The San Juan Daily Star
US will name the Wagner mercenary group a transnational criminal organization
By KATIE ROGERS
The United States has decided to designate the Russian private military group Wagner as a significant transnational criminal organization, the White House said late last week, a move that will expand the number of nations and institutions that can be prevented from doing business with the company.
“Our message to any company that is considering providing support to Wagner is simply this: Wagner is a criminal organization that is committing widespread human rights abuses,” John Kirby, the White House national security spokesperson, told reporters at a news briefing.
The new measures against the company, which is already under U.S. sanctions, will take effect next week. Designating Wagner as a transnational criminal organization will allow the government to freeze any assets the company may have in the United States and ban Americans from providing money, goods or services to the group.
Kirby said North Korea had provided arms for Russia’s military operation through Wagner, delivering rockets and missiles for use by the group’s mercenaries last year.
Kirby said Wagner, a mercenary force run by a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has established itself as a “rival power center” to the Russian military and added that the group’s founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, has overseen the deployment of about 50,000 personnel to Ukraine, a number that largely consists of contractors and newly released convicts.
Wagner’s mercenaries have played a large role in the battle for eastern Ukraine and have also carried out military operations in Africa.
“Russia is searching for arms in foreign countries, including through Wagner,” Kirby said.
North Korea has denied it is arming Wagner or Russian forces, but Kirby said the United States has evidence. He produced aerial images that he said showed a Russian train entering North Korea on Nov. 19 and then leaving fully loaded with shipping containers.
Kirby said the amount of material delivered to Wagner has not changed battlefield dynamics in Ukraine but that the United States expects the company will continue to receive North Korean weapons.
He said that American officials had referred the photos to the United Nations Security Council and that he expects additional sanctions to be placed against the company after the panel reviews evidence that United Nations resolutions were violated.
“While we assess that the amount of material delivered to Wagner has not changed battlefield dynamics in Ukraine,” Kirby said, “we expect that it will continue to receive North Korean weapons systems.”