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Nuclear cooperation between N. Korea, Iran concerning: State Dept.

Department of State Press Secretary Ned Price is seen answering questions in a daily press briefing in Washington on Tuesday in this image captured from the department's website. (US Department of State)
Department of State Press Secretary Ned Price is seen answering questions in a daily press briefing in Washington on Tuesday in this image captured from the department's website. (US Department of State)

Any nuclear cooperation between North Korea and Iran is concerning, a state department spokesperson said Tuesday, calling the two countries the "most acute proliferation threats."

State Department Press Secretary Ned Price also noted the countries have a history of violating international norms.

"We have released information on this. Some of this information has been reportedly publicly as well," the spokesperson said when asked about possible nuclear cooperation between Pyongyang and Tehran.

North Korea has long been suspected of exporting its weapons of mass destruction and related technologies, including those of nuclear weapons program, to countries such as Iran.

Price said it was concerning to see any nuclear cooperation between "two of the most acute proliferation threats the world faces -- the DPRK, a regime that has, of course, already a nuclear weapons program and Iran, a regime that has advanced its nuclear program in a way that is of concern to us."

DPRK stands for the North's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

"So any cooperation between countries that have consistently and unapologetically flouted multiple UN Security Council resolutions, the international norms, who have engaged in malign and malicious behavior both in their respective regions and around the world, that is, of course, a concern to us," he added. (Yonhap)

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