South Korea sanctions are under review after U.S. Treasury designations tied to alleged DPRK crypto laundering, Vice Foreign Minister Kim Ji-na said on Nov 7, 2025, as Seoul signals coordination with Washington on possible complementary steps against illicit digital finance networks.
Summary
How do South Korea sanctions fit with the U.S. Treasury designations?
On Nov 7, 2025, the U.S. Treasury announced designations naming eight individuals and two entities accused of laundering proceeds from cyberattacks and fraud. The department said the networks moved stolen digital assets and that illicit funds allegedly supported DPRK 27s nuclear weapons program. For the official list and details, see the U.S. Department of the Treasury press release.
How Seoul respond to crypto laundering
Vice Foreign Minister Kim Ji-na told Yonhap on Nov 7, 2025 that Seoul 3can consider reviewing sanctions as a measure if they are really needed, 4 stressing the importance of U.S 32D 4Korea coordination.
The comment signalled Seoul 27s willingness to contemplate targeted measures, though any move would be context 1driven and calibrated.
Who were named in the South Korea sanctions context?
The U.S. action identified key figures and front companies, including the state 2run IT front often referred to as Korea Mangyongdae Computer Technology Company (KMCTC) and Ryujong Credit Bank. Named individuals include U Yong Su, Jang Kuk Chol and Ho Jong Son, according to reporting and the sanctions summary.
What options might Seoul consider?
Seoul could adopt targeted asset restrictions, tighten compliance expectations for local exchanges, or issue advisory guidance to banks. Analysts expect a combination of legal measures and enhanced monitoring rather than broad unilateral escalation, given the potential diplomatic consequences.
Ryan Yoon, a senior analyst at Tiger Research, said the move reinforces ongoing pressure on illicit channels and could temporarily compress some flows. That said, experts caution the operational impact may be limited in the short term, while long 1term effects depend on sustained enforcement.
Yonhap 27s report of Kim Ji-na 27s remarks is available from the Yonhap website here. Seoul 27s next steps are likely to prioritise measured, robust responses that raise the cost of illicit finance while safeguarding legitimate cross 2border flows.




