N. Korea funding missile tests through cyberattacks, according to U.N. report

North Korea is paying for its continued missile tests with “widespread and increasingly sophisticated” cyberattacks on banks and cryptocurrency exchanges, according to a new report to the U.N. Security Council, two diplomatic sources said.

Reuters first detailed the report.

The sources told NBC News on Monday that the Security Council has been told Pyongyang may have generated what is estimated to be up to 2 billion dollars for its illegal weapons of mass destruction program, although they caution it is impossible to completely quantify the total amount because of North Korea’s ability to evade detection by using cyberspace “to launch increasingly sophisticated attacks to steal funds from financial institutions and cryptocurrency exchanges,” using cyberspace to launder the transactions.

The U.N. report, according to the diplomats, say these attacks permit the North “to generate income in ways that are harder to trace and subject to less government oversight and regulation than the traditional banking sector.”

Since 2016, private cyber-security firms have pointed to North Korea’s advancing from traditional cyber targets, such as South Korean governmental and military institutions, to more diverse targets that cannot as easily be traced to Pyongyang, the sources said.

In 2018, NBC News first reported that North Korea had stolen 81 million dollars by hacking into the Central Bank of Bangladesh, the equivalent of that country’s Federal Reserve. That theft is mentioned in the new U.N. report as part of its estimated up to $2 billion total. The report also cites other violations of U.N. sanctions, including “illicit ship-to-ship transfers and procurement of WMD-related items and luxury goods.”

source: nbcnews.com