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Old 12-13-2009, 09:54   #1
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Thailand intercepts plane with weapons from North Korea

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/terro...om-North-Korea





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Old 12-13-2009, 14:39   #2
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Quote:
...a cache of grenades, rocket launchers, and other heavy arms....
Quote:
...."Some believe the crew of the detained aircraft may have indicated they were heading for Sri Lanka in order to conceal their actual destination." One Sri Lankan military official told Reuters, "Why should Sri Lanka buy from North Korea when the same is available in China?"....


The aircraft is Georgian. The pilot has said that the cargo was destined for the Ukraine (possibly a fib).
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Old 12-13-2009, 21:04   #3
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An update:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1260...sections_world

....The Ilyushin 76 transport plane was registered in Georgia but flew to Bangkok from Pyongyang, Thai officials said. Its cargo -- later transferred to a Thai military base -- included rocket-propelled grenades, components for surface-to-air missiles, and explosives, according to the Associated Press, which cited Thai officials.... Thai authorities said it could take several more days to fully examine the plane's contents....
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Old 12-14-2009, 09:14   #4
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Destinations

Looks like from North Korea around the eastern boundry of China (I hope that China would not have given them overflight rights); then cut the corner near Viet Nam to Thailand. That between 2,500~3,000 miles.

Then roughly another 2,000 miles to Sri Lanka.

And from there: Yemen? Somalia? Iran? Sudan? even Syria? (with another refueling stop along the way).

I'd like to see what the cockpit had in the way of maps, commo, and manifests.
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Old 12-14-2009, 10:54   #5
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Originally Posted by CSB View Post
Looks like from North Korea around the eastern boundry of China (I hope that China would not have given them overflight rights); then cut the corner near Viet Nam to Thailand. That between 2,500~3,000 miles.

Then roughly another 2,000 miles to Sri Lanka.

And from there: Yemen? Somalia? Iran? Sudan? even Syria? (with another refueling stop along the way).

I'd like to see what the cockpit had in the way of maps, commo, and manifests.
Possibly, however there is still an active Tamil insurgency in northern Sri Lanka.

Quote:
The Tamil Tigers of Sri Lanka are undoubtedly one of the most organized, effective and brutal terrorist groups in the world. They invented the suicide vest and, according to the FBI, are the only terrorist group to have assassinated two world leaders. The rebels, based in northern and eastern Sri Lanka, have been waging a violent offensive against the central government on and off for more than 20 years.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/artic...#ixzz0ZgOsS8SP
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Old 12-22-2009, 01:08   #6
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http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Sec...6341261426200/

Seized North Korean arms 'bound for Iran'

Published: Dec. 21, 2009 at 3:10 PM
BANGKOK, Dec. 21 (UPI) -- A planeload of North Korean arms seized in Bangkok was reportedly bound for Iran, which has been buying up large amounts of weaponry in recent months as it braces for a possible onslaught by Israel, and possibly the United States.

Mystery has shrouded the destination of the Georgian-registered Ilyushin Il-76 cargo plane that was found be to carrying 35 tons of arms, including surface-to-air missiles and rocket launchers, in 12 crates when it was detained during a refueling stop on Dec. 11 following a tip-off from U.S. intelligence.

The five-man crew, all former Soviet air force members from Belarus and Kazakhstan, are in police custody and claim they thought they were hauling oil-field equipment.

According to two organizations that monitor international arms transfers -- TransArms in Chicago and the International Peace Information Service in Antwerp, Belgium -- the Ilyushin's flight plan now in the hands of Thai authorities indicates that Iran was the final destination of the deadly cargo, worth an estimated $18 million.

Tehran has been buying unusually large amounts of weapons and military equipment in recent months because of fears the Islamic Republic will be attacked by Israel to knock out its nuclear facilities, and possibly by the United States as well.

North Korea has been identified as a key source of those arms purchases. But in recent months U.S. authorities have also broken up several clandestine Iranian efforts to buy F-4 fighters, helicopters, aircraft components and other military materiel worth $2.5 billion.

The Ilyushin cargo was the first airborne arms shipment from Pyongyang to be seized since U.N. Security Council Resolution 1874 banning arms exports by Pyongyang was passed in June after North Korea conducted missile and nuclear tests.

It authorizes any country to inspect and seize North Korean weapons shipments that pass through its territory, regardless of the cargo's destination.

Cash-starved North Korea is estimated to earn $1 billion a year from arms sales, usually to rogue regimes or insurgent groups, to fund its nuclear program. Its biggest sales are ballistic missiles to Iran and other Middle Eastern states.

The Bangkok seizure was the second shipment of North Korean arms bound for Iran that has been intercepted in recent weeks.

In August authorities in the United Arab Emirates seized a Bahamian-flagged freighter, the ANL Australia, which was found to be carrying military equipment from North Korea to Iran.

Like the Bangkok shipment, that cargo, which included a large quantity of solid-fuel propellant for missiles, was also listed as drilling equipment.

During the summer the U.S. Navy shadowed a North Korean ship suspected of carrying arms to Myanmar. It was refused entry by several ports and eventually turned back.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute of Sweden, which monitors global arms sales, the Ilyushin seized in Thailand is registered in Georgia to a company called Air West Limited.

It had bought the aircraft from Beibars, a Kazakh company linked to notorious Serbian arms dealer Tomislav Dmanjanovic.

The aircraft had previously been registered with three companies identified by the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control as controlled by Viktor Bout, arguably the world's most infamous arms trafficker.

Although the former Soviet air force officer is not believed to have been involved in the arms shipment seized at Bangkok's Don Muang International Airport, there are some curious links to his gunrunning network and the fleet of aircraft he owns.

Bout was arrested in Bangkok in March 2008 in a sting operation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration on charges of plotting to sell anti-aircraft missiles and other weapons to Colombian rebels listed as terrorists by U.S. authorities.

He was indicted in New York on four charges of terrorism. Last August a Thai court rejected a U.S. extradition request, but Washington is appealing that ruling.

Bout remains behind bars in Bangkok's Klong Prem Central Prison, which is, as fate would have it, where the Ilyushin's crewmen are being held.
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Old 01-30-2010, 03:15   #7
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http://www.businessweek.com/news/201...port-says.html

North Korean Arms Were Headed to Iran, Thailand Report Says

January 30, 2010, 12:22 AM EST
By Bill Varner and Viola Gienger

Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) -- An airport in Iran’s capital of Tehran was the intended destination for a North Korean weapons shipment seized in Bangkok on Dec. 12, according to a confidential report to the United Nations Security Council by Thailand’s government.

A copy of the report, obtained from diplomats whose governments hold Security Council seats, said the 40-ton cargo’s destination was Airport Mahrabad in Tehran. It says the plane departed from the North Korean capital of Pyongyang and that the shipper was the Korea Mechanical Industry Co....

The seizure and subsequent investigations may shed light on North Korean arms deals, a key source of foreign-currency income for the reclusive state. North Korea earns about $1.5 billion annually from missile sales, mostly to Iran via airports in China, the U.S.-based Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis said in a report this year.

Other Arms Seizures

There have been three other seizures of arms allegedly going to or from Iran in the past year. Israel intercepted a ship it said was carrying arms to Syria from Iran in November. The United Arab Emirates in August seized a ship carrying North Korean-manufactured munitions, detonators, explosives and rocket-propelled grenades bound for Iran. Another shipment of Iranian arms, also allegedly bound for Syria, was detained by Cyprus last January.

Israel believes the arms were intended to go to the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon and the Hamas Islamic movement in the Gaza Strip, both of which are designated as terrorist organizations by the U.S....
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