US says Russia seeking more NKorean arms, names broker

US says Russia seeking more NKorean arms, names broker

US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby has identified a Slovakian man Washington says has been brokering deals to ship weapons from North Korea to Russia to help Moscow's war effort in Ukraine
US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby has identified a Slovakian man Washington says has been brokering deals to ship weapons from North Korea to Russia to help Moscow's war effort in Ukraine. Photo: SAUL LOEB / AFP
Source: AFP

The White House said Thursday that Russia is seeking more arms from North Korea for the Ukraine war, revealing the identity of a Slovakian man allegedly brokering deals between Moscow and Pyongyang.

"We have new information that Russia is actively seeking to acquire additional munitions from North Korea," said White House national security spokesman John Kirby.

He said the man, identified as Ashot Mkrtychev, 56, of Bratislava, was working on arms-related sales and barter deals between the two countries between late 2022 and the early part of this year.

"With the support of Russian officials, Mkrtychev has been attempting to broker a secret arms agreement between Russia and North Korea," he said.

Under discussion was for North Korea to ship "over two dozen" kinds of weapons and munitions to Russia, according to the US Treasury, which placed Mkrtychev on its sanctions blacklist.

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In exchange, the Treasury said, Pyongyang would obtain cash, commercial aircraft, commodities and raw materials.

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Kirby said Washington understands that Russia seeks to send a delegation to North Korea and is offering Pyongyang food in exchange for munitions.

He did not say if any deals had been completed, or detail the specific weapons involved.

"Any arms deal between North Korea and Russia would directly violate a series of UN Security Council resolutions," Kirby added.

He said the deals Mkrtychev was involved in were separate from North Korea's sale late last year of rockets and artillery munitions to the Wagner Group, a semi-independent Russian military force fighting on the front lines in Ukraine.

Being placed on the Treasury sanctions list cuts Mkrtychev off from the US financial system, according to Kirby.

"He will face significant challenges in attempting to access and abuse the international financial system now that his activities have been exposed," he said.

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The blacklisting also places in jeopardy anyone who provides support to Mkrtychev.

"Today's action is a clear message that the United States will not relent in targeting those who provide support to Russia's aggression and brutal war against Ukraine," said US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

"We will continue to identify, expose, and counter Russian attempts to acquire military equipment from (North Korea) or any other state that is prepared to support its war in Ukraine," Blinken said in a statement.

Last September, as Ukrainian and Russian forces faced looming shortages of artillery ammunition, the White House said it had intelligence that Russia was planning to acquire shells and rockets from North Korea.

Pyongyang denied the allegation, but over subsequent weeks US officials repeated it.

Then in November Kirby said North Korea was shipping the ammunition to Russia but obfuscating the trade by making it look like it was sending arms to the Middle East or North Africa.

In December he said Washington had intelligence that North Korea had completed an initial arms delivery to the Wagner Group.

Source: AFP

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