Daily Report Archives

Daily Report Archives

Established in December 1993, the Nautilus Institute’s *N*ortheast *A*sia *P*eace and *S*ecurity *N*etwork (NAPSNet) Daily Report served thousands of readers  in more than forty countries, including policy makers, diplomats, aid organizations, scholars, donors, activists, students, and journalists.

The NAPSNet Daily Report aimed to serve a community of practitioners engaged in solving the complex security and sustainability issues in the region, especially those posed by the DPRK’s nuclear weapons program and the threat of nuclear war in the region.  It was distributed by email rom 1993-1997, and went on-line in December 1997, which is when the archive on this site begins. The format at that time can be seen here.

However, for multiple reasons—the rise of instantaneous news services, the evolution of the North Korea and nuclear issues, the increasing demand for specialized and synthetic analysis of these and related issues, and the decline in donor support for NAPSNet—the Institute stopped producing the Daily Report news summary service as of December 17, 2010.

NAPSNet

NAPSNet Daily Report Friday, June 11, 2004

NAPSNet Daily Report Friday, June 11, 2004 NAPSNet Daily Report Friday, June 11, 2004 United States 1. DPRK Working-Level Talks 2. ROK Military Budgest 3. ROK on DPRK Energy Aid 4. G-8 On Japan’s DPRK Posture 5. DPRK Missile Engine Test 6. US on DPRK Missile Program 7. ROK Iraq Troop Deployment 8. DPRK Foreign […]

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NAPSNet Daily Report 09 June, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. US ROK Troops Force Level Decision
2. DPRK Six-Way Talks Delayed
3. DPRK-ROK Military Relations
4. PRC on US-DPRK Relations
5. US Nuclear Weapons Funding
6. DPRK-ROK Military Talks
7. Japan and US on DPRK Nuclear Diplomacy
8. Japan-US Relations
9. Hong Kong-PRC Relations
10. PRC-Taiwan Military Relations
II. Japan 1. Japan Iraq Troops Dispatch
2. Japan DPRK Ship Ban
3. Japan-DPRK Abduction Cases
4. Japan Nuclear Energy Policy
5. US Bases in Japan

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NAPSNet Daily Report 08 June, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. DPRK on Uranium Bomb Program Accusations
2. DPRK Nuclear Freeze Request
3. DPRK Nodong Missile Range
4. Iran on DPRK-Iran Nuclear Relations Allegations
5. US Kerry on Nuclear Non-Proliferation
6. PRC Taiwan Straits Military Exercises
7. ROK-US Talks on US Troop Reduction
8. ROK Troops to Iraq
9. ROK Security Chief US Visit
10. PRC on DPRK Refugee Flow
11. UK on EU PRC Arms Ban
12. PRC on Military Build-Up
13. Japan on DPRK Ship Ban
14. Japan Response to Saudi Attacks
II. Japan 1. Japan-DPRK Abduction Cases
2. Bashing Against Released Japanese Hostages
3. Japan-PRC Wartime Slave
4. Japan ROK Fishing Boat Poaching
5. US Bases in Japan
III. CanKor E-Clipping Service 1. Issue #166

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NAPSNet Daily Report 07 June, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. DPRK Nuclear Talks
2. ROK on DPRK Six-Way Talks
3. ROK US Troops Withdrawal
4. ROK Security Road
5. Cross-Straits Relations
6. Japan on Missile Defense System
7. DPRK-ROK Cross-Border Roads Agreement
8. DPRK-PRC Commercial Flight Route
II. CanKor E-Clipping Service 1. Issue #168

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NAPSNet Daily Report 04 June, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. DPRK on Light Water Reactor Project
2. DPRK-ROK DMZ Propaganda
3. DPRK-ROK Naval Clash Aversion
4. DPRK Six-Way Talks Outlooks
5. DPRK-ROK Commercial Trade
6. Red Cross Chief DPRK Visit
7. Rumsfeld on US Troops in ROK
8. PRC Response to Tiananmen Anniversary Protest
9. US on PRC Official View of Tiananmen
II. Japan 1. Japan-DPRK Abduction Cases
2. Japanese Journalists Killed in Iraq

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NAPSNet Daily Report 03 June, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. DPRK Working-Level Talks
2. DPRK-ROK Economic Military Discussions
3. PRC on DPRK Nuclear Proliferation
4. DPRK Drug Smuggling
5. DPRK Economic Liberalization
6. Japan Al-Qaeda Suspect Arrests
7. Amnesty International on PRC Tiananmen Square Square
8. DPRK Humanitarian Aid
9. Dalai Lama on EU PRC Arms Embargo
10. ROK Olympic Corruption

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Policy Forum 04-23A: Japan-North Korea Diplomatic Normalization and Northeast Asia Peace

The following is Wada Haruki’s analysis of the larger stakes in the recent Japan-North Korea negotiations. Setting off the emotional issues of the kidnapping of Japanese against the record of Japanese colonialism in Korea, Wada examines the prospects for negotiating an agreement that could become the basis for defusing the range of contentious issues that continue to swirl around a nuclear North Korea facing acute problems of starvation and isolated from its powerful neighbor and historic antagonist, Japan. Wada Haruki is Emeritus Professor of the University of Tokyo.

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NAPSNet Daily Report 27 May, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. DPRK Six-Way Talks
2. DPRK-ROK Naval Security Talks
3. ROK-DPRK Military Relations
4. DPRK Iran Missile test Data?
5. Japan Al-Qaeda Suspects Arrests
6. US-DPRK War Remains Joint Recovery Project
7. ROK on DPRK Military Hackers
8. ROK Response to US Army Statement on USFK
9. Taiwan-US Relations
10. Hong Kong Democratization
11. PRC Tiananmen Square Anniversary Harassment
II. Japan 1. Japan Military Emergency Bills
2. Japan Iraq Troops Dispatch
3. Japan Logistic Support for the US War in Afghanistan
4. US Bases in Japan
5. Japan Nuclear Energy Policy
6. DPJ New Leader
7. Japan-DPRK Abduction Cases
8. Japan Al-Qaeda Network

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NAPSNet Daily Report 26 May, 2004

 
CONTENTS

I. United States

1. ROK-DPRK Military Talks
2. ROK Prime Minister Resignation
3. DPRK-Libya Nuclear Connection
4. PRC on US Iraq War
5. DPRK PRC Economic Tour
6. DPRK-PRC Military Border
7. Japan on DPRK Humanitarian Aid
8. PRC-DPRK Air Route
9. ROK-US Diplomatic Relations
10. US Enriched Uranium Reclamation Plan
II. Japan 1. Japan Oppression against Anti-war Movement
2. Overseas A-Bomb Survivors
3. Japan Nuclear Energy Policy
4. Japan Iraq Troops Dispatch
5. Bashing against Released Japanese Hostages
6. Japan Domestic Politics

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“North Korea’s Uranium Exports: Much Ado About Something” By Peter Hayes

In this special report, Peter Hayes provides basic information on North Korea’s uranium industry. He concludes that the main significance of the reported export of North Korean uranium to Libya is not that the DPRK exported uranium, a material that is available from many suppliers around the world, but rather, the fact that it has already developed an important prerequisite for enriching its own uranium.

This special report is accompanied by three documents that provide new insight into the support for North Korea’s uranium mining industry from the IAEA and western companies.

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