{"title": "The Reconnaissance General Bureau", "authors": [{"author": {"key": "/authors/OL5992903A"}, "type": {"key": "/type/author_role"}}], "key": "/works/OL45013730W", "type": {"key": "/type/work"}, "subtitle": "The Kim Regime's \"Precious Treasured Sword\"", "identifiers": {"wikidata": ["Q138711764"]}, "description": {"type": "/type/text", "value": "Executive Summary\r\n\r\nSection 1 provides an overview of North Korea\u2019s Reconnaissance General Bureau (RGB), the country\u2019s primary foreign intelligence agency. This section outlines the RGB\u2019s main objectives as an organization and explains how its goal of unifying the Korean Peninsula under the Kim regime is linked to human rights violations committed against South Korean citizens.\r\n\r\nSection 2 explores the historical development of North Korean intelligence prior to the establishment of the RGB. It provides context for the origins of this organization by analyzing earlier agencies that performed counterintelligence work against South Korea in the 20th century. This list includes the Security Bureau, formed under Soviet military leadership, and the National Political Security Department, which combined counterintelligence work with regular policing duties.\r\n\r\nSection 3 examines the mission of the RGB and analyzes how each of its six main bureaus contributes to this goal. This section argues that the primary objective of the RGB is to incite an uprising against the South Korean government and unify the Korean Peninsula under the Kim regime. This section also uses diagrams and charts to highlight the RGB\u2019s adherence to a strict chain of command that ultimately reports to North Korea\u2019s Supreme Leader.\r\n\r\nSection 4 reviews the history of the RGB and predecessor organizations in terms of their provocations against South Korea. This section identifies and explores six main kinds of North Korean provocations against South Korea that took place in the 20th and 21st centuries: assassinations, air warfare, naval warfare, abductions, espionage, and DMZ tunnel activity.\r\n\r\nSection 5 assesses North Korea\u2019s cyber warfare capabilities, which include hacking, information collection, bank/cryptocurrency theft, and ransomware. As the section explores, North Korea poses a sophisticated cybercrime and espionage threat, with organizations like the Lazarus Group stealing money from governments and multinational corporations around the world. Indeed, the section analyzes how North Korea\u2019s cyber warfare capabilities threaten global security as North Korea uses money from these operations to fuel its nuclear weapons programs.\r\n\r\nSection 6 evaluates the impact of the RGB on the ROK-U.S. military alliance. It concludes that North Korea employs cyberwarfare\u2014exemplified by the work of the Andarial Group\u2014to gain intelligence on South Korean and U.S. military forces, underscoring the threat posed by North Korean cyber operations.\r\n\r\nSection 7 discusses the various levels of RGB training and education. The section begins by talking about the level of education required to become a member of the RGB, noting that most hackers begin their training in grade school and later attend top technological universities to refine their skills. The section then shifts to explore the rigorous training and recruitment process within the RGB.\r\n\r\nSection 8 reviews the current and past leadership of the RGB. It opens with a summary of North Korea\u2019s Supreme Leader, Kim Jong-un, and his relationship with the RGB. The section later explores the roles and influence of other North Korean leaders, including notable military generals like Oh Kuk-ryol, who have shaped the direction and operational priorities of the RGB over time.\r\n\r\nSection 9 offers an overview of the international sanctions imposed on the RGB and its affiliated personnel. The section focuses on U.S. sanctions targeting North Korea, with particular attention to executive orders enacted by U.S. presidents in the 21st century. This section also discusses the enforcement actions taken by the U.S. Department of Justice, including the prosecution and indictment of RGB members who were involved in the 2014 Sony Pictures cyberattack.\r\n\r\nSection 10 highlights how RGB operations infringe on the fundamental human rights of South Korean citizens and other foreign nationals. This section is divided into various subsections that address North Korean cybercrime, violations of international human rights law, and acts of terrorism. Together, these topics underscore the significant threat of the RGB not only to stability on the Korean Peninsula but global security as well.\r\n\r\nSection 11 explains how the RGB has evolved over the years and explores what the future of the organization may look like moving forward."}, "subjects": ["Espionage, North Korean", "Korea (North) -- Politics and government"], "subject_people": ["Kim Jong-un"], "subject_places": ["Korea (North)"], "links": [{"title": "Official website of the publisher", "url": "https://www.hrnk.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/RGB_Final.pdf", "type": {"key": "/type/link"}}, {"title": "Archival link to the report in PDF", "url": "https://web.archive.org/web/20260227175605/https://www.hrnk.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/RGB_Final.pdf", "type": {"key": "/type/link"}}], "latest_revision": 3, "revision": 3, "created": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2026-03-18T05:32:26.574926"}, "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2026-03-18T05:50:44.162897"}}