Such a relationship would be logical and useful to both North Korea and Iran," said Mark Hibbs, an authority of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace last year, a U.N. report suggested that impoverished, reclusive North Korea might include supplied Iran as well as Syria and Myanmar with banned atomic technology.
In what could be a sign of this, a German newspaper last month report that North Korea had provided Iran with a computer programme as part of intensified cooperation that might help the Islamic state build nuclear weapons.
There are reports and rumours, which governments and the IAEA (the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency) have not denied, indicating so as to there may be a track record of bilateral nuclear cooperation between North Korea and Iran, Hibbs said but while this can make sense for two states facing tightening sanctions and potentially earn Pyongyang a few badly needed funds the extent and nature of any such dealings, if they get place at all, remain shrouded in mystery.
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