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China Joins the Axis of Evil-Wall Street Journal,Dec 7th, 2010

John Doe

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704156304576003124111945808.html#articleTabs=article

Last month, U.S. nuclear scientist Siegfried Hecker paid his fourth visit to North Korea, where he was granted a tour of some of the hermit kingdom's nuclear facilities. Think WikiLeaks is bad? Compared to what the former director of the Los Alamos lab saw, it's nothing.

Mr. Hecker was given a tour of a construction site where Pyongyang intends to build a 100-megawatt reactor. Next he was taken to a uranium enrichment facility. "The first look through the windows of the observation deck into the two long high-bay areas was stunning," relates Mr. Hecker. "Instead of seeing a few small cascades of centrifuges, which I believed to exist in North Korea, we saw a modern, clean centrifuge plant of more than a thousand centrifuges all neatly aligned and plumbed below us."

Nor was that all. Mr. Hecker also writes that "The control room was astonishingly modern. Unlike the reprocessing facility and reactor control room, which looked like 1950s U.S. or 1980s Soviet instrumentation, this control room would fit into any modern American processing facility."

The North Koreans told Mr. Hecker they had developed all of this indigenously. I asked Thomas Reed and Danny Stillman, both former nuclear-weapons designers and authors of "The Nuclear Express," an excellent history of nuclear proliferation, what they thought were the chances of that. Answer: "Zero."

What does this mean? For starters, it means that Pyongyang's nuclear efforts are not, or not merely, of the what-else-do-you-expect-from-these-nutcases variety. Some other entity—or regime—has made a considered decision to actively support the North's efforts to field an ambitious nuclear program.

So who is it?

Messrs. Reed and Stillman have their suspicions. Could it be Iran? Tehran, Damascus and Pyongyang have such a flourishing trade in nuclear know-how that it seems a good possibility, Various news outlets have noted the resemblance of the North's enrichment facility to the Iranian one in Natanz. But the authors are doubtful. "Not likely," they say. "[The Iranians] can't even make their own machines work."

What about Pakistan? "A possibility." The nuclear and ballistic missile trade between Pakistan and North Korea dates to the early 1990s, when Pakistani scientist A.Q. Khan was perfecting his import-export model. Then, too, the centrifuges Mr. Hecker observed appeared to be of the second-generation, P-2 variety used by Pakistan.


Yet the Islamabad-Pyongyang express was shut down years ago, while the North Korean facility appears to be brand new. It's unlikely that Pakistan would have been able to supply the large numbers of centrifuges the North has assembled. And then there's that state-of-the-art control room, probably not a Pakistani specialty.

Which leaves China, the "most likely" provider of the North's new toys, according to the authors. "There is no possibility," they say, "of North Korea achieving what nuclear capability it has without Chinese help."

Mr. Stillman in particular knows whereof he speaks: He was among the first foreigners ever to visit China's nuclear-test base at Malan. In "The Nuclear Express," he and Mr. Reed note that beginning in 1982, the Chinese "decided to actively support nuclear proliferation in the Third World, specifically the Muslim and Marxist worlds. In the decade that followed, Deng's government then trained scientists, transferred technology, sold delivery systems, and built infrastructure in furtherance of that policy."

Why the government of Deng Xiaoping embarked on that very Maoist course remains a bit of a mystery. Yet embark it did: A.Q. Khan almost certainly obtained his first bomb blueprint from China, and China may also have been the site of Pakistan's first nuclear test in May 1990. In 1997, the CIA testified that "China was the most significant supplier of WMD-related technology to foreign countries."

In 2002 came news that Chinese experts had worked on Iran's nuclear facility in Isfahan. That same year, the Washington Times reported that a Chinese company had sold North Korea 20 tons of tributyl phosphate, a key ingredient for extracting plutonium from spent fuel rods. And thanks to WikiLeaks, we know that China facilitates North Korean weapons exports—over insistent U.S. protests—to sundry foreign destinations.

It's time the U.S. drew appropriate conclusions from this. Every effort to negotiate with the North has failed. Yesterday, President Obama called Hu Jintao to ask for help with Pyongyang. But as proliferation expert Henry Sokolski notes, what's the point of urging Beijing to be part of the solution when it's so willfully part of the problem? China has signed on to nearly every nonproliferation agreement around. Yet it continues to flout all of them.

This is not the behavior of a status quo power, but of a revolutionary one supporting activities and regimes that represent the most acute threat to global security. If it continues unchecked, it is China that should be sanctioned—and the North's facilities destroyed.

John Doe:
I agree with most of this article, though not the title.
 
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hmmm yea okay cause rocking the boat is what china wants and it bring so many advantages to china if nk had nukes, the stuff people will say to make china look bad these days.
 
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they obviously don't believe it, or they're powerless to do anything, because if they had the ability and the motivation, GO FOR IT, talk is cheap.
 
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China is the leading instigator of the destabilization of peace in Asia today. China wants to disrupt the status quo so that it may become the hegonistic power of Asia. OK! Let China reap what it sows....
 
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on the topic,

hahahaha nice one, throwing dirt on pakistan, mixed with sarcasm, with a trio, pakistan, china, NK

now question is who invented the nukes in the first place, and who gave nukes to the europeans to play with??
 
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China is the leading instigator of the destabilization of peace in Asia today. China wants to disrupt the status quo so that it may become the hegonistic power of Asia. OK! Let China reap what it sows....

Let's do recheck on history. How many wars/"powerplay game" did US start? If china is going for hegomony in Asia,then US is DOING it on the whole damn world right NOW. Remind what US said to UN about starting the Irak war...

Unlike US,China don't like to put it's nose in other ppl's business. Sometime it would wrong(like Sudan),but mostly it's better(same rules to all). Let other ppl made their mistek and fixing their self. US's "help" never helps. Ofc that mostly because US's help most start with US own best interest,not the best interest of the ppl they are "helping".

After spying on china,then park carrier group near china,and call china is "destabilization force"?

US rule for every thing:We can do what ever we want,you can't,because it's anti-freedom,anti-democracy,anti-human right,anti-something that we would put it here when it fit our best interest!
And "I would like to pray for world peace!"
 
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China is the leading instigator of the destabilization of peace in Asia today. China wants to disrupt the status quo so that it may become the hegonistic power of Asia. OK! Let China reap what it sows....

What Wrong with China being the Might Nation an Asian Super Power aren't they they largest nation in Asia ? Japan is size of one of its small cities like it or Not China is here to Stay and for a VERY , very VERY .. long time
 
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China is the leading instigator of the destabilization of peace in Asia today. China wants to disrupt the status quo so that it may become the hegonistic power of Asia. OK! Let China reap what it sows....

THe irony of the user name Truthseeker. Stop lying for Uncle Sam

This axis evil thing is a joke.
 
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