Pubdate: Thu, 03 Jun 2004 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2004 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Victor Cha, and Chris Hoffmeister Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) NORTH KOREA'S DRUG HABIT WASHINGTON - Reaction to last month's meeting between Junichiro Koizumi, the Japanese prime minister, and Kim Jong II, the North Korean leader, was nothing short of underwhelming. Critics said Mr. Koizumi gave up too much - millions in medical aid and thousands of tons of rice - to secure the return of five children of Japanese citizens abducted by North Korea more than two decades ago. He also failed to obtain a definitive commitment from Mr. Kim to dismantle North Korea's nuclear weapons programs. The critics notwithstanding, Mr. Koizumi's diplomacy should be judged a success. The lesson the United States and Japan should learn from it is that moderate pressure on the North Korean regime works - and can be used to limit the North's ambitions not only in weapons development but also in the drug trade. After all, Japan has been pressing for the release of its citizens and their relatives since the day two years ago when Kim Jong Il admitted North Korea had kidnapped them. Yet it was not until Japan made clear it was prepared to curtail trade with the North - cutting off financial remittances to the North, imposing an import ban on North Korean goods, banning Japanese ships from making North Korean ports of call - that North Korea made any concessions. International commerce is clearly important to North Korea, and threats of trade sanctions obviously get the regime's attention. Yet there is an even better reason for the United States and Japan to employ this strategy: there is increasing evidence that in recent years North Korea has expanded its role as producer, shipper and trafficker of narcotics throughout East Asia and Southeast Asia. According to the Pacific Forum of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Pyongyang has directed North Korean farmers to produce opium poppies since the late 1970's, with cultivation areas expanding exponentially in recent years. These farms are thought to produce as much as 40 tons of opium annually. Government-subsidized factories process the opium into heroin, which is then distributed through companies and diplomatic conduits. According to some sources, North Korea now ranks among the world's largest opium and heroin suppliers. Because the North Korean state is so secretive, it is difficult to prove any direct links between the regime and drug trafficking. But there is some evidence that the government may be taking over and enlarging the trade, as it has done in other areas of the North Korean economy. A 2003 report from the Congressional Research Service cited nearly 50 arrests or drug seizures involving North Koreans in more than 20 countries since the early 1990's, with at least 11 documented cases involving North Korean diplomats or intelligence agents. In the last five years, both Russian and German police have detained North Korean diplomats on counterfeiting or heroin smuggling charges. And between 1999 and 2001, more than one-third of all drug seizures by Japan and China were methamphetamines en route from North Korea. This problem is likely to get worse. In part, this may be the unintended consequence of other diplomatic policies. The American-led Proliferation Security Initiative, for example, which began almost two years ago and aims to block trade in nuclear and other weapons, may have caused Kim Jong Il to rely on drug trafficking and counterfeiting to try to compensate for lost revenues. North Korea's foray into illicit activities has been further spurred by United States efforts at taking customers like Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen and Libya off North Korea's missile sales roster, which has cut the North's revenues in this area to one-tenth of their usual volume. As they continue their on-again, off-again diplomacy, the United States and Japan may find that North Korea's drug trade is a more visible component of the regime's threat. The good news, for the United States and its allies, is that the North's growing drug threat means that diplomacy aimed at eliminating its missile exports is working. The bad news, for North Korea, is that continued drug trafficking is not likely to be tolerated by the region. If it continues to increase its trade in drugs, North Korea is likely to become the eventual target of a regional initiative to restrict the drug trade - which, in conjunction with the American-led curbs on its weapons trade, will put moderate yet deliberate pressure on North Korea. And if Japan's recent experience with abductees is any indication, such patient but comprehensive diplomacy may be the key to attaining Mr. Kim's flexibility on nuclear disarmament. Victor Cha is a professor of government and Asian studies at Georgetown. Chris Hoffmeister is a recent graduate of Georgetown. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin