It is common for the producing company to know that the shell company is a shell company. If that was the case, using the shell company takes no blame away.
Selling a large amount of weapons to a tiny neverheard company raises anyone’s suspicion. Check the background of owners, notice they’re connected to the Russia.
A large Finnish computer store suddenly started selling something like hundred times as many Mavic drones as before. All was bought by one company, and the company was transporting the drones in vans to the Russia. They absolutely knew where the drones were going, but sold them anyway.
So, reading the article, it says that the Turkish shell company bought the machinery and resold it to russia. Making the title quite misleading.
This happens a lot (not only with turkey and not only with Switzerland). It’s not something that’s very easy to protect against.
It is common for the producing company to know that the shell company is a shell company. If that was the case, using the shell company takes no blame away.
How would the production company know that?
Selling a large amount of weapons to a tiny neverheard company raises anyone’s suspicion. Check the background of owners, notice they’re connected to the Russia.
A large Finnish computer store suddenly started selling something like hundred times as many Mavic drones as before. All was bought by one company, and the company was transporting the drones in vans to the Russia. They absolutely knew where the drones were going, but sold them anyway.