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North Korea has been accused of using cyberattacks to gain financial resources needed to keep its nuclear and missile programs going.
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Hit by sanctions, the reclusive state could exploit cryptocurrencies as a way to obtain funds and evade the pain of such international restrictions, according to a new report by defense think tank Royal United Services Institute.
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North Korea has long used its financial activities in Southeast Asia to evade sanctions and the region "could prove vulnerable" to its crypto-related ambitions, the report said.
North Korea 's cyber capabilities and financial networks pose a threat to Southeast Asia's growing, yet vulnerable, cryptocurrency sector, according to British defense and security think tank Royal United Services Institute.
North Korea has been heavily sanctioned for years by the United Nations, the United States and other countries over its nuclear and missile ambitions. The reclusive state has also been accused of using cyberattacks to gain financial resources needed to keep its nuclear programs going.
The lifting of sanctions is vitally important to North Korea. It was in part due to disagreement over sanctions that saw the collapse of a second summit meeting between its leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump in Hanoi, Vietnam in February.
'Sustained' security challenge
In a report Monday, London-based RUSI said that as sanctions bite, the country has shown an increasing interest in virtual assets. It cited the alleged hijacking of crypto exchanges in South Korea as well as 2017's " WannaCry " global ransomware attack.
"North Korea has gone to extremes to raise funds and evade international sanctions, recently expanding these efforts to include the exploitation of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin," David Carlisle, a former official at the U.S. Treasury department's office of terrorism and financial intelligence, and Kayla Izenman, a financial crime and terrorist finance expert, wrote in the report.
"As a determined and sophisticated cyber actor in need of financial resources, North Korea is likely to continue to find ways of obtaining and exploiting cryptocurrencies," they said in their report, "Closing the Gap: Guidance for Countering North Korean Cryptocurrency Activity in Southeast Asia."
The WannaCry attack "signaled North Korea's interest in, and ability to exploit, cryptocurrencies," they said. And its cyber skills, coupled with the constant need for funds amid the squeeze of sanctions, point to the risk of a "sustained security challenge," they added.