South Korea Weighs Action After U.S. Says North’s Crypto Loot Funds Nukes

Pyongyang’s piggy bank just got raided—again. The U.S. Treasury slapped sanctions on eight North Korean bankers and two firms Monday for laundering **$3 billion** in stolen crypto straight into Kim Jong Un’s nuclear arsenal, sparking Seoul to dust off its own penalty playbook.

Second Vice Foreign Minister **Kim Ji-na** fired the warning shot on Yonhap TV: “We can review sanctions if really needed—U.S.-Korea coordination is key.” Targets include Lazarus hackers’ cash mules in China/Russia who funnelled $5.3M via First Credit Bank alone. UN’s Oct 22 report already flagged DPRK’s $6B+ crypto haul since 2017.

From Bybit’s $1.5B mega-heist to daily DeFi drains, North Korea’s cyber army now out-earns its missile tests. Treasury’s John K. Hurley: “Unmatched scale—straight to WMDs.”

Seoul’s toolkit: freeze rogue wallets, blacklist OTC desks, joint Chainalysis probes. Experts predict bilateral “Crypto Sanctions 2.0” by December—mirroring 2016 postar blitz.

Kim’s regime roared back: “Hostile farce.” Yet with 30% of foreign cash now digital, the noose tightens. South Korea’s message: steal our bytes, lose your bytes.