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Key Takeaways:
- The disbandment of the UN Panel of Experts marks an unprecedented governance breakdown in the DPRK sanctions regime, weakening monitoring structures while leaving all legal obligations fully intact.
- The enforcement responsibility now shifts more heavily onto individual states and coalition mechanisms such as the MSMT.
- Sustaining effective pressure on the DPRK requires coordinated innovation, with the Republic of Korea uniquely positioned to lead regional implementation, analytical standard-setting, and capacity-building in the post-Panel environment.
I.
A Historic Break in UN Sanctions Governance
The
termination of the UN Panel of Experts on DPRK sanctions in April 2024
represents an unprecedented moment in the history of the UN sanctions regime.
For the first time, a monitoring and investigative body mandated under Chapter
VII was effectively dissolved due to a veto targeting the mechanism itself,
rather than a dispute over sanctions content. This differs sharply from past
sanctions-monitoring transitions, which changed through consensus or natural
expiration—with the Mali case in 2023 as the sole exception. In Mali, both the
sanctions regime and its Panel lapsed, whereas in the DPRK case only the
monitoring body ended while sanctions remain in force.
The
disbandment of the Panel—the only impartial, internationally recognized body
producing evidence-based reports on DPRK nuclear and missile-related
violations—removes the most authoritative source of public information on
sanctions implementation. The legal obligations remain intact, but the
governance infrastructure that underpinned enforcement has been severely
weakened.
II.
UN Sanctions Against DPRK Remain Legally Binding
A
fundamental principle of Security Council practice is that a veto prevents new
action but does not reverse past action. A permanent member’s veto can block
new action, but it cannot alter or invalidate an existing resolution already in
force. Once a sanctions resolution is adopted under Chapter VII, it becomes
binding international law until the Council affirmatively modifies or
terminates it.
Accordingly,
the series of Security Council resolutions that established and strengthened
the DPRK sanctions regime with no expiration provision —UNSCR 1718 (2006), 1874
(2009), 2087 (2013), 2094 (2013), 2270 (2016), 2321 (2016), 2356 (2017), 2371
(2017), 2375 (2017), and 2397 (2017)—remain fully in force. These measures
continue to impose legally binding obligations under Article 25 of the UN
Charter.
To
terminate or amend the DPRK sanctions, a new draft resolution would need to be
introduced and adopted by at least nine affirmative votes with no vetoes from
any of the five permanent members. In practice, this means that even if China
or Russia supported lifting the sanctions, it is very unlikely that the
resolution will be adopted.
The
termination of the Panel of Experts therefore creates a governance gap, not a
legal gap, which continues. All prohibitions—arms transfers, financial
restrictions, sectoral bans, luxury-goods prohibitions, maritime interdictions,
and petroleum-import caps—remain fully binding on all UN Member States. States
must continue to prevent circumvention, investigate violations, report
implementation measures, and refrain from actions that undermine the
restrictive measures.
III.
Ongoing DPRK’s Violations of UN Sanctions
Even
before the Panel’s termination, expanding and persistent evasion underscored
the need for robust monitoring. These violations have not diminished; in
several areas they have intensified.
Maritime
evasion remains one of the most pervasive challenges. DPRK has continued to
engage in ship-to-ship transfers of refined petroleum, manipulate vessel
identities, disable or falsify AIS signals, and operate through foreign-flagged
or foreign-owned vessels connected to opaque shell-company networks.
Cyber-enabled revenue generation has also expanded. Units under the DPRK’s
Reconnaissance General Bureau increasingly exploit cryptocurrency exchanges,
decentralized finance platforms, ransomware operations, and intrusions into
global financial institutions. DPRK labor and service networks persist despite
UNSCR requirements mandating the repatriation of overseas workers. Various
disguised employment and remittance schemes continue to generate prohibited
revenue for DPRK entities.
IV.
International Response: Establishment of the MSMT, Its Legal Basis, and
Limitations
The
Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team (MSMT) emerged in October 2024 as a
coordinated response by like-minded states to the termination of the UN Panel
of Experts. Its legal basis relies on state sovereignty, voluntary cooperation,
and each member’s national sanctions authorities. It also operates through
mutual agreements to share information, intelligence, and analytical expertise.
Unlike
the former Panel, the MSMT is not a subsidiary organ of the UN Security
Council. It does not derive authority from Chapter VII and carries no mandate
under Articles 39 or 41 of the UN Charter. It therefore functions as a
coalition-based mechanism rather than a UN-mandated investigative body.
In
practice, the MSMT provides a platform for participating states to share
maritime and financial intelligence, coordinate enforcement actions, analyze
sanctions-evasion networks, and support interdiction and investigative efforts.
It also produces analytical assessments intended to guide like-minded
governments in strengthening implementation.
Its
legal and operational limitations, however, are clear. The MSMT cannot compel
cooperation from non-members, issue binding interpretations of Security Council
resolutions, or act as a legal successor to the former Panel within the UN
framework. Nor can it replicate the neutrality or authority of a Security
Council–mandated body.
Despite
its limits, the MSMT is currently the most functional mechanism available,
providing operational continuity amid weakened UN monitoring. The MSMT has
recently issued two follow-on reports, published in May and October 2025,
respectively. Moreover, its first report was formally transmitted to the
President of the Security Council through a joint letter signed by 11
participating states, including ROK, US, UK, and subsequently uploaded to the
UN Digital Library.
V.
Post-First anniversary of MSMT: Building a Sustainable Post-Panel Architecture
The
end of the Panel demands institutional innovation and a renewed commitment to
coordinated enforcement. Like-minded states will need to pursue greater
systemization to ensure sustainability. This includes developing consistent
evidentiary standards for sanctions cases, institutionalizing data-sharing
through secure and reliable channels, publishing regular analytic briefs to
restore a measure of transparency, and adopting common maritime and financial
monitoring protocols. Such measures would strengthen coherence in sanctions
implementation.
Within
this landscape, the MSMT has the potential to evolve into a more durable and
structured coordination mechanism. It can host specialized expert groups on
maritime, cyber, financial, and export-control issues; produce consolidated
annual reports drawing on multi-agency insight; and possibly coordinate
technical assistance and training programs for jurisdictions in Southeast Asia,
Africa, and the Pacific that remain vulnerable to evasive activities. While not
a legal successor, the MSMT can still serve as a core coordination platform for
committed states. They could help preserve institutional memory, public
reporting, and technical coherence during a period of diminished UN monitoring
capacity.
The
Republic of Korea has a particularly important role to play. Its advanced
cyber-financial investigative capabilities, strong maritime surveillance
systems, and robust export-control framework position it to contribute
meaningfully to coalition-based monitoring efforts. Its geographic proximity to
DPRK proliferation pathways and its diplomatic relationships with Southeast
Asian and Pacific states further strengthen its ability to convene partners,
set analytical baselines, and enhance regional compliance capacity. The ROK is
well placed to serve as both a regional anchor and a normative leader in the
post-Panel environment.
Conclusion
The
termination of the DPRK Panel of Experts marks a historic precedent in UN
sanctions governance. Although the legal obligations remain fully binding, the
absence of a UN-mandated investigative body creates a serious enforcement gap.
The establishment of the MSMT is a significant step, but cannot fill all legal
or institutional functions once performed by the Panel.
To
preserve the integrity of the DPRK sanctions regime, the path forward must be
anchored in legality, sustained political commitment, functional innovation,
and the leadership of capable states. The ROK is uniquely positioned to drive
this process—operationally, diplomatically, and normatively.
Atty. Hojin Jang, licensed in Washington, D.C., is a Partner Foreign Counsel at Joowon Law Firm in Seoul, Republic of Korea. His work centers on global governance, regulatory policy, and legal issues arising from emerging technologies, with a particular focus on artificial intelligence, export controls, sanctions, antitrust, data protection, and U.S. tariff regulation. He also serves as a Visiting Fellow at the Sejong Institute and the Seoul International Law Academy (SILA), and is an active member of the Export Controls and Economic Sanctions Committee and the International Law Section of the American Bar Association. In these roles, he contributes to policy discussions on international regulation and security-related governance frameworks. Before joining Joowon, Atty. Jang worked as a Senior Consultant at Crownlabs, a boutique consulting firm advising multinational companies on regulatory and government-affairs strategy. He also acquired corporate-sector experience as an HR Analyst at CJ CheilJedang and previously served as a Lieutenant in the Republic of Korea Army, working on operational planning in an armor battalion. His academic background includes a J.D. from Handong International Law School, an LL.M. from Regent School of Law, and a B.A. from Yonsei University, where he graduated summa cum laude. In the public sector, his recent work includes analyses of global governance initiatives for military applications of artificial intelligence and comprehensive sanctions-monitoring assessments. Across both public and private domains, he supports institutions and multinational corporations in evaluating policy environments, reviewing legislative and regulatory proposals, and developing strategic responses aligned with complex global regulatory trends.