A-WEB: The UN-backed "Election Fraud Cartel"
A-WEB, the world's largest election body, HQ'd in South Korea, tied to hacked NEC systems, Miru tech disasters, 70% failure in Iraq, 45% in DRC, ghost voters, counterfeit ballots & suspicious global patterns.
1.) Cybersecurity Failures in South Korea's National Election Commission (NEC):
- 2023 joint NIS/KISA audit, July–Sept 2023, findings released Oct 10, 2023, found the NEC's systems highly vulnerable.
- Voter registration system could be infiltrated to create "ghost voters" or mark early voters as non-voters.
- Ballot printing system vulnerable to theft of official stamp files, counterfeit ballots with matching QR codes.
- Vote counting system could be altered via unauthorized USB devices or wireless connections.
- Poor network separation, easily guessable passwords, and plain-text storage of sensitive data, candidate lists, overseas voter rolls.
- NEC self-rated its security 100/100, independent re-evaluation scored it 31.5/100.
- NEC used unqualified vendors for security assessments, illegal under Korean law.
- NEC was cyber-attacked 8 times in the two years prior, with 7 attacks attributed to North Korea's Lazarus Group.
- In April 2021, NEC internet PCs were infected with malware from North Korea’s Kimsuky group, leaking confidential documents.
- NEC had "no prior knowledge" of multiple North Korean hacking incidents reported by NIS.
2.) Problems with Miru Systems. The NEC's main tech vendor:
- Miru Systems, Seongnam, South Korea, maintains and repairs South Korea's electronic voting/counting systems and exports them internationally.
- 70% malfunction rate in Iraq, 45% malfunction rate in Democratic Republic of Congo.
- Countries using Miru systems, Iraq, DRC, Philippines, Kyrgyzstan, El Salvador, Ecuador, Bulgaria, reportedly faced serious fraud allegations and protests afterward.
- Long-term ties to Russian election systems, via Bauman Moscow State Technical University, since 2009, including Russia's 2024 election.
- $100 million deal to export vote-counting machines to Iraq in 2017.
- University of Michigan professor Alex Halderman: "Miru's reported track record raises serious concerns…
- Politico investigation highlighted experts calling Miru's track record "long, troubling and well-documented."
2024 legislative election accusations of digitally manipulated early voting results favoring the opposition. President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law partly citing election fraud, military briefly occupied NEC headquarters. Yoon later received a life sentence for "insurrection" in Feb 2026.
Persistent statistical anomalies between early voting and same-day voting, described by researcher Dr. Gong Byeong-ho as consistent manipulation patterns.
June 3, 2025 presidential election, Liberal candidate Lee Jae-myung "won" with 49.4%. International Election Monitoring Team (IEMT), including former U.S. Ambassador Morse H. Tan, Col. John R. Mills (Ret.), Dr. Bradley A. Thayer, and Col. Grant Newsham (Ret.) reported that:
- Significant statistical disparities between early and same-day voting.
- Security/transparency concerns with electronic counting systems.
- Irregularities in ballot handling and chain of custody.
- Obstruction of citizen monitors and lack of NEC cooperation.
June 3, 2026 local elections, ballots ran short at 50 of 14,288 polling stations, voting stunted at 22. NEC Chairperson Rho Tae-ak resigned, police raided NEC headquarters.
A-WEB = 121 Election Management Bodies from 111 countries, founded 2013, headquartered in Incheon, Songdo, South Korea. Signed MOUs with USAID, IFES, Democracy International, NDI, IRI, etc. (2014).
A-WEB acts as a "UN-Supported Election System Cartel" that exports South Korean election methodologies and technology, including vulnerable Miru systems, to developing nations where USAID funds elections. aka: part of regime change operations.
A-WEB observed U.S. elections in 2016, in-person, and 2020, virtual. No detailed public reports released. U.S. legal figure Sidney Powell called for DOJ investigation into A-WEB's activities abroad, describing an "international network of electoral problems" with an alleged operations hub in Suwon, South Korea.
A-WEB sits at the center of risks in U.S.-taxpayer-funded elections in places like Iraq and DRC, etc. A-WEB is a major funding arm, with connections to USAID, for regime change operations around the world, which funds and organizes the means of election manipulation. This is ONE part of a larger operation spreading Communism throughout the world.
Document: Election Crime Bureau