2:51 pm today

Ukraine hit with surge of attacks using North Korean missiles using Western chips

2:51 pm today

By Daria Tarasova-Markina, Lauren Kent, Nick Paton Walsh and Victoria Butenko, CNN

Putin and Kim Jong Un

Russia has fired around 60 North Korean KN-23 missiles at Ukraine this year. Photo: Korean Central News Agency / AFP

Ukraine has been hit by a surge in Russian ballistic missile attacks, around a third of which used North Korean weapons that can only fly because they run on Western circuitry, obtained despite sanctions, according to Ukrainian military officials.

Russia has fired around 60 North Korean KN-23 missiles at Ukraine this year, according to a Ukrainian defence official.

That accounts for nearly one in three of the 194 ballistic missiles fired so far in 2024, a CNN tally of attacks publicly acknowledged by Ukraine's air force shows.

August and September saw a spike in ballistic missile attacks, when Ukraine first publicly detailed the use of the KN-23.

"We see that since the spring, Russia has been using ballistic missiles and attack drones much more to strike Ukraine. And less use of cruise missiles," acting head of communications of the Ukrainian Air Force Yuriy Ignat, told CNN.

These less-sophisticated missiles are part of North Korea's growing support to Moscow, which also includes about 11,000 North Korean soldiers deployed to Russia's Kursk region.

As the expanding role of the North Korean missiles becomes clear, Ukrainian officials have given CNN rare access to fragments from the wreckage of the weapons, which show the apparent extent of US and European-made or designed circuitry in their guidance systems.

Crucial components used in the North Korean missiles are produced by nine Western manufacturers, including companies based in the United States, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, according to a recent report by Ukraine's Independent Anti-Corruption Commission (NAKO), a civil society organization. Some parts of the KN-23/24 missiles they analysed were produced as recently as 2023, suggesting a swift delivery pipeline to North Korea.

CNN was shown around one warehouse where Ukrainian government investigators comb through the debris, searching for small details that offer clues about the production of these deadly weapons.

In this handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on November 19, 2024, Ukrainian rescuers clean rubble of a destroyed dormitory building following a  missile attack in Glukhiv, Sumy region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. - A Russian strike overnight killed twelve people including a child in the eastern Ukrainian region of Sumy, which has faced an increase in deadly attacks, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on November 19, 2024. (Photo by Handout / UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

File photo. The components were salvaged from the rubble of buildings where lives were lost. Photo: AFP PHOTO / UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE

The warehouse was full of damaged drones and burned missile parts. In different buildings, hundreds of microchips were carefully separated into folders named for various weapons used by Russia - "Shahed," "Iskander," and "KN-23."

It's a sombre site, as investigators are keenly aware the components were salvaged from the rubble of buildings where lives were lost. Strikes using North Korean missiles have killed at least 28 people and injured 213 this year, the Ukrainian prosecutor general told CNN.

"Everything that works to guide the missile, to make it fly, is all foreign components. All the electronics are foreign. There is nothing Korean in it," said Andriy Kulchytskyi, head of the Military Research Laboratory of Kyiv's Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise.

"The only thing Korean is the metal, which quickly rusts and corrodes," he added.

A Ukrainian Defence Intelligence official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said their investigations are hampered by the damage to the missile fragments, but it is still possible to determine that "the vast majority of components are Western components. Probably 70 percent are American, from well-known companies ... They also use components made in Germany and Switzerland."

A report released earlier this year by the UK-based investigative organization Conflict Armament Research (CAR) found that 75 percent of components in one of the first North Korean missiles used to attack Ukraine were from US-based companies.

Sanctioned goods move though China

There is no reliable information on how exactly the components make their way into North Korea, according to weapons-tracing experts. But all signs to point to China as the likely conduit, experts say.

"We have successfully traced some of those components, and the last known custodians are Chinese companies," said deputy director of operations at CAR Damien Spleeters, which works to independently document diverted weapons. That means Chinese firms bought the components from manufacturers and a series of intermediaries.

"The diversion rarely happens at the plant that makes the components," he told CNN.

CAR had a policy of not "naming and shaming" specific manufacturers because there was no evidence the firms deliberately shipped the parts to North Korea.

"Some parts of these components may be actually fake and made in China," said Victoria Vyshnivska, a senior researcher at NAKO, "But we cannot be 100 percent sure," she added, as the companies in question often failed to respond to questions.

One manufacturer was able to provide NAKO with evidence that a low-value electronic component found in a North Korean missile was counterfeit.

Meanwhile, Vyshnivska said, some other manufacturers are choosing not to pursue better control of their exports, as more detailed record-keeping and company audits would incur costs. "It's ignorance that is sometimes, maybe, driven by money," she told CNN.

CAR and others consider that middleman distribution companies - not manufacturers - are the primary issue.

There are more than 250 companies whose components have been identified in North Korean missiles, according to CAR. But the majority of those electronics are sold to five main distributors, which are all based in the United States and Canada. CAR is urging policymakers to focus more effort on regulating those distribution companies.

The US Commerce Department has already stepped up its targeting of entities and shell companies that have shipped sanctioned goods to Russia and Belarus.

Ukrainian officials argue the poor enforcement of the sanctions regime by Western nations is one major issue.

Vladyslav Vlasiuk, the Ukrainian president's commissioner for sanctions policy, said he was hopeful the incoming Trump administration would seek greater control over the illicit trade.

"No manufacturers' entities have been held responsible for any of these supplies yet," he told CNN. "We think that if any of these ... manufacturers would be held responsible for the quantity of microelectronics found, say, in Russian missiles hitting Ukraine, (they) would really, really start to do more in that regard."

That echoes the sentiment of the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which earlier this year slammed US manufacturers for not doing enough to vet potential buyers, despite having adequate "resources, funding, and knowledge."

"Our findings reveal a distinct disinterest in evaluating and improving corporate compliance practices and particularly, monitoring those distributors, the middlemen," said Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) in September.

Components also continue to be diverted to Iran and to Russia directly, according to the Ukrainian intelligence official.

"Russia uses Western components in the whole segment of both lethal weapons and reconnaissance drones," the Defence Intelligence official told CNN, noting that the downing of one of Russia's heavy drones, the "Okhotnik," revealed it was primarily made from American components.

"We also need to do the appropriate work to close these supply channels," he said.

- CNN

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