress sent a letter
to North Korea’s United Nations Ambassador demanding information on the
Reverend Kim Dong-shik, who was kidnapped by North Korean agents in China in
2000. The Illinois delegation stated that it would oppose removing North Korea from
the list of state sponsors of terrorism until his fate is resolved. H.R. 3650, a bill
introduced in the House of Representatives in September 2007 with 27 sponsors as
of December 10, 2007, would continue to designate North Korea as a state sponsor
of terrorism until North Korea met a number of conditions related to cessation of
nuclear and missile proliferation, arms and training to terrorist groups, the
counterfeiting of U.S. currency; and the release of kidnapped Japanese and Kim
Dong-shik and South Korean prisoners of war from the Korean War.
A complex challenge facing those charged with compiling and maintaining the
list is the degree to which diminution of hard evidence of a government’s active
involvement indicates a real change in behavior, particularly when a past history of
44 Letter from Jeffrey T. Bergner, State Department, Assistant Secretary for Legislative
Affairs to Representative Edward J. Markey, November 6, 2007.

CRS-15
active support or use of terrorism as an instrument of foreign policy has been well
established. For example, Iraq, which was removed in 1982, was again placed on the
list in 1990, to be again removed in 2004. Some observers suggest that one reason
that countries have not been dropped from the list is the reluctance of the executive
branch to confront Congress on the issue.
Rationale and Background for
DPRK Retention on the Two Lists
North Korea was added to the “official” list of countries supporting terrorism
because of its implication in the bombing of a South Korean airliner on November
29, 1987, which killed 115 persons. According to the State Department, North Korea
has not been conclusively linked to any terrorist acts since 1987. A North Korean
spokesman in 1993 condemned all forms of terrorism, and said his country resolutely
opposed the encouragement and support of terrorism. A similar statement was made
in November 1995 and again in 2001, in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.
Country Reports, 2006, continues to contain language that could be used to
justify retention of the DPRK on the list of state supporters of terror:
... The DPRK continued to harbor four Japanese Red Army members who
participated in a jet hijacking in 1970. The Japanese government continued to
seek a full accounting of the fate of the 12 Japanese nationals believed to have
been abducted by DPRK state entities; five such abductees have been repatriated
to Japan since 2002....”45
Using language similar to the 2006 Report, Country Reports, 2005, in a brief
two-paragraph section on North Korea states that
The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is not known to have
sponsored any terrorist acts since the bombing of a Korean Airlines flight in
1987.
Pyongyang in 2003 allowed the return to Japan of five surviving abductees, and
in 2004 of eight family members, mostly children, of those abductees. Questions
about the fate of other abductees remain the subject of ongoing negotiations
between Japan and the DPRK. In November, the DPRK returned to Japan what
it identified as the remains of two Japanese abductees, whom the North had
reported as having died in North Korea. The issue remained contentious at year’s
end. There are also credible reports that other nationals were abducted from
locations abroad. The ROK government estimates that approximately 485
civilians were abducted or detained since the 1950-53 Korean War. Four
Japanese Red Army members remain in the DPRK following their involvement
in a jet hijacking in 1970; five of their family members returned to Japan in
2004.46
45 See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/82736.htm] (p. 147 of the published version).
46 See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/c17689.htm], p. 175.

CRS-16
Perhaps most revealing of United States’ policy rationale for keeping nations
such as North Korea on the terrorism list is text contained in the “State Sponsors Of
Terror Overview” section of Country Reports, 2005, and partially reprinted in
Country Reports, 2006. Prominently mentioned are two factors: (1) maintaining ties
to terrorist groups and (2) “the capability to manufacture WMD and other
destabilizing technologies that can get into the hands of terrorists.”
Libya and Sudan continued to take significant steps to cooperate in the global
war on terror. Cuba, Iran, North Korea, and Syria, however, continued to
maintain their ties to terrorist groups. Iran and Syria routinely provide unique
safe haven, substantial resources and guidance to terrorist organizations.
State sponsors of terrorism provide critical support to non-state terrorist groups.
Without state sponsors, terrorist groups would have much more difficulty
obtaining the funds, weapons, materials, and secure areas they require to plan
and conduct operations. Most worrisome is that some of these countries also
have the capability to manufacture WMD and other destabilizing technologies
that can get into the hands of terrorists. The United States will continue to insist
that these countries end the support they give to terrorist groups.
[Emphasis and
italics added]47
North Korea Previously Cited for Possible Removal

In its “Introduction,” the Patterns 1999 report cites North Korea as a possible
candidate for removal from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. The Patterns 1999
report states:
The designation of state sponsors is not permanent, however. In fact, a primary
focus of U.S. counterterrorist policy is to move state sponsors off the list by
delineating clearly what steps these countries must take to end their support for
terrorism and by urging them to take these steps ...There have been some
encouraging signs recently suggesting that some countries are considering taking
steps to distance themselves from terrorism. North Korea has made some
positive statements condemning terrorism in all its forms. We have outlined
clearly to the Government of North Korea the steps it must take to be removed
from the list, all of which are consistent with its stated policies.
The report states that “if a state sponsor meets the criteria for being dropped
from the terrorism list, it will be removed — notwithstanding other differences we
may have with a country’s other policies and actions.”
In June 15, 2000, testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Michael Sheehan, the State Department Coordinator for Counterterrorism, testified
that
47 Country Reports, 2005, p. 171, at [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/c17689.htm] and
Country Reports, 2006, p. 145, at [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/82736.htm]. The
italicized text appears identically in Country Reports for both 2005 and 2006.

CRS-17
We need to take into account all relevant considerations in connection with
moving states onto or off of the list, and we also need to explore whether it
would be appropriate in any cases to identify states as “not fully cooperating”
rather than as state sponsors of terrorism if doing so was warranted by the facts
and would advance U.S. counterterrorism objectives ... I have been considering
what intermediate steps could be taken to give state sponsors a clearer look at
how they might “graduate” off the list. It may be possible that in appropriate
cases state sponsors could step off the state sponsor list and be left only on the
“not fully cooperating” list, with an eye towards stepping off of that list when
they fully cooperate with U.S. antiterrorism efforts.
Similarly, in July 12 testimony before the House International Relations
Committee, Ambassador Sheehan confirmed that his earlier statements were intended
as a clear signal to terrorist supporting countries that the United States would
consider taking them off the list if they take the necessary steps to cease their support
for terrorism.
Prospects for Removal Are Set Back
Patterns 2000, issued in 2001 under the new Bush Administration, changed the
tone. It does state that “the Department of State is engaged in ongoing discussion
with North Korea and Sudan with the object of getting those governments completely
out of the terrorism business and off the terrorism list.” It cites the North Korean
statement in the U.S.-North Korean joint statement of October 12, 2000, in which
“the DPRK reiterated its opposition to terrorism and agreed to support international
actions against such activity.” However, as stated previously, Patterns 2000 was
more specific in citing evidence of North Korean support of other terrorist groups,
particularly in the Philippines. The report also asserts that “the US has a long
memory and will not simply expunge a terrorist’s record because time has passed.”
Patterns 2001 and Patterns 2002, arguably, softened language to designed to
provide a rationale for retaining the DPRK on the terror list. For example, Patterns
2002,
although noting that “Pyongyang continued to sell ballistic missile technology
to countries designated by the United States as state sponsors of terrorism, including
Syria and Libya,” concluded with the statement that “North Korea is a party to six of
the twelve international conventions and protocols relating to terrorism.”48 Contrast
such language to Patterns 2003: “Although it is a party to six international
conventions and protocols relating to terrorism, Pyongyang has not taken any
substantial steps to cooperate in efforts to combat international terrorism.
[italics
provided]”49
Patterns 2003, which covers the year North Korea was designated a member of
the “axis of evil” by President Bush in his 2003 State of the Union Address, appears
48 Patterns 2002, p. 81. On the other hand, the section covering North Korea begins with text
characterizing the DPRK’s response to international efforts to combat terrorism as
“disappointing throughout 2002.”
49 Patterns 2003, p. 92.

CRS-18
to take a somewhat more confrontational position.50 The 2003 report begins with text
to the effect that the DPRK is not known to have sponsored any terrorist acts since
1987. The report notes, however, that North Korea continued to give sanctuary to
hijackers affiliated with the Japanese Red Army. Although Patterns 2003 arguably
indicates that North Korea’s support for international terrorism appears limited at
present, it offers no promising language to suggest that DPRK removal from the
terrorism list may occur anytime soon.
Country Reports, 2004, again offers no promising language to suggest that
DPRK removal from the terrorism list may occur anytime soon, but notes what can
be interpreted as progress in resolving the issue of kidnapped Japanese citizens.
Again restated is language to the effect that the DPRK is “not known” to have
sponsored any acts of terrorism since 1987. Pyongyang, however, is cited for lack
of “substantial steps” in co-operating in efforts to combat international terrorism,
although it has signed six international conventions and protocols relating to
terrorism.
The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is not known to have
sponsored any terrorist acts since the bombing of a Korean Airlines flight in
1987.
At a summit with Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi in Pyongyang in September
2002, National Defense Commission Chairman Kim Jong Il acknowledged the
involvement of DPRK “special institutions” in the kidnapping of Japanese
citizens and said that those responsible had already been punished. Pyongyang
in 2003 allowed the return to Japan of five surviving abductees, and in 2004 of
eight family members, mostly children, of those abductees. Questions about the
fate of other abductees remain the subject of ongoing negotiations between Japan
and the DPRK. In November, the DPRK returned to Japan what it identified as
the remains of two Japanese abductees whom the North had reported as having
died in North Korea. Subsequent DNA testing in Japan indicated that the remains
were not those of Megumi Yokota or Kaoru Matsuki, as Pyongyang had claimed,
and the issue remained contentious at year’s end. Four Japanese Red Army
members remain in the DPRK following their involvement in a jet hijacking in
1970; five of their family members returned to Japan in 2004.
50 See text in preceding paragraph regarding lack of international cooperation. Note that
arguably, a factor that may affect whether the DPRK is removed from the terrorism list is
whether any other nations — notably Libya and possibly Sudan — are removed first. In
the wake of one or two successful cases of removal, a political climate may well be created
that is less risk adverse to chancing removal of a third state. Conversely, removing the
DPRK from the list prior to removing other nations would arguably create a climate more
favorably disposed to removal of additional states as well. In the past, the list has been
subject to criticism that it is governed by political criteria not necessarily connected to a
nation’s level of support for terrorism. See CRS Report RL32417, The Department of
State’s Patterns of Global Terrorism Report: Trends, State Sponsors, and Related Issues
,
by Raphael Perl.

CRS-19
Although it is a party to six international conventions and protocols relating to
terrorism, Pyongyang has not taken substantial steps to cooperate in efforts to
combat international terrorism.51
Process for Removal Moves Forward
In a dramatic shift in U.S. position regarding DPRK removal from the terrorist
list, Country Reports, 2006, clearly states that the United States has agreed to begin
the process of removing the DPRK from the list of state supporters of terror:
The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) was not known to have
sponsored any terrorist acts since the bombing of a Korean Airlines flight in
1987. The DPRK continued to harbor four Japanese Red Army members who
participated in a jet hijacking in 1970. The Japanese government continued to
seek a full accounting of the fate of the 12 Japanese nationals believed to have
been abducted by DPRK state entities; five such abductees have been repatriated
to Japan since 2002. In the February 13, 2007 Initial Actions Agreement, the
United States agreed to “begin the process of removing the designation of the
DPRK as a state-sponsor of terrorism.
” [Emphasis added]52
The Country Reports, 2006, reflected the new Rice-Hill strategy of linking
removal of North Korea to fulfillment of the February 2007 nuclear agreement.
While it mentions the Japanese kidnapping issue, there is less discussion of it than
in prior reports. Moreover, it did not describe progress or a settlement of the
kidnapping issue as a condition for North Korea’s removal.
New Reports of Support of Terrorist Groups
The State Department’s long-standing claim that North Korea “was not known
to have sponsored any terrorist acts since 1987” was particularly important in 2007
in view of the clear goal of the Rice-Hill strategy to remove North Korea from the list
of state sponsors of terrorism. However, questions about the accuracy of the claim
are relevant in view of two types of reported information. One is from the State
Department, itself. In the Department’s Country Reports, 2005, the section on North
Korea discusses the Japanese kidnapping issue and then states that there is “credible
reports that other nationals were abducted from locations abroad.” The State
Department does not appear to have provided clarification or details regarding these
“credible reports.” This assertion in Country Reports, 2005 could be seen as
contradicting the assertion that North Korea has not sponsored any terrorist acts since
1987.
The second type of reports, coming from several diverse sources, asserts that
North Korea has provided arms and possibly training to Hezbollah in Lebanon and
51 See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/c14813.htm], p. 90 of the full pdf file, or the “North
Korea” section at the end of Chapter 5 — Country Reports B.
52 See [http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/82736.htm] (p. 147 of the published version).

CRS-20
the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka and that it maintains an intimate relationship with the
Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Hezbollah and the Tamil Tigers are two of the most
active terrorist groups on the U.S. list of international terrorist groups. The Iranian
Revolutionary Guard has been designated by the State Department as a supporter of
terrorism.
Hezbollah
There have been several reports of North Korean support for Hezbollah from
Europe-based sources that report regularly on the Middle East. U.S. media
publications have not reported on it. In September 2006 and April 2007, Intelligence
Online
, a French internet publication specializing in political and economic
intelligence in the Middle East, published two reports detailing an extensive program
by North Korea to provide arms and training to Hezbollah.53 The reports described
Iran as the facilitator of the North Korea-Hezbollah relationship. According to
Intelligence Online, the program began in the late 1980s and early 1990s with visits
by Hezbollah cadre to North Korea. These visits were reported to involve training
courses of several months run by the North Koreans. The September 2006
Intelligence Online report cited three current top Hezbollah officials who, it says,
received training in North Korea during this earlier period: Hassan Nasrallah,
Hezbollah’s secretary-general and head of Hezbollah’s military organization; Ibrahim
Akil, the head of Hezbollah’s security and intelligence service; and Mustapha
Badreddine, Hezbollah’s counter-espionage chief.
Intelligence Online reported that after 2000, the program expanded with the
dispatch of North Korean trainers to southern Lebanon where they instructed
Hezbollah cadre in the development of extensive underground military facilities,
including tunnels and bunkers. Takashi Arimoto, Washington correspondent for the
Japanese newspaper, Sankei Shimbun, has reported “a document of an international
organ” that in 2004, Syrian President Bashar Al-Asad met with North Korean
officials in Damascus and requested North Korean assistance in helping Hezbollah
to design and construct underground military installations.54 (North Korea is
believed to have extensive underground military installations inside North Korea.)
Another report, from the London-based newspaper, Al-Sharq al-Awsat, cited “a high-
ranking officer in the [Iranian] Revolutionary Guard” that one such North Korean-
assisted facility in southern Lebanon was a sophisticated, 25-kilometer, underground
tunnel with numerous assembly points that Hezbollah used to move and concentrate
troops.55 These underground tunnels and bunkers, according to numerous reports,
53 Hezbollah a North Korea-Type Guerrilla Force, Intelligence Online, September 7, 2006.
Hezbollah training in North Korea, Intelligence Online, April 20, 2007. Intelligence Online
is put out by the Indigo Publications of Paris, France. It is one of several reports on Middle
East security and political affairs put out by Indigo Publications.
54 Takashi Arimoto, International document points concretely to close cooperation between
North Korea, Syria; Syria also asked for assistance to Hizballah, Sankei Shimbun (internet
version), January 7, 2008.
55 Ali Nuri Zadah, Iranian officer: Hezbollah has commando naval unit, Al-Sharq Al-Awsat
(London), July 29, 2006. Also cited in the American Enterprises Institute’s report, Iranian
(continued...)

CRS-21
significantly improved Hezbollah’s ability to fight the Israelis during the 2006 Israel-
Hezbollah war. These reports asserted that Hezbollah was able to hide many of its
1,000-1,500 rocket launchers underground; and thus, Israeli aerial surveillance had
only limited effectiveness in locating the rocket launchers before Hezbollah fired
rockets into Israel. When Israeli ground troops entered southern Lebanon, Hezbollah
troops used networks of underground tunnels and bunkers to move from location to
location and often to attack the Israelis from the rear. Deep underground bunkers
also were found to have large storage rooms.56
Additional information on North Korean assistance to Hezbollah in constructing
underground tunnels and bunkers has come from Lenny Ben-David, a former Israeli
diplomat who served as Israel’s deputy ambassador to the United States. Ben-David
specified that North Korean experts and equipment were brought into southern
Lebanon by the Korea Mining Development Trading Corporation. He asserted “The
description of North Korean tunnels and cooperation with Iran are based on fact.”57
An Israeli report from Jerusalem Update asserted that North Korean also had
sent trainers into Lebanon to engage in the psychological training of Hezbollah cadre
who are to be suicide bombers.58
Another report of the North Korea-Hezbollah relationship appeared in the South
Korean newspaper, JoongAng Ilbo, in November 2007. The author of this report was
Professor Moon Chung-in, a professor at South Korea’s Yonsei University.59
Professor Moon is a specialist on Korean security issues and was a close adviser to
the South Korean government of former President Roh Moo-hyun. This advisory
role has given him access to the U.S. government and other foreign governments. He
is well-known to American experts on Korean issues, and he has advocated policies
to improve relations with North Korea. It is noteworthy that Professor Moon cited
Mossad, the Israeli government’s main intelligence agency, as the source of an
assessment that “vital missile components” of Hezbollah missiles fired into Israel
during the 2006 war came from North Korea. Dr. Moon stated that Mossad believes
that the missiles with North Korean components were assembled in Iran and were
transported to Hezbollah in Lebanon via Syria. (North Korea also has sold Syria an
assortment of missiles since the 1980s.) According to Professor Moon, Mossad
55 (...continued)
Influence in the Levant, Iraq, and Afghanistan. February 2008, p. 7; and by BBC
Monitoring Middle East, August 3, 2006.
56 Jonathan Finder, Israeli soldiers find a tenacious foe in Hezbollah, Washington Post,
August 8, 2006, p. O1. Molly Moore, Israelis confront ‘new kind of war’; high-tech tactics
fail to halt rocket fire, Washington Post, August 9, 2006, p. A11. Paul Moorcraft, Hezbollah
rising; the surprising success of Iran’s client, Washington Times, August 15, 2006, p. A15.
57 Lenny Ben-David, Mining for trouble in Lebanon, Jerusalem Post (internet version),
October 29, 2007.
58 Roots of Hezbollah’s war against Israel and the Islamic revolution, Jerusalem Update,
June 17, 2008.
59 Moon Chung-in, The Syrian nuke connection, JoongAng Ilbo (internet version),
November 26, 2007.

CRS-22
“partially blames North Korea” for the effectiveness of Hezbollah’s missile strikes
into Israel.
In 2008, the Israeli government reported that Hezbollah has received new
missiles from Iran with longer ranges than the missiles that Hezbollah used in the
2006 war. These include 10,000 long-range missiles with a range up to 185 miles
compared to a maximum range of 45 miles during the 2006 war.60 Hezbollah leaders
reportedly admit that their missile arsenal has increased since the 2006 war.61 The
Intelligence Online report of April 20, 2007, asserted that top Hezbollah leaders,
including Hassan Nasrallah, visited Tehran in early April 2007, where Iran pledged
to deliver new medium-range missiles to Hezbollah.62 If the Israeli estimate is
correct and if the reported Mossad assessment of North Korea’s role in providing
components to missiles supplied to Hezbollah prior to the 2006 war is correct, it
would appear highly possible the missiles that Iran is supplying to Hezbollah
continue to have North Korean components.
The Intelligence Online report of April 20, 2007, asserted that North Korea and
Hezbollah were strengthening their relationship in the aftermath of the Israel-
Hezbollah war. Citing sources in “the Pasadaran [Iranian Revolutionary Guard]
leadership, the report stated that Iran and North Korea had reached an agreement
under which about 100 Hezbollah field commanders would receive training in North
Korea from North Korea’s elite commando infiltration units and also training on
intelligence-gathering and counter-espionage.63 This report suggests the possibility
that Hezbollah has sought training in infiltration tactics from North Korean military
units that U.S. commanders in South Korea have described as trained to infiltrate
deeply into South Korea in time of war through tunnels, by air, and by sea, to attack
bases, command centers, and transportation and communication facilities. The object
of such training could be to give Hezbollah the capability to infiltrate troops into
Israel in another war.
Tamil Tigers
Reports of North Korean arms shipments to the Tamil Tigers appeared in the
Japanese newspaper, Sankei Shimbun, in September 2007.64 Sankei Shimbun is
Japan’s fifth largest national newspaper with a circulation of two million daily. It is
considered to be right of center politically and generally is critical of North Korea.
Two reports described several North Korean attempts in late 2006 through the spring
60 Matti Friedman, Israel: Hezbollah increases rocket range, Associated Press, March 27,
2007.
61 Nicholas Blanford, Hizbullah regroups amid war jitters, Christian Science Monitor, April
14, 2008, p. 7.
62 Hezbollah training in North Korea, Intelligence Online, April 20, 2007.
63 Ibid.
64 Kubota Ruriko, DPRK plotted to export weapons to terrorist organ, Sankei Shimbun
(internet version), September 26, 2007. Kubota, Ruriko, Busting of DPRK arms smuggling
part of US psychological war aiming at weakening dictatorial regime, economic damage,
Sankei Shimbun (internet version), September 26, 2007.

CRS-23
of 2007 to smuggle conventional arms, including machine guns, automatic rifles, and
anti-tank rocket launchers, to the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka. The Sri Lankan navy
intercepted and attacked three North Korean ships carrying arms in October 2006,
February 2007, and March 2007. It sunk two of the vessels, seized some of the North
Korean arms, and may have captured several North Korean crewmen. Sankei
Shimbun
published photographs of the North Korean weapons it says were seized by
the Sri Lankan navy. According to Sankei Shimbun, the Sri Lankan government filed
an official protest with the North Korean government. U.S. intelligence agencies,
using spy satellites, may have conveyed information about the North Korean ships
to the Sri Lankan government, according to the reports.
Press reports in September 2006, February 2007, and March 2007 cited
incidents of the Sri Lankan navy intercepting and attacking large, unidentified cargo
ships, which, according to the Sri Lankan navy, were attempting to smuggle arms
into Sri Lanka for the Tamil Tigers.65 The Sri Lankan navy cited four such ships with
no flags or other indentifying markers — two on March 18, 2007. In each incident,
the Sri Lankan navy contacted the ships, which gave false identifications and refused
to allow a search. When the ships fired on Sri Lankan naval vessels, the navy
attacked. The Sri Lankan navy claimed to have seized weapons aboard the ship in
the incident of February 28, 2007. However, neither the Sri Lankan navy nor the Sri
Lankan government made public any subsequent information on the identity of the
ships, the crewmen, or the origins of the weapons aboard the ships.
Moreover, the reported arms supply link between North Korea and the Tamil
Tigers appears to be one of long duration. In 2000, the Far Eastern Economic
Review
reported that, according to foreign intelligence sources in Bangkok, the Tamil
Tigers had received a sizeable portion of its weapons from North Korea.66 In its
Patterns of Global Terrorism reports for 2001, 2002, and 2003, the State Department
cited evidence that North Korea had supplied arms to terrorist groups. Patterns of
Global Terrorism, 2002
stated that North Korea “has sold weapons to several
terrorist groups.” An analysis done by Jane’s Intelligence Review of the video of a
Tamil Tiger ship attack on a Sri Lanka navy-operated passenger vessel in October
2000 revealed that the attackers used an exclusively North Korean-version of a 107
millimeter Katyusha rocket, using dual launch tubes instead of the standard single
launch tube.67
Iranian Revolutionary Guard
The State Department’s Fact Sheet of October 25, 2007, on Iranian entities
involved in proliferation and terrorism support activities asserted that the Iranian
65 See reports of Agence France Presse of September 19 and October 15, 2006, and February
28 and March 18, 2007. See also Ranga Sirilal, Sri Lanka says sinks big rebel arms
transport ship, Reuters News, February 27, 2007. Bharatha Mallawarachi, Sri Lankan navy
destroys ships smuggling arms, attacks rebel flotilla, Associated Press, February 28, 2007.
Lanka navy destroys two Tiger ships, The Press Trust of India Limited, March 18, 2007.
66 Tigers buy North Korean arms, Far Eastern Economic Review, June 8, 2000, p. 12.
67 Roger Davies, Sea tigers, stealth technology and the North Korean connection, Jane’s
Intelligence Review, March 2001, p. 2-3.

CRS-24
Revolutionary Guard (IRG) was providing “material support” for the Taliban,
Hezbollah, Hamas, Iraqi Shia militants, and other terrorist groups.68 In 2006, U.S.
District Judge Royce Lambert issued a ruling that the IRG recruited people who
attacked the U.S. military facility in Saudi Arabia, Khobar Towers, in 1996 and
manufactured the bombs used in the attack. General David Petraeus and U.S.
Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker testified to Congress in 2008 that the IRG was
directing and supporting the attacks of the Iraqi Shia “special groups” against U.S.
and Iraqi military and government targets.69
Many reports describe a close relationship between the IRG and Hezbollah. The
State Department’s Fact Sheet stated that the IRG has a “long history” of supporting
Hezbollah with guidance, funding, weapons, intelligence and logistical support.
Other reports describe IRG training of Hezbollah personnel in both Iran and Lebanon,
the supply of missiles to Hezbollah by the IRG, IRG cadre in southern Lebanon
directing Hezbollah’s development of military facilities (including missile sites), and
IRG coordination of missile attacks against Israel during the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah
war.70 The State Department’s Fact Sheet asserted that the IRG “has assisted
Hizballah [Hezbollah] in rearming” since the 2006 war, presumably including the
supply of new longer-range missiles described by the 2008 Israeli intelligence
estimate.
The State Department’s October 2007 Fact Sheet also described the IRG as
heavily involved in Iran’s program to develop ballistic missiles. It said that the IRG
is “one of the primary organizations tied to developing and testing the Shahab 3”
missile (the Iranian version of North Korea’s Nodong missile) and that, as recently
as 2006, the IRG was procuring “sophisticated and costly equipment that could be
used to support Iran’s ballistic missile and nuclear programs.” The Iranian
announcement of its tests of Shahab-class missiles, including the Shahab 3, on July
9-10, 2007, came from commanders of the IRG.
North Korea’s relationship with the IRG appears to be in two areas: (1)
coordination in support for Hezbollah and (2) cooperation in ballistic missile
development. Reports also suggest that North Korea cooperates with the IRG and
other Iranian entities in the development of nuclear capabilities or nuclear weapons.
Given the close relationship between the IRG and Hezbollah, the IRG could
have facilitated the North Korean training of Hezbollah personnel by North Korea in
the late 1980s and 1990s, as discussed above. The Paris Intelligence Online report
of September 7, 2006, describing the role of North Korean instructors in the
construction of Hezbollah’s underground military installations in southern Lebanon
68 U.S. Department of State, Fact Sheet: Designation of Iranian Entities and Individuals for
Proliferation Activities and Support for Terrorism, October 25, 2007.
69 Peter Spiegel, Another top threat emerges; Iranian-backed ‘special groups’ now roil Iraq,
General Petraeus testifies, Los Angeles Times, April 10, 2008, p. A1.
70 American Enterprise Institute, Iranian Influence in the Levant, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
February 2008, p. 5-6.Gavin Rabinowitz, Israel, Hezbollah fight to a draw, Associated Press,
August 15, 2006. See also Kenneth Katzman, The Warriors of Islam: Iran’s Revolutionary
Guard. Bounder, Westview Press, 1993, pp. 96-98.

CRS-25
in the period before the 2006 war, asserts that IRG General Mir Faysal Baqer Zadah
supervised the construction of the underground facilities.71 Other reports describe
IRG cadre in southern Lebanon prior to the 2006 war, as assisting in the building of
underground military bases, including missile bases.72 The IRG reportedly has been
the main supplier of missiles to Hezbollah.73 Thus, the reported utilization of North
Korean components on these missiles prior to the 2006 war undoubtedly would have
been coordinated between the IRG and North Korea as well as any North Korean
components in the large number of missiles the IRG has supplied to Hezbollah since
the war.
Cooperation between North Korea and the IRG in the development of ballistic
missiles appears to be of long standing. North Korea supplied Iran with Scud B and
Scud C missiles after 1987. In 1993, the overall commander of the IRG, Major
General Mohsen Rezaei, and IRG Brigadier General Hossein Mantiqi visited North
Korea heading Iranian delegations.74Another delegation, headed by Iran’s Defense
Minister and reportedly including IRG officials, visited Pyongyang in December
1993. Press reports, citing statements by Central Intelligence Agency officials,
described the goal of these missions as arranging for Iran’s purchase of up to 150
newly-developed North Korean Nodong intermediate range missiles.75 North Korea
first tested the missile in 1993. Paul Beaver, military expert for the Janes
publications, said in an interview that the delegations negotiated an agreement with
North Korea to establish a plant in Iran to produce the Nodongs.76 At that time, there
reportedly were North Korean missile experts in Iran helping Iran to manufacture
Scud missiles based on North Korean technology.77
Beaver’s assessment appears to have been correct. By 1997, there reportedly
were North Korean missile experts in Iran working on the construction of Shahab 3
and Shahab 4 missiles, Iranian versions of the Nodong. Like the State Department’s
October 2007 Fact Sheet, a 1997 London Daily Telegraph report stated that the IRG
71 Hezbollah a North Korea-type guerrilla force — Lebanon, Paris Intelligence Online,
August 25, 2006.
72 American Enterprise Institute, Iranian Influence in the Levant, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
February 2008, p. 5-6.
73 Ibid. Hezbollah firing Iranian missiles into Israel, Forecast International/Missile Forecast,
July 17, 2006.
74 Iran, N. Korea army chiefs want closer military ties, Korea Herald, January 14, 1993, p.
4.
75 Douglas Jehl, Iran is reported acquiring missiles, New York Times, April 8, 1993, p. 7.
N. Korea’s air force chief visits Iran for closer ties, Washington Times, February 25, 1994,
p. A15 Iran said to place order for 150 DPRK missiles, Yonhap News Agency, July 14,
1993.
76 Interview with Paul Beavers, military commentator for Janes, Fuji Television Broadcast
Network, April 11, 1994.
77 Martin Sieff, N. Korean missiles may be tested in Iran this year, Washington Times, June
16, 1994, p. 13.

CRS-26
was directing the Shahab program.78 In November 1997, the IRG announced that it
had conducted a successful test launch of a Shahab 3 prototype.79 A fully successful
test flight of the Shahab 3 was conducted in 1998. North Korea reportedly continued
to supply components for the Shahab 3.80
Recent reports indicate continuing North Korean-Iranian collaboration in trying
to develop longer range ballistic missiles. A detailed report in the Los Angeles Times
in August 2003 stated that “many North Koreans are working on nuclear and missile
projects in Iran.”81 One report of March 2006 was issued by the National Council of
Resistance of Iran, an exile opposition group. In 2002, the National Council had
revealed correctly the existence of secret Iranian nuclear facilities at Natanz and Irak.
Several subsequent claims of the National Council have not been verified, but the
Iranian government places severe obstacles on the International Atomic Energy
Agency and other international groups that could engage in verification work. The
National Council’s March 2006 report asserted that North Korean experts were
working at the Memot Missile Industries Complex in Iran in the development of an
intermediate range missile with a range of 1,900 miles and in the continuing
development of the Shahab 4 missile.82 Later in 2006, it was reported that North
Korea had made an initial shipment to Iran of its new Musudan intermediate range
missile. U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates stated in November 2007 that North
Korea had supplied Iran with missiles with a range of 1,562 miles83 (probably the
Musudan). North Korea and Iran reportedly carried out joint tests of the Musudan.84
In April 2008, several publications reported the existence of a new Iranian missile
research and development site that had the same appearance as North Korea’s
Taepodong missile assembly facility inside North Korea.85
78 Con Coughlin, China, N. Korea send experts to hone Iran’s long-range missiles,
November 23, 1997, p. A5.
79 Ibid.
80 Buill Gertz, North Korea sends missile parts, technology to Iran, Washington Times, April
18, 2001, p. A3. Critical N. Korea missile parts seen aiding Iran’s program, Washington
Times
, February 10, 2000. P. A3. Yi Chol-hui, North’s air cargo: missiles, Chungang Ilbo
(internet version), June 16, 2003.
81 Douglas Frantz, Iran closes in on ability to build a nuclear bomb, Los Angeles Times,
August 4, 2003, p. A1.
82 Resistance group claims Iran hiding long-range missiles, working with North Korea,
Associated Press, March 6, 2006.
83 Jim Mannion, ROK, US express concerns over DPRK’s development of long-range
missiles, Agence France Presse, November 7, 2007.
84 Iran develops missile with 4,000-km range, Middle East Newsline, March 2, 2006.
Charles P. Vick, Has the No-DongB/Shahab-4 finally been tested in Iran for North Korea,
Global Security (internet version), May 2, 2006. Takashi Arimoto, North Korea may have
tested engine combustion of a new type missile in Iran — the two countries may share data,
Sankei Shimbun (internet version), June 21, 2007.
85 Michael Evans, Spy photos reveal ‘secret launch site’ for Iran’s long-range missiles, The
Times (London, internet version), April 11, 2008. Masato Kimura, Iranian rocket test-firing
space center resembles Taepo Dong 2 facility, Sankei Shimbun (internet version), April 17,
(continued...)

CRS-27
In short, these reports and the State Department’s characterization of the IRG
as a major player in Iran’s missile program point to a likely continuing relationship
between North Korea and the IRG, including a kind of joint venture partnership to
develop missiles inside Iran.
The State Department’s 2007 Fact Sheet asserted that “the IRGC attempted, as
recently as 2006, to procure sophisticated and costly equipment that could be used
to support Iran’s ballistic missile and nuclear program.” The National Council of
Resistance of Iran asserted in a 2006 report that the IRG was directing the nuclear
program. Other recent reports have alluded to IRG leadership in at least some
elements of Iran’s nuclear program.86 The IRG reportedly directs Iran’s Nuclear
Control Center, which supervises the nuclear program and reports directly to Iran’s
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khomeini.87 Thus North Korea’s apparent main
interlocutor in missile development was in a position to bring North Korea into the
Iranian nuclear program.
Numerous public reports have appeared since 1993 describing elements of
North Korean-Iranian collaboration in the development of nuclear capabilities. Some
cite the Central Intelligence Agency or Western intelligence sources as sources of
information. Other reports seem to be based, at least in part, on Israeli intelligence
sources. Specific events or factors in the alleged North Korean-Iranian nuclear
collaboration are described in multiple reports.
Nuclear cooperation reportedly began at the same time North Korea negotiated
with the IRG for cooperation in developing and manufacturing Nodong missiles in
Iran. The first reports, in 1993 and 1994, said that North Korea and Iran had signed
an initial agreement for nuclear cooperation. An Economist Foreign Report cited
“CIA sources” that Iran was helping to finance North Korea’s nuclear program and
that North Korea would supply Iran with nuclear technology and equipment.88 A
report of the U.S. House Republican Research Committee claimed that Iran would
provide $500 million to North Korea for the joint development of nuclear weapons.89
The “CIA sources” cited by the Economist Foreign Report reportedly mentioned the
development of enriched uranium as a goal of the new North Korean-Iranian
agreements. Recent information has disclosed that North Korea had negotiated with
85 (...continued)
2008.
86 Dafna Linzer, Strong leads and dead ends in nuclear case against Iran, Washington Post,
February 8, 2006. P. AO1.
87 Robin Hughes, Tehran takes steps to protect nuclear facilities, Jane’s Defence Weekly,
January 25, 2006. P. 4.
88 An Israeli lesson for North Korea? Economist Foreign Report, April 22, 1993, p. 2. See
also: DPRK reportedly aids Iranian nuclear project, Yonhap News Agency, January 26,
1993. DPRK military delegation’s Iran visit reported, Seoul KBS-1 Radio Network,
February 24, 1994.
89 U.S. report on DPRK-Iran missile deal cited, Yonhap News Agency, July 16, 1993. The
$500 million figure also was cited in: Iran funds North Korea’s drive to build nuclear
bombs, U.S. News and World Report, March 29, 1993, p. 18.

CRS-28
Pakistan for Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto to turn over to North Korean officials
detailed data on developing highly enriched uranium when she visited North Korea
in 1993. 90 U.S. officials at the time reportedly concluded that Iran was the most
likely customer for North Korean nuclear weapons; the CIA reportedly was
concerned that nuclear cooperation, including the transfer of materials, would be
difficult to detect.91
The next reported stage in North Korean-Iranian nuclear cooperation, in 2003
and afterwards, appears to have been influenced by the reported joint advancement
of the Nodong (Shahab) program in Iran, by North Korea’s development and reported
sale to Iran of the more advanced Musudan intermediate range ballistic missile
(originally designed by the Soviets to launch nuclear warheads92), and by the reported
initiation of joint development of the Taepodong long-range missile after 2000.
Stepped up visits to Iran by North Korean nuclear specialists in 2003 reportedly led
to a North Korean-Iranian agreement for North Korea to either initiate or accelerate
work with the Iranians to develop nuclear warheads that could be fitted on the North
Korean Nodong missiles that North Korea and Iran were jointly developing. Iran was
reported to have offered shipments of oil and natural gas to North Korea to secure
this joint development of nuclear warheads.93 North Koreans reportedly were seen
at Iranian nuclear facilities in 2003. By this time, a large number of North Korean
nuclear and missile specialists reportedly were in Iran.94 The German news
magazine, Der Spiegel, quoted “western intelligence service circles” as describing
Iran in 2005 as offering North Korea economic aid if Pyongyang “continues to
cooperative actively in developing nuclear missiles for Tehran.”95
During this period, Israeli officials began to assert that Iran was trying to
develop nuclear warheads and that North Korea might be helping Tehran. Israeli
President Shimon Peres was quoted that “there is no doubt” that Iran is developing
long-range missiles to outfit with nuclear warheads. U.S. intelligence officials
reportedly disclosed in early 2006 that Iran was trying to expand the nose cone of the
Shahab 3 (Nodong) missile so that it could carry a nuclear warhead. They described
an Iranian Project 111 as “a nuclear research effort that includes work on missile
90 Glenn Kessler, Bhutto dealt nuclear secrets to N. Korea, book says, Washington Post,
June 1, 2008, p. A16.
91 Bill Gertz, N. Korea as nuclear exporter, Washington Times, June 8, 1994, p. 1.
92 Gordon Fairclough, Pyongyang’s Iran sales fan concerns about ties, Wall Street Journal
Asia
, July 6, 2006. P. 1
93 Douglas Frantz, Iran closes in on ability to build a nuclear bomb; Tehran’s reactor
program masks strides toward weapons capability, a Times investigation finds, Los Angeles
Times, August 4, 2003, p. A1. Military source: DPRK, Iran planning joint development of
nuclear warheads, Sankei Shimbun (internet version), August 6, 2003.
94 Iranian nuke experts visited N. Korea this year, Kyodo World Service, June 10, 2003.
Douglas Frantz, Iran closes in on ability to build a nuclear bomb, Los Angeles Times, August
4, 2003, p. A1. Military source: DPRK, Iran planning joint development of nuclear
warheads, Sankei Shimbun (internet version), August 6, 2003.
95 Mullahs helping Stalinists, Der Spiegel (internet version), November 28, 2005.

CRS-29
development.”96 In March 2006, Reuters reported “an intelligence report given to
Reuters by a non-U.S. diplomat” that described Iran’s plans to develop nuclear
warheads for the Shahab 3 missiles.97 Most recently, it has been reported that the
International Atomic Energy Agency has evidence that Iran had developed designs
of what appeared to be a nuclear warhead and that the nuclear smuggling ring linked
to Pakistan’s nuclear czar, A.Q. Khan, had acquired blueprints for an advanced
warhead that could be mounted on a Nodong missile. Both North Korea and Iran had
received other types of missile and nuclear technology from Khan.98
The February 2008 report of the National Council of Resistance of Iran also
claimed North Korean-Korean-Iranian collaboration in nuclear warhead development
at secret sites inside Iran.99 It alleges that the Iranian Defense Ministry has a secret
facility at Khojir on the edge of Tehran, code-named B1-Nori-8500, that is engaged
in the development of nuclear warheads for intermediate range ballistic missiles.
North Korean specialists are at this facility, according to the National Council. The
National Council’s report so far has not been verified or refuted by governments or
other organizations.
European and Israeli defense officials stated in early 2007 that North Korea and
Iran had concluded a new agreement for North Korea to share data from its October
2006 nuclear test with Iran.100 In February 2008, an Iranian delegation reportedly
visited North Korea that included officials from Iran’s Nuclear Energy Agency.101
Two other forms of North Korean-Iranian nuclear collaboration have been
reported recently. At least one involved direct North Korean-IRG collaboration. In
2005, the Iranian leadership is reported to have initiated a huge project to develop
underground bunkers and tunnels for Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, estimated to cost
hundreds of million of dollars. The project reportedly includes the construction of
10,000 meters of underground halls for nuclear equipment connected by tunnels
96 Dafna Linzer, Strong leads and dead ends in nuclear case against Iran, Washington Post,
February 8, 2006, p. AO1.
97 Louis Charbonneau, Iran said to step up plans for Shahab missiles, Reuters News, March
6, 2006.
98 David E. Sanger, Nuclear agency says Iran has used new technology, New York Times,
February 23, 2008, p. A3. Joby Warrick, Smugglers had design for advanced warhead,
Washington Post, June 15, 2008, p. A1.
99 Iran still developing nuclear warheads: exiled opposition group, Agence France Presse,
February 20, 2008. Marc Champion, Iran arms claim is lodged — Tehran is developing
nuclear warheads, exile group tells U.N., Wall Street Journal Asia, February 21, 2008, p.
9.
100 Jin Dae-woong, Concerns grow over missile links between N. Korea, Iran, Korea Herald
(internet version), January 28, 2007. UK press: North Korea aids Iran in nuclear testing,
Dow Jones International News, January 24, 2007. Israel PM to charge NKorea link with
Iran, Syria, Agence France Presse, February 26, 2008.
101 Takashi Arimoto, Iranian delegation makes top secret visit to North Korea in late
February; for discussions on nuclear issue? Sankei Shimbun (internet version), March 20,
2008.

CRS-30
measuring hundreds of meters branching off from each. Specifications reportedly
called for reinforced concrete tunnel ceilings, walls, and doors resistant to explosions
and penetrating munitions.
The IRG implemented the project. North Korea is said to have participated in
the design and construction of the bunkers and tunnels. In early 2005, Myong Lyu-
do, a leading North Korean expert on underground facilities, traveled to Tehran to
run the program of North Korean assistance.102 Thus, as in the case of reported North
Korean assistance to Hezbollah in the construction of underground bunkers and
tunnels, the IRG apparently made further use of North Korea’s skills in developing
underground military facilities.
The second reported form of collaboration involved joint assistance to Syria in
developing the Syrian nuclear reactor that Israel bombed in September 2007. The
Bush Administration has said nothing about Iranian involvement in the Syrian
reactor. However, the online service of the German news publication Der Spiegel
has cited “intelligence reports seen by Der Spiegel” that North Korean and Iranian
scientists were working together at the reactor site at the time of the Israeli bombing.
Some of the plutonium production slated for the reactor was to have gone to Iran,
which viewed the reactor as a “reserve site” to produce weapons-grade plutonium as
a supplement to Iran’s own highly enriched uranium program.103 Such Iranian
involvement also would raise the possibility of North-Korean Iranian collaboration
in developing plutonium reprocessing facilities in either Syria or Iran.
Policy Implications of Removing North Korea from
the List of State Sponsors of Terrorism
The final stage in the Bush Administration’s negotiations with North Korea in
June 2008 focused on North Korea’s obligation under the “two for two” deal
embodied in the October 3, 2007, six party statement to provide a declaration of
nuclear programs. However, the Administration’s real objective in removing North
Korea from the terrorism support list is to achieve the completion of the disablement
of North Korea’s plutonium nuclear installations at Yongbyon. The shutting down
of Yongbyon would prevent North Korea from producing more weapons grade
plutonium for atomic bomb production. Given the reported progress achieved toward
disablement of Yongbyon, removal of North Korea from the terrorism support list
would appear likely to achieve this goal. This would be the immediate achievement
in removing North Korea.
Christopher Hill and others reportedly have argued within the Bush
Administration that the Administration should give the highest priority in its North
Korea policy to limiting and eliminating North Korea’s plutonium program because
the plutonium is the known source of North Korea’s production of atomic bombs;
102 Robin Hughes, Tehran takes steps to protect nuclear facilities, Jane’s Defence Weekly,
January 25, 2006. Pp. 4-5.
103 Asad’s risky nuclear game, Spiegel Online, June 23, 2008.

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other issues, such as the alleged North Korean highly enriched uranium program and
North Korea’s proliferation activities, therefore should be given less priority or
deferred into the future.104
Removing North Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism also will
open the way for what Assistant Secretary of State Hill has described as a Phase
Three of nuclear negotiations beyond the February 2007 six party nuclear agreement.
U.S. goals in a Phase Three negotiation would be the full dismantlement of
Yongbyon, securing control over North Korea’s plutonium stockpile, and eliminating
North Korea’s stockpile of nuclear weapons. This prospect, however, is much more
uncertain, since North Korea is certain to present new demands for U.S. concessions
as part of any deal for a further reduction of its plutonium program.
There are potential negative consequences for U.S. policy in removing North
Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. Japanese officials have warned
that there would be short-term damage to U.S. relations with Japan if the Bush
Administration removes North Korea without any substantive progress on the
Japanese kidnapping issue.105 U.S. Ambassador Thomas Schieffer has expressed
such concerns since October 2007. Some U.S. experts also believe there may be
damage.106 However, a sizeable number of members of Japan’s Diet has voiced
opposition to the Bush Administration removing North Korea from the list of state
sponsors of terrorism. Japanese press and majority public opinion also appears to
oppose such a U.S. action.107 There also could be potential for longer-term damage
to the U.S.-Japan alliance that could affect future Japanese policies toward U.S.
military bases in Japan and support for future U.S. military operations against
Muslim terrorist groups.
Removing North Korea likely will encourage Pyongyang to continue and
possibly expand its support for terrorist groups and other state sponsors of terrorism
in the Middle East. North Korea’s expansion of these activities since 2000 appear to
constitute a major threat to U.S. national security policy interests in the Middle East.
Relatedly, the United States will no longer have the terrorism support list as a
negotiating lever if it ever decided to address North Korean activities in the Middle
East in negotiations with Pyongyang.
104 Glenn Kessler, Mid-level official steered U.S. shift on North Korea, Washington Post,
May 26, 2008, p. A1. Helene Cooper, Past deals by N. Korea may face less study, New York
Times
, April 18, 2008, p. A5. Siegfried S. Hecker and William J. Perry, The right path with
N. Korea, May 13, 2008, p. A15.
105 Ignore abductees at your peril, Japan warns the United States, JoongAng Ilbo (internet
version), October 26, 2007.
106 James Morrison, Bad impact feared, Washington Times, July 3, 2008, p. A20. The
Nelson Report, July 10, 2008.
107 League of Parliamentarians for Early Repatriation of Japanese Citizens Kidnapped by
North Korea, Urgent Resolution Urging Refrain from Unprincipled Concessions to North
Korea on Nuclear and Abduction Issues, May 27, 2008. The League is made up of 203
members of the Diet. Akiko Yamamoto and Blaine harden, Japan await abduction answers,
Washington Post, December 23, 2007, p. 18.