German authorities uncovered a large sanctions evasion network that allegedly supplied Russia’s military industry with European dual-use technology through Turkey and shell companies, Politico reported on Monday, May 18. According to the report, German prosecutors believe a Lübeck-based trading company called Global Trade functioned as a covert procurement arm for Russian industry after Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. Police arrested a 39-year-old businessman identified as Nikita S. during raids connected to the four-year investigation. Prosecutors allege the network illegally exported European dual-use goods to Russia in violation of Germany’s Foreign Trade Act. Components allegedly routed through Turkey According to investigative files reviewed by Politico and BILD, the scheme relied on Turkish intermediaries and German shell companies to disguise the final Russian recipients. Investigators said the network shipped microcontrollers, sensors, converters, ball bearings, oscilloscopes, and other electronic and mechanical components that could have both civilian and military applications. Some shipments were allegedly traced to Russian defense-linked entities and nuclear research institutes. A Turkish company called MR Global reportedly acted as a transit hub, while Russian company Kolovrat – also known as Siderius – allegedly coordinated the procurement operation from Moscow.
German Firm Secretly Routed European Tech to Russia’s War Machine
German investigators uncovered a large sanctions evasion network that allegedly routed European dual-use technology to Russia through Turkey.








