Egypt–North Korea relations
Egypt–North Korea relations refer to bilateral relations between Egypt and North Korea. Egypt has an embassy in Pyongyang whilst North Korea has an embassy in Cairo.
Egypt |
North Korea |
---|
History
Relations have remained fairly strong since the time of Gamal Abdel Nasser and the Non-Aligned Movement, when North Korea strongly supported Nasser's decision to nationalise the Suez Canal.[1] During the Suez Crisis, on 3 November 1956, the DPRK issued a declaration of solidarity with Egypt, and sent a small amount of financial aid (60.000 won) in the aftermath of the invasion.[2] In 1957 and 1958, the two governments signed a trade agreement and a cultural cooperation agreement, respectively.[3] A North Korean diplomatic delegation was sent to Egypt in 1961 for the purpose of establishing consular relations.[1] On 24 August 1963, the two governments elevated their diplomatic relations to the ambassadorial level.[4]
During the annual UN General Assembly debates over the Korean problem, Egypt initially abstained on the question of whether both Koreas or only the Republic of Korea should be invited to participate in the UN discussions. On 11 December 1962, Egypt, for the first time, voted in favor of a Soviet draft resolution on inviting both Koreas; this step was probably a reaction to the recent establishment of diplomatic relations between Israel and South Korea (9 April 1962). Nevertheless, in 1962-1966 Egypt still refrained from rejecting the U.S.-sponsored UN resolutions on Korea; instead, it preferred to abstain from voting.[5]
In the aftermath of the Six-Day War, North Korea provided Egypt with food aid (5.000 tons of cereals). Egypt, on its part, switched to a consistently pro-DPRK position in the UN. At that time, this shift reflected Nasser's growing dependence on Soviet assistance, but the Egyptian government maintained cordial relations with the DPRK even after Nasser's successor, Anwar Sadat, broke with the USSR in favor of a partnership with the U.S. In 1973–1976, Egypt continued to side with North Korea in the UN and the Non-Aligned Movement, whereas the DPRK expressed agreement with the Sinai Interim Agreement, the abrogation of the Egyptian-Soviet treaty of friendship (14 March 1976), Sadat's visit in Jerusalem (19–21 November 1977), and the Camp David Accords.[6]
In 2015, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who has refused to enforce United Nations sanctions against North Korea,[1] invited North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to attend the reopening of the reworked Suez Canal; Kim Yong-nam attended in his place.[7]
Military
During the visit of a North Korean government delegation headed by Kang Ryang-uk (1-7 March 1973), Egyptian Chief of Staff Saad el-Shazly asked the delegates to dispatch DPRK troops to train Egyptian pilots, because the recent expulsion of Soviet military advisers (7 July 1972) had adversely affected the Egyptian Air Force. On April 6-13, Shazly visited the DPRK, and gained the consent of Kim Il-sung. The North Korean trainers (20 pilots and 18 other staff members) arrived in June, and were assigned in July. On October 18, after the outbreak the Yom Kippur War, Kim Il-sung sent Egypt and 16 other Arab states a message of solidarity.[8] However, during the Libyan–Egyptian War in July 1977, North Korea sided with Libya.[9]
President Anwar el-Sadat approved the sale of R-17 Elbrus missiles to North Korea between 1976 and 1981.[1] North Korea has also helped Egypt develop its own missile systems.[1] North Korea obtained its first Scud-B ballistic missiles from Egypt in 1979 or 1980,[10] whereas in the 1990s, Egypt purchased Scud-C missiles from North Korea.[1]
Port Said has served as a transshipment port for North Korea weapon exports to Africa.[1][10] The United Nations reported in 2016 that a North Korean freighter containing some 30,000 rocket-propelled grenades worth an estimated $26 million had been intercepted off the coast of Egypt; the RPGs were allegedly purchased by the Egypt-based Arab Organization for Industrialization overseen by President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.[11]
In 2017, following a visit to South Korea, Egyptian Defense Minister Sedki Sobhi reportedly announced that Egypt had "severed all military ties with North Korea",[12] after the US slashed some $291 million worth of aid to Egypt.[11]
Economic relations
Egypt is one of North Korea's biggest trading partners. As of 2010, Egypt is the third-largest importer of North Korean goods, after China and South Korea, and also ranks among the top five exporters to North Korea.[13] The Egyptian telecommunications company Orascom was critical to the establishment of Koryolink in 2008, creating North Korea's only 3G phone network.[1][14][15] Orascom also became the first non-North Korean company to own a telecom license in North Korea.[16]
References
- Ramani, Samuel (August 28, 2017). "The Egypt-North Korea Connection". The Diplomat.
- Barry K. Gills, Korea versus Korea: A Case of Contested Legitimacy (London: Routledge, 1996), 64.
- Chung-in Moon, "Between Ideology and Interest: North Korea in the Middle East," in Jae Kyu Park, Byung Chul Koh and Tae-Hwan Kwak, eds., The Foreign Relations of North Korea: New Perspectives (Colorado: Westview Press; Seoul: Kyungnam University Press, 1987), 385.
- Moon, "Between Ideology and Interest," 383.
- Balazs Szalontai, "Courting the 'Traitor to the Arab Cause': Egyptian-North Korean Relations in the Sadat Era, 1970-1981,” S/N Korean Humanities, 5:1 (March 2019), 106-107.
- Szalontai, "Courting the 'Traitor to the Arab Cause'," 107-126.
- Suter, Margaret (19 September 2017). "Why Is Egypt's Sisi Buying Arms From Kim Jong Un?". Newsweek.
- Satoru Miyamoto, "DPRK Troop Dispatches and Military Support in the Middle East: Change from Military Support to Arms Trade in the 1970s.” East Asia 27 (2010): 345-359.
- Chadwick, Richard W. (1 October 2001). "A Short History of Contemporary North Korea and International Politics" (PDF). University of Hawaii. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - Gilchrist, Karen. "Egypt could be a pawn in the US's North Korea offensive — if it had the foresight". CNBC.
- Walsh, Declan (3 March 2018). "Need a North Korean Missile? Call the Cairo Embassy". The New York Times.
- The Associated Press (September 12, 2017). "Egypt's top commander says military ties with Pyongyang severed". The Japan Times.
Yonhap quoted the South Korean Defense Ministry on Monday as saying Egypt’s Defense Minister Sedki Sobhi told his counterpart Song Young-moo that Egypt has “already severed all military ties with North Korea.”
- U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission (2011). Report to Congress of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. p. 246.
- Alaa Shahine (2 February 2012). "Orascom Telecom Media Shares Jump After North Korea Announcement". Bloomberg. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
- Ricks, Thomas E.; Kim, Yonho (2016-03-17). "North Korea's silent hard currency source: That cellphone business with Orascom". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 2017-04-27.
- Graham, Emma (6 March 2020). "Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris sees oil at $100 in 18 months, says he would buy airlines". CNBC.