"We
determined that from there (the North Korean embassy in Berlin) weapons
procurement took place, in our view, with an eye toward the missile
program and in part also the nuclear program," the head of Germany's
Security Agency (BfV), Hans-Georg Maassen, told CNN affiliate ARD.
"If
we find such things, we stop it, but we cannot guarantee that this can
be prevented in all cases," he said in a press release from the public
broadcaster ahead of a documentary about North Korea's missile program
to be aired Monday.
Maassen
said authorities believe parts for North Korea's weapons program were
"acquired through shadow buyers or shadow markets abroad, which they
then bought in Germany,"
Many of the purchases were so-called dual-use goods that could be used for both civil and military purposes, he said.
German
authorities received evidence of product purchases destined for North
Korea's missile program in 2016 and 2017, according to the documentary.
The
report also alleges a North Korean diplomat tried in 2014 to acquire a
monitor which measures gas emissions during the production of chemical
weapons.
CNN attempted to contact North Korean authorities but they were not available for comment at time of publishing.
The
rogue regime's repeated weapons tests saw the UN Security Council pass
increasingly strict resolutions against Pyongyang in 2017. The measures,
passed after intense lobbying by Washington, targeted energy, money
transfers and shipping.
However, UN
Investigators in a recent report found that North Korea "is already
flouting the most recent resolutions by exploiting global oil supply
chains, complicit foreign nationals, offshore company registries and the
international banking system."
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