Researcher: North Korea can produce ballistic missiles for Russia to use
against Ukraine in months
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[December 19, 2024]
By EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — North Korea demonstrated this year that it could
produce ballistic missiles and supply them to Russia for use against
Ukraine in a matter of months, the head of a research organization that
traces weapons used in the war said Wednesday.
Jonah Leff told the U.N. Security Council that researchers on the ground
examined remnants of four missiles from North Korea recovered in Ukraine
in July and August, including one that had marks indicating it was
produced in 2024.
“This is the first public evidence of missiles having been produced in
North Korea and then used in Ukraine within a matter of months, not
years,” he said.
Leff also had briefed the Security Council in late June, telling members
that the organization he heads, Conflict Armament Research, had
“irrefutably” established that ballistic missile remnants found in
Ukraine early this year were from a missile manufactured in North Korea.
The U.K.-based organization, which was established in 2011 to document
and trace weapons used in conflicts to assist governments in countering
diversion and proliferation, has worked in Ukraine since 2018.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed his country would “invariably
support” Russia’s war in Ukraine when he met Russia’s defense chief in
late November, the North’s state media reported.
Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia objected to the second
appearance of Leff at the council meeting, chaired by Ambassador Linda
Thomas-Greenfield of the United States, which holds the council’s
rotating presidency this month.
He claimed Leff represents NATO and the European Union, and questioned
whether his organization could provide impartial assessments. And he
accused Thomas-Greenfield of violating Security Council practices and
transforming its meetings “into a politicized act of buffoonery.”
The U.S. ambassador retorted that Russia had vetoed a resolution that
ended the monitoring of sanctions against North Korea by U.N. experts,
which she said makes organizations like Conflict Armament Research and
its independent, well-regarded experts all the more critical.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin, second left in front, and
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un, second right in front, examine a
rocket assembly hangar during their meeting at the Vostochny
cosmodrome outside the city of Tsiolkovsky, about 200 kilometers
(125 miles) from the city of Blagoveshchensk in the far eastern Amur
region, Russia, Sept. 13, 2023. Russian Federal Space Corporation
Roscosmos CEO Yuri Borisov is on the left. (Artyom Geodakyan,
Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)
She said its reports show why Russia was determined to block the
renewal of the mandate for the U.N. experts. Russia and North Korea
“are engaging in unlawful arms transfers and training, in brazen
violation of numerous council resolutions," Thomas-Greenfield said.
Leff stood by the organization's research and said its analysis
highlights three observations about North Korea’s missile
activities.
It confirms the continued use of freshly manufactured North Korean
ballistic missiles in Ukraine, he said, and the discovery of the
2024 manufacturing mark on one missile reveals the very short period
between the production of these ballistic missiles, their transfer
and eventual use in Ukraine.
Leff also said the presence of recently produced missile components
not from North Korea, some bearing 2023 production marks,
“illustrates North Korea’s robust acquisition network for its
ballistic missile program, despite U.N. sanctions prohibiting the
transfer of this material for military purpose.”
North Korea’s U.N. Ambassador Kim Song insisted that its
relationship with Russia is “a positive contribution to
international peace and security and can by no means be subject of
the criticism.”
He accused the United States and its allies of inciting
“confrontation and discord among nations,” by intervening militarily
across the planet and providing Ukraine with billions of dollars in
military aid, including long-range weapons.
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