Globalization is predominantly thought of as a benign force offering greater opportunities for trade, communication and technological innovation. Yet globalization has developed a dark side, exploited by malicious actors like drug and human traffickers, terrorists and WMD proliferators. Globalization has done more than just provide these actors tools for conducting their trade; it has created an entirely new breed of crime, where illicit activities converge and the drug trafficker may also be the terrorist or the proliferator, or both.
One recent example of this growing confluence of transnational security threats is Panama’s recent seizure of the North Korean cargo ship Chong Chon Gang. Authorities stopped and boarded the ship in the Panama Canal, finding smuggled components of fighter jets and surface-to-air missiles from Cuba bound for North Korea. This is not the first time officials seized the Chong Chon Gang: It was also detained in Ukraine in 2010 for smuggling small arms and narcotics.
Knowing what we know about trafficking networks, it is not farfetched to suspect that the Chong Chon Gang may have also been a vehicle for human trafficking, as well as for smuggling counterfeit goods and even materials for nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Such is the nature of illicit activity in a globalized world.
Read the full article in World Politics Review here.
_______________________________
Photo by SurfaceWarriors via flickr
Resilience & Sustainability, Resilience & Sustainability
Share:
Globalization is predominantly thought of as a benign force offering greater opportunities for trade, communication and technological innovation. Yet globalization has developed a dark side, exploited by malicious actors like drug and human traffickers, terrorists and WMD proliferators. Globalization has done more than just provide these actors tools for conducting their trade; it has created an entirely new breed of crime, where illicit activities converge and the drug trafficker may also be the terrorist or the proliferator, or both.
One recent example of this growing confluence of transnational security threats is Panama’s recent seizure of the North Korean cargo ship Chong Chon Gang. Authorities stopped and boarded the ship in the Panama Canal, finding smuggled components of fighter jets and surface-to-air missiles from Cuba bound for North Korea. This is not the first time officials seized the Chong Chon Gang: It was also detained in Ukraine in 2010 for smuggling small arms and narcotics.
Knowing what we know about trafficking networks, it is not farfetched to suspect that the Chong Chon Gang may have also been a vehicle for human trafficking, as well as for smuggling counterfeit goods and even materials for nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Such is the nature of illicit activity in a globalized world.
Read the full article in World Politics Review here.
_______________________________
Photo by SurfaceWarriors via flickr
Recent & Related
Tripoli’s New Leverage: How the American Initiative Changed the Rules of Negotiation
America’s Chip Future Still Runs Through Taiwan
Postwar, Iran Is at a Crossroads
When Formal Alliances Stop Doing Political Work: The Canada-US Alliance in Crisis
Post-War Street Rallies in Iran: The Ascendance of Religious over National Identity
The Next Iran Nuclear Deal: Lessons from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and North Korea
The Negative Strategic Consequences of the US-Iran War for Iraq
What OCHA’s 87 Million Lives Campaign Reveals About the Future of UN Leadership
What The Iran War Reveals About Airpower
The Status of Transitional Justice in Syria
Iran-Qatar Electricity Grid Interconnection Plan Shows Pragmatism in the Shadow of War
North Africa Regional Outlook: June 17, 2026
การทำเหมืองแร่โดยไม่ได้รับการควบคุมตามแนวแม่น้ำในแผ่นดินใหญ่ของเอเชียตะวันออกเฉียงใต้
ການຂຸດຄົ້ນ-ປຸງແຕ່ງແຮ່ທີ່ບໍ່ຖືກຕ້ອງ ຢູ່ຕາມແມ່ນໍ້າສາຍຕ່າງໆ ຢູ່ແຜ່ນດິນໃຫຍ່ອາຊີຕາເວັນອອກສຽງໃຕ້ Unregulated Mining Along Rivers in Mainland Southeast Asia (Lao Language)
Current Geopolitics Shift Deep-Sea Mining Debates
Navigating Seabed Mining in the Cook Islands: A Conversation with John Parianos
การทำเหมืองแร่โดยไม่ได้รับการควบคุมตามแนวแม่น้ำในแผ่นดินใหญ่ของเอเชียตะวันออกเฉียงใต้
Mining in Mainland Southeast Asia – River Basins Dashboard
Unregulated Mining Along Rivers in Mainland Southeast Asia
Trump’s Critical Minerals Search in Africa Won’t Tip the Scales Against China
Breaking Silos to Beat Scams: Why Holistic Law Enforcement Matters
The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Violence Against Women and Girls
Find an Expert
Home to more than 100 scholars and global affiliates, the Stimson Center is proud to be a magnet for the world’s leading experts on the most pressing foreign policy and national security issues of our time. Explore our experts and their work.