Defense analysts from the publication Jane's Defence Weekly have
told reporters this week that North Korea's 16-wheel vehicle, known as a
transporter-erector-launcher, bears many similarities in detail to its
Chinese counterparts. That raises the possibility that the vehicle could
have been manufactured or designed in China.
Photo: AP -- An April 15, 2012 photo of a North Korean vehicle carrying
a missile during a mass military parade in Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung Square
to celebrate the centenary of the birth of the late North Korean founder
Kim Il Sung.
The U.N. Security Council Resolution 1874, passed three years ago after
North Korea conducted its second nuclear test, prohibits supplying
Pyongyang's weapons program with arms, money, training, or other
assistance.
China has denied any wrongdoing in connection with the vehicle. Foreign
Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said Thursday that China is against the
spread of weapons of mass destruction and carriers for such weapons. He
said China has strict rules against the spread of such weapons.
U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Thursday that Washington is not aware of any evidence that China violated the U.N. arms embargo.
Arms transfer expert Pieter Wezeman of the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute told the Associated Press that it would be difficult to
prove whether Beijing violated U.N. sanctions because the vehicle could
have been imported to North Korea from a third country, or it might have
been meant for civilian purposes.
Michael Green of the Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies said at a U.S. congressional hearing Wednesday that
China is not properly implementing the Security Council sanctions. He said
he has seen evidence of North Korean companies on the sanctions list
operating openly in China. And he said the Security Council sanctions
committee has been ineffective.
"The sanctions committee of the Security Council has not done anything
since it was originally charged to look at this in 2009," said Green.
When questioned by VOA Thursday, the head of the North Korea sanctions
committee, Portuguese Ambassador José Filipe Moraes Cabral, said the
sanctions committee has not yet discussed the alleged Chinese violation. He
said the committee's experts are "doing their work" and a report
is due in May.


