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Manalit: Belarus's Sanctions Loophole Feeding Russia's War Machine


The Russian-Belarusian radio components plant Manalit in Vitsebsk, Belarus, supplies products for the military-industrial complex of Russia.
The Russian-Belarusian radio components plant Manalit in Vitsebsk, Belarus, supplies products for the military-industrial complex of Russia.

In the spring of 2024, the Belarusian government placed the Manalit radio components plant in Vitsebsk on its Republican Honor Board for "outstanding economic results." It was the second time in a row the plant had received this recognition.

The recognition of Manalit, a Russian-owned manufacturer based in Belarus, came as the plant become a critical supplier of high-reliability electronic components for missiles, radars, and aircraft used by Russia in its war against Ukraine.

Within the first two years of Russia's full-scale aggression against Ukraine, which began in February 2022, Manalit's annual profits increased nearly sixfold, driven almost entirely by military exports to Russia.

Military-grade capacitors produced by the Vitsebsk-based Manalit plant.
Military-grade capacitors produced by the Vitsebsk-based Manalit plant.

Manalit's history mirrors that of many in Belarus's heavy industry. Founded in the Soviet era as a major producer of ceramic capacitors, the plant fell into crisis in the 1990s as demand collapsed. By 2009, it was near complete liquidation.

In 2011, salvation and transformation came from its former competitor: the Kulon plant in Russia's second-largest city, St. Petersburg. Russian investors acquired a 51 percent controlling stake, effectively turning Manalit into an offshore production base for Russia's defense industry.

Capacitors Built for War

Manalit specializes in multilayer ceramic capacitors of exceptional durability, certified for use in military and space applications.

"Ninety-seven percent of our output serves Russia's defense industry, " Manalit's director, Alyaksandr Shumakher, was cited by BelTA state news agency as saying in November 2020.

In 2024, Vitsebsk Regional Executive Committee Chairman Alyaksandr Subotsin noted that the plant was "operating systematically" and had shown results over the previous two years that "could not fail to satisfy."

Vitsebsk Regional Executive Committee Chairman Alyaksandr Subotsin (left), plant director Alyaksandr Shumakher (center), and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Manalit plant Akif Hasymau (right) during a visit to the production facility in March 2024.
Vitsebsk Regional Executive Committee Chairman Alyaksandr Subotsin (left), plant director Alyaksandr Shumakher (center), and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Manalit plant Akif Hasymau (right) during a visit to the production facility in March 2024.

Capacitors like Manalit's K10-84 series are not intended for consumer electronics. Instead, they are found in missile guidance systems, radar arrays, electronic warfare modules, and nuclear control systems, where failure can mean the loss of a mission or weapon.

A Loophole In Sanctions

Western sanctions imposed on Russia in 2014 after the annexation of Ukraine's Crimea cut off direct access to advanced Western electronics for military use.

But Belarus was not subject to the same restrictions until 2022. For nearly eight years, Manalit exploited this gap, importing equipment and materials from Europe and the United States, then shipping finished components to Russia to replace banned Western parts.

A machine from the Slovenian company KEKO that was manufactured in April 2024 appears in a Manalit workshop.
A machine from the Slovenian company KEKO that was manufactured in April 2024 appears in a Manalit workshop.

Even today, despite EU and US sanctions, Manalit is allowed to purchase Slovenian KEKO production lines, equip them with Japanese Pro-face control panels (owned by France's Schneider Electric), and continue sourcing American precious-metal powders for capacitor production.

Evidence In The Debris Of War

According to a specialist from the Ukrainian Defense Ministry's Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR), Manalit-made K10-84 capacitors have been found in Russia's Iskander ballistic missiles, Kalibr cruise missiles, Kh-101 air-launched cruise missiles, S-200 and S-300 air-defense missiles, as well as Zoopark counter-battery radar systems.

"The air-pressure system in Kh-101 missiles, all the capacitors, and 80 percent of the microchips are Belarusian-made. As for the control blocks in the 2024-model Iskanders, almost every capacitor in them is from Manalit," the specialist told RFE/RL.

An electric circuit board from the debris of a Russian Iskander missile found in Ukraine in 2022. Yellow components are the capacitors. Also visible are microchips from the Belarusian plant Integral and a chip from the American company Texas Instruments.
An electric circuit board from the debris of a Russian Iskander missile found in Ukraine in 2022. Yellow components are the capacitors. Also visible are microchips from the Belarusian plant Integral and a chip from the American company Texas Instruments.

Links To The Kremlin

Manalit's exports to Russia are funneled through a single dealer: Spetselektronkomplekt (SpecEk), a major supplier to Russia's Defense Ministry.

Customs data obtained by RFE/RL and the Belarusian Investigative Center show that from October 2022 to March 2025, Manalit shipped $43 million worth of goods to SpecEk, 96 percent of it ceramic capacitors.

SpecEk is registered in Russia's closed registry of defense contractors, which lists suppliers to the following partners in Russia:

Rostec: An umbrella for 350 defense enterprises, producing 40 percent of Russia's state arms orders.

Almaz-Antey: Themaker of the S-300, S-400, Buk, and Tor missile systems.

KRET: Electronic warfare systems

UAC: Su, MiG, and Tupolev aircraft

Tactical Missiles Corporation: Precision missiles, including the Kh-101

UralVagonZavod: Main battle tank production

Russian Helicopters: Mi-8, Ka-52, Mi-35 gunships

Inside one of the workshops at Manalit
Inside one of the workshops at Manalit

War Profits, Sanctions

Before the full-scale war began in 2022, Manalit's annual profits were around $1.4 million. By 2024, net profit was up to $6.2 million. The company has seen growth over the past five years of over 460 percent.

It has achieved record-breaking profits during the bloodiest conflict in Europe since World War II.

In May 2023, Ukraine sanctioned Manalit for "directly facilitating Russian military aggression." Meanwhile, neither the EU nor the United States has followed suit, leaving the company with open access to Western suppliers.

This has effectively made Manalit a "sanctions gateway," a Belarusian legal entity delivering Western technology to Russia's military.

Emergency workers carry a fragment of a Russian Iskander-K cruise missile that struck a residential building in Kyiv on August 1.
Emergency workers carry a fragment of a Russian Iskander-K cruise missile that struck a residential building in Kyiv on August 1.

Since falling under Russian control in 2011, Manalit has been modernized with Western equipment, maintained open access to European and US raw materials, and secured Russian military certification. It also supplied capacitors found in missiles that have struck multiple Ukrainian cities.

As Western governments debate new sanctions, the capacitors made in a quiet Belarusian factory continue their journey from Vitsebsk's assembly lines to Russia's missile plants, and finally, to the skies over Ukraine.

The investigation was conducted with the assistance of information from the Ukrainian project Slidstvo.Info and the Belarusian Investigative Center.
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