The United States, with the subtlety of a bear in a teacup, has tightened its grip on North Korea’s shadowy financial ballet by sanctioning individuals and institutions accused of laundering crypto pilfered through cyberattacks. One might call it a new chapter in the symphony of international diplomacy-or a very serious game of hide the nukes. 🤷♂️
Crypto To Support Nuclear Initiatives?
On Tuesday, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) unveiled its latest move: designating eight individuals and two entities for their role in processing funds from cybercrime and dubious IT ventures. One imagines the North Korean banks involved were simply “helping out” their neighbors, not quietly managing $5.3 million in crypto through the “First Credit Bank.” How quaint. 🏦
Some of these funds, it seems, have been used to target U.S. citizens or support ransomware actors-those hardworking North Korean IT workers who probably just wanted to escape the cold. One wonders if they receive bonuses in cryptocurrency or just eternal gratitude from their leaders. 🙌
The sanctions also extend to the Chosun Mangyongdae Computer Technology Company (KMCTC), a firm that sends IT workers to China like diplomats on a budget. One might call it a cultural exchange-or a very strategic money-laundering scheme. 🇨🇳💻
The Treasury, ever the drama queen, declared that North Korean cyber operations are “unmatched by any other nation.” A bold claim, considering their only competition is probably Russia arguing over who invented the internet. 🤝
John Hauli, the Treasury’s Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, stated that hackers fund nuclear weapons initiatives, posing a “direct threat” to global security. A noble cause, really-if only they’d stick to chess instead of cyberattacks. ♟️
North Korean IT Operations
TRM Labs, a blockchain intelligence firm, noted that Cheil Bank’s addresses resemble salary payments. With OFAC now on the case, these flows likely represent income for IT workers employed under “false pretenses”-a euphemism that makes “human trafficking” sound polite. 💼
Between June 2023 and May 2025, Cheil Bank’s wallets received $12.7 million. One might call it a two-year savings plan-or a very expensive hobby. 🎉
The Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team (MSMT), the UN’s replacement after Russia’s veto, has traced how Cheil Bank and allies facilitate payroll and laundering. A team effort, much like a heist movie-minus the glamour and plus the sanctions. 🎬
Over three years, North Korea allegedly siphoned $3 billion via crypto, using malware like a five-star chef uses salt. In 2025 alone, $2.7 billion was stolen, including Bybit’s $1.5 billion hack. One wonders if the hackers left a thank-you note. 🤑
These funds are then laundered through OTC brokers and FX dealers, converted to fiat, and funneled back into DPRK accounts. A financial loop so elegant, it could win an Oscar-if only it weren’t illegal. 🏆
The newly sanctioned individuals and entities? Critical nodes in Pyongyang’s network, moving millions to fund nukes. A true public service, if one ignores the part about world domination. 🌍

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2025-11-05 12:35