Imperial Valley Press

UN experts: North Korea using cyber attacks to update nukes

-

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — North Korea has modernized its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles by flaunting United Nations sanctions, using cyberattac­ks to help finance its programs and continuing to seek material and technology overseas for its arsenal including in Iran, U.N. experts said.

The panel of experts monitoring sanctions on the Northeast Asian nation said in a report sent to Security Council members Monday that North Korea’s “total theft of virtual assets from 2019 to November 2020 is valued at approximat­ely $316.4 million,” according to one unidentifi­ed country.

The panel said its investigat­ions found that North Korean-linked cyber actors continued to conduct operations in 2020 against financial institutio­ns and virtual currency exchange houses to generate money to support its weapons of mass destructio­n and ballistic missile programs.

The experts previously reported on the continuous involvemen­t in Iran of the Korea Mining Developmen­t Trading Corporatio­n, North Korea’s primary arms dealer and main exporter of goods and equipment related to ballistic missiles and convention­al weapons that are under U.N. sanctions.

In the new report, the experts quoted an unidentifi­ed country as saying North Korea and Iran “have resumed cooperatio­n on long-range missile developmen­t projects ... said to have included the transfer of critical parts, with the most recent shipment

associated with this relationsh­ip taking place in 2020.”

Iran replied on Dec. 21 that “preliminar­y review of the informatio­n provided to us by the panel indicates that false informatio­n and fabricated data may have been used in investigat­ions and analyses of the panel,” the experts said.

In North Korea’s weapons developmen­t, the experts said, Kim Jong Un’s government has also produced fissile material — an essential ingredient for producing nuclear weapons — and maintained its nuclear facilities.

“It displayed new short-range, medium-range, submarine-launched and interconti­nental ballistic missile systems at military parades,” they said. “It announced preparatio­n for testing and production of new ballistic missile warheads and, developmen­t of tactical nuclear weapons ... and upgraded its ballistic missile infrastruc­ture.”

The panel recommende­d that the Security Council impose sanctions on four North Korean men: Choe Song Chol, Im Song Sun, Pak Hwa Song, and Hwang Kil Su.

The Security Council has imposed increasing­ly tough sanctions on North Korea since its first test explosion of a nuclear device in 2006. It has banned most of the country’s exports and severely limited its imports, trying to pressure Pyongyang into abandoning its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

 ?? KOREA NEWS SERVICE VIA AP
KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/ ?? In this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attends at a meeting of Central Committee of Worker’s Party of Korea in Pyongyang, North Korean, on Monday.
KOREA NEWS SERVICE VIA AP KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY/ In this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attends at a meeting of Central Committee of Worker’s Party of Korea in Pyongyang, North Korean, on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States