U.S.
slaps more sanctions on North Korea after Sony hack
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[January 03, 2015]
By Julia Edwards and Jason Lange
HONOLULU/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - North
Korea was hit with more sanctions on Friday designed to impede access to
the U.S. financial system in the wake of a cyberattack on Sony Pictures
Entertainment, which the Obama Administration has said was supported by
the reclusive country.
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The U.S. government named three entities, including North Korea's
military intelligence agency, and sanctioned 10 people with links to
weapons sales and proliferation.
Financial sanctions have been effective in bringing pressure on Iran
and Russia, but they have had limited impact on North Korea, which
has been sanctioned by the United States for more than 50 years.
“It’s not as if they travel a lot abroad to western Europe or the
United States ... They don’t have billions of dollars in western
banks,” said Joel Wit of 38North, part of the U.S. Korea Institute
at Johns Hopkins University in Washington.
Pyongyang has denied involvement in the cyberattack. Washington said
there was no evidence that any of the three entities or the
individuals were linked to it.
Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew said in a statement that Washington
had a "commitment to hold North Korea accountable for its
destructive and destabilizing conduct."
Lew said that even as a probe by the FBI continued "these steps
underscore that we will employ a broad set of tools to defend U.S.
businesses and citizens, and to respond to attempts to undermine our
values or threaten the national security of the United States."
The cyberattack that crippled Sony's networks occurred as the
company was preparing to release the film "The Interview," a comedy
centered on plans to assassinate North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un.
Obama signed an executive order imposing the new sanctions, which
deny designated persons access to the U.S. financial system, and
authorize the Treasury Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary
of State, to apply sanctions against officials of North Korea's
government and the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, and people acting
on their behalf or in support of them.
See the Treasury Department statement at
http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/jl9733.aspx
"That will allow us at the time and place of our choosing to impose
sanctions on any of those Korean officials," a senior administration
official told reporters during a telephone briefing.
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The entities are Reconnaissance General Bureau, North Korea's
intelligence organization; Korea Mining Development Trading Corp,
which the Treasury Department described as North Korea's primary
arms dealer; and Korea Tangun Trading Corp, which the U.S. said is
primarily responsible for procuring commodities and technology to
support North Korea's defense research and development programs.
The White House said on Friday that the Reconnaissance General
Bureau was linked to North Korea's capacity to wage cyber warfare,
but it did not link it directly to the Sony hack attack. Korea
Mining Development Trading Corp and Korea Tangun Trading Corp have
been previously sanctioned.
The 10 North Koreans named in the new sanctions worked for the two
companies but are not part of the North's top leadership.
Despite past sanctions that have been designed to curb North
Korean's nuclear capabilities, Pyongyang has pressed ahead with its
nuclear program.
(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton; Writing by David Chance;
Editing by Toni Reinhold and Grant McCool)
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