Originally posted by Sandeep Kaul:
Benazir, it's about kim chi, not hamburgers!
Seems Benazir was in N. Korea in 1993, according to this article published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, published November, 2002:
Pakistan and North Korea - Dangerous Counter Trades
As early as 1992, Pakistani officials visited North Korea to view a No-dong prototype, and, in May 1993, Pakistani engineers and scientists attended the No-dong test-launch at Musudan-ri. When then-Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto visited Pyongyang in December 1993, analysts speculated that a missile deal featured on her agenda. Subsequently, in late 1995, Marshal Ch'oe Gwang, the former vice-chairman of North Korea's National Defense Commission, visited Pakistan and brokered a missile deal.
Details of Pakistan and North Korea's missile cooperation efforts surfaced in open source literature throughout the 1990s. In 1996, Taiwanese officials seized 15-tons of ammonium perchlorate - an oxidizing agent used in most modern solid-propellant formulas - an a freighter bound from North Korea to Paskistan's Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Committee.
http://www.wisconsinproject.org/countries/nkorea/nuke-miss-chron.htm
North Korea: Nuclear/Missile Chronology
The Risk Report
Volume 6 Number 6 (November-December 2000)
1993: North Korea successfully tests the Nodong missile to a range of about 500km.
1994: Agrees to one-time inspection of all seven declared sites, but balks at procedures.
1994: CIA Director says he believes North Korea may have produced one or two nuclear bombs.
1994: Agrees to inspection procedures but delays inspectors' visas and continues to bar inspectors from undeclared sites. Threatens to leave the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty if U.S. sends Patriot anti-missile batteries to South Korea.
1994: Inspectors find seals broken, are denied access to crucial equipment and cannot certify North Korean compliance.
1994: IAEA terminates inspections after North Korea bars inspectors from collecting samples at its plutonium reprocessing plant.
1994: U.S. cancels scheduled talks.
1994: IAEA announces again that it can no longer ensure that North Korea's nuclear materials were not being diverted for nonpeaceful purposes.
1994: North Korea begins removing spent fuel from the 5 Mwt. reactor, in "serious violation" of North Korea's safeguard agreement with IAEA. U.S. offers to hold high-level talks. IAEA reports that it is quickly losing ability to monitor past production of plutonium.
1994: IAEA tells UN Security Council that North Korea's recent removal of fuel rods makes it impossible to reconstruct the operating history of the reactor.
1994: IAEA exempts North Korea from technical assistance; North Korea reacts by quitting IAEA.
1994: U.S. announces it will pursue global economic sanctions against North Korea if North Korea does not allow IAEA inspectors to examine the spent fuel rods.
1994: U.S. builds up its troops in South Korea and announces it will begin consultations with other countries regarding sanctions.
1994: Former President Carter visits North Korea; Kim Il Sung offers to freeze North Korea's nuclear program in return for high-level talks between the U.S. and North Korea. U.S. offers to resume high-level talks and suspends efforts to sanction North Korea.
1994: U.S. begins negotiations with North Korea on freezing North Korea's nuclear program. Kim Il Sung dies; talks are suspended.
1994: U.S. and North Korea issue an "Agreed Statement,"under which North Korea will rejoin the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in exchange for light-water reactors, interim energy supplies and normalization of political and economic relations.
1994: U.S. and North Korea conclude an "Agreed Framework," in which President Clinton promises to help arrange, finance and construct the light-water reactors and fund interim energy supplies.
1994: North Korea announces that it has halted construction on its two unfinished graphite-moderated reactors.
1994: Chinese President Jiang Zemin promises the U.S. that China will strongly support the U.S.-North Korea agreement.
1994: IAEA inspectors confirm North Korea has frozen its nuclear program and stopped construction on the unfinished reactors.
1994: U.S. helicopter strays over North Korea and is shot down; one pilot is killed, Bobby Hall is taken prisoner and released 13 days later.
In th eold thread of NoKo there was an item that christopher warren of US allowed NoKo to sell the nodong to TSP and cancelled the agreement by Israel to stop weapons program of NoKo for payment of money.
http://www.nti.org/db/profiles/dprk/msl/chron/NKMCH94Go_bg.html
April 1994
North Korean Foreign Ministry delegation led by Pak Chung Kuk travels to Iran and
Pakistan.
—Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr., "A History of Ballistic Missile Development in the DPRK," Occasional Paper No. 2, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, November 1999, p. 23.
September 1994
A North Korean delegation, led by chairman of the North Korean State Commission of Science and Technology, travels to
Pakistan.
—Joseph S. Bermudez, Jr., "A History of Ballistic Missile Development in the DPRK," Occasional Paper No. 2, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, November 1999, p. 23.
16 December 1994
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin says it was a mistake to hold talks with North Korea in Beijing last year in an effort to persuade North Korea to stop missile exports to the Middle East. He says that instead of trying to solve the problem, "North Korea tried to fool Israel. Rabin reveals that North Korea demanded $1 billion to stop the sales, and he claims that Iran has provided North Korea with hundreds of millions of dollars to produce missiles with longer ranges. [Note: The talks were held in June 1993.]
—"Rabin: Earlier Talks with N. Korea over Missiles Were 'Major Mistake'," Jerusalem Post, 18 December 1994, p. 2, in Lexis-Nexis Academic Universe, <
http://www.lexis-nexis.com>.