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VisitFate of the Angara ship by end of 2024
Continued harboring in China • 33%
Seizure or detention by an international body • 33%
Return to Russia • 34%
Satellite imagery, official government statements, and international news sources
China Harbors U.S.-Sanctioned Russian Ship Linked to North Korea Arms Transfers
Apr 25, 2024, 05:49 AM
Satellite images have revealed that China is providing moorage for the Angara, a U.S.-sanctioned Russian cargo ship implicated in North Korean arms transfers to Russia. The ship, which has been involved in shipping thousands of containers believed to contain North Korean munitions to Russian ports since August 2023, has been anchored at a Chinese port for several months. This action is seen as further evidence of Beijing's support for Moscow's activities in Ukraine, despite China's official denials of such support.
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Return to service • 33%
Sold for scrap • 33%
Permanent decommission • 34%
Returns to service • 25%
Sold or transferred • 25%
Decommissioned • 25%
Undergoing repairs • 25%
Diplomatic Agreement • 33%
Military Confrontation • 33%
Ongoing Dispute • 34%
Return to service • 25%
Permanent decommission • 25%
Sold or transferred • 25%
Converted for non-commercial use • 25%
UN Resolution • 33%
ASEAN Intervention • 33%
No major intervention • 34%
Condemnation by UN • 33%
Sanctions against China • 33%
No significant international response • 34%
Repaired • 33%
Scrapped • 33%
Unrecovered • 34%
Diplomatic protest • 33%
Militarized response • 33%
No significant response • 34%
Assets remain frozen • 50%
Assets partially unfrozen • 25%
Assets fully unfrozen • 25%
Warship • 33%
Cargo Ship • 33%
No Further Strikes • 34%