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Time to play fire with fire, "Russia and North Korea will help each other if attacked": Vladmir Putin

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Putin says Russia and North Korea will help each other if attacked, taking ties to a ‘new level’​

Vladimir Putin said Russia and North Korea have ramped up ties to a “new level,” pledging to help each other if either nation is attacked in a “breakthrough” new partnership announced during the Russian president’s rare visit to the reclusive state.

Thousands of North Koreans chanting “welcome Putin” lined the city’s wide boulevards brandishing Russian and North Korean flags and bouquets of flowers, as Putin kicked off his first visit to North Korea in 24 years with a finely choreographed display of influence in the dictatorship.

The pair then signed the new strategic partnership to replace previous deals signed in 1961, 2000 and 2001, according to Russian state news agency TASS. “The comprehensive partnership agreement signed today includes, among other things, the provision of mutual assistance in the event of aggression against one of the parties to this agreement,” Putin said after the meeting.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin exit a welcome ceremony at Kim Il Sung square in Pyongyang on June 19.

He said the deal encompasses the “political, trade, investment, cultural spheres, and the security sphere as well,” calling the pact “truly a breakthrough document.”

Putin said joint drills involving the United States, South Korea and Japan were “hostile” toward North Korea,” characterizing the US policy as “confrontational.” Kim, meanwhile, called the new “alliance” a “watershed moment in the development of the bilateral relations.”

But the deal between the two autocrats raised many questions, too – including whether Russia’s nuclear deterrent now extends to North Korea, and vice versa, or whether the two nations will now hold joint military drills.

Putin greeted with fanfare. Putin was met with exuberant celebrations at a welcome ceremony with his counterpart at Kim Il Sung Square in the heart of the North Korean capital, where mounted soldiers, military personnel and children holding balloons cheered against the backdrop of large portraits of the each leader.

A NATO-style defense pact and an image boost – what Putin got from North Korean visit

The two leaders presented their respective officials and stood together as the Russian national anthem played before riding off standing shoulder to shoulder in an open-top limousine as they smiled and waved to the crowds. The scenes of pomp and fanfare were a constant throughout the day, which closed with Kim escorting Putin to his plane late in the evening ahead of his trip to Vietnam.

The staging reflected North Korea’s reliance on Moscow and was likely intended as a reminder to the West that Putin still holds considerable influence in at least some corners of the world, after his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The relationship is important to Russia, too. Multiple governments have accused Pyongyang of supplying arms to Moscow for its grinding war in Ukraine, a charge both countries have denied, despite significant evidence of such transfers.

Source: CNN
 
And another funny thing is that its going to be the Eastern version of Quad and NATO with China also being part of this alliance.
In all honesty this has happened before with Vietnam and they got smacked into oblivion. I live in states and I support them overall but their absolute hypocrisy with Middle east I can’t ignore.

US should aways stick economy and tech that’s their strong point they get involved in these pointless nonsense.
 
US should aways stick economy and tech that’s their strong point they get involved in these pointless nonsense.
100 percent agree but US deep state elements and their stupid offensive realism theories are ruining US, like obama's pivot to Asia etc crap. As long as they stick to their strengths they won't lose the Super power spot.
 
Putin is cooking something big and nasty here, Surprise to ensue soon
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Russian President Vladimir Putin flies to Vietnam on Wednesday evening after a day trip to North Korea for a visit to an old ally that has positioned itself as an increasingly influential geopolitical player, wooed by most major nations

The visit, among other things, is Russia’s way of showcasing that Putin is treated as a pariah by the West, but he still holds political clout in the East, experts have said. Communist-led Vietnam will welcome Putin for a two-day visit, the Kremlin said.

The trip comes after the United States last week imposed more sanctions on Moscow and Western countries reiterated their unwavering support for Ukraine – now fighting its third year of war against Russia – by agreeing to a $50bn loan for Kyiv at a Group of Seven summit. The visit also comes days after last weekend’s Ukraine peace summit in Switzerland.

So, why Vietnam?
While North Korea, where Putin held meetings with leader Kim Jong Un on Wednesday, is itself a global outcast — heavily sanctioned by the United Nations over its nuclear and missile programmes — Vietnam is a nation that other major countries want close ties with.

A rising economy and a leading exporter of garments, Vietnam today counts the US and other Western countries as important partners. India is a growing defence partner. Vietnam is also a pillar of Southeast Asian efforts to balance ties with China — keeping strong economic ties with Beijing while pushing back against perceived military threats from the Asian giant.

That backdrop makes Vietnam a choice destination for the Russian leader. “Putin will hope his Vietnam visit signals that Russia is far from isolated in Asia amid its recent Ukraine war inroads,” said Prashanth Parameswaran, a fellow at the Washington, DC-based Wilson Center. “Even though the visit has been pending for a while now and Moscow’s list of regional friends is quite short in practice,” added Parameswaran, who is also the founder of the weekly ASEAN Wonk newsletter.

What is on the agenda?
Talks are expected to focus on strengthening their strategic partnership. In 2001, Russia became the first country to sign a strategic partnership with Vietnam.

Regional and global issues will also feature on the agenda, the Russian state news agency TASS reported. Following the meeting, a joint statement will be adopted and a number of bilateral documents will be signed, it added.

How strong are Vietnam-Russia ties?
Ties between the two countries date back to the Soviet Union, which was Hanoi’s biggest weapons supplier — a position that Russia today still occupies.

The Soviet Union’s military support was critical to the Communist Party of Vietnam during key historical events, including the First and Second Indochina Wars against France and the US.

But the relationship between the two goes beyond its military scope.

“They were once on the same side of history, they shared the same ideology against Western capitalism and imperialism. And the legacy of shared ideology is still there,” said Huong Le Thu, International Crisis Group’s deputy programme director for Asia.

The Soviet Union used to host tens of thousands of Vietnamese students during the Cold War, including the current head of the Communist Party, Nguyen Phu Trong.

Hanoi’s architecture also has a Soviet touch, such as the museum of modern Vietnam’s founding father Ho Chi Minh, and an imposing Vietnam-Soviet Friendship Cultural Palace, built in the late 1970s.

Source: Al Jazeera
 

Russia, Iran & China siding with North Korea, while India going the opposite pole with South Korea. Certainly, India is playing against geography just to appease USA​


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India Korea Relations: Why the Indian Army Chief visited Seoul?

Indian Army Chief General Manoj Pande recently undertook a four-day visit to the Republic of Korea (ROK), aiming to enhance bilateral defense cooperation, particularly in defense manufacturing. During the visit, he engaged in crucial discussions with high-ranking South Korean military officials, focusing on fostering mutual understanding and contributing to the security framework of the Indo-Pacific region.

Sources within the defense and security establishment highlighted the significance of the visit, emphasizing that General Pande received detailed briefings on security aspects in the joint security area and demilitarized zone. Additionally, he visited a drone combat unit to gain insights into border management and surveillance facilities, contributing to discussions on regional security situations.

The primary objective of the visit was to seek collaboration from South Korea in defense manufacturing, involving strategic discussions and bilateral meetings with key figures like General Park An-su and General Kim Seung-kyum. These engagements aimed not only to foster mutual understanding but also to contribute to the overall security architecture of the Indo-Pacific, aligning with the broader geopolitical goals of both nations.

The visit which commenced on November 20, holds historical significance in India-ROK relations, as it marks the day 73 years ago when the Indian Army played a vital role in the Korean War, providing medical support and contributing a Brigade Size Force named ‘Custodian Force’ under the United Nations. This historical connection further solidifies the ties between the two nations.

Why is the visit important and the significance of Nov 20?

Regarding the importance of the visit, Neeraj Rajput, Editor in Chief of Final Assault and a Senior War-journalist, emphasized the humanitarian role played by India during the Korean War.

He says: “The benchmark of Indian and South Korea relationship is the stellar role 60 Para Field Ambulance (Headquartered in Agra) played during the Korean War (1950-53) where the Indian paramedics not only treated soldiers of ROK but also of North Korea. 03 Indian paramedics had even laid down their lives healing the wounded Korean soldiers.”

“South Korea pays homage to Indian soldiers by making a special ‘Bharat’ memorial at the sprawling Korean War Memorial in the heart of the capital Seoul. That is exactly the reason COAS Gen Manoj Pande began his visit to Seoul exactly on 20th November because that was the day 70 years ago when 60 Para Field Ambulance had landed in Busan (port city of South Korea) to participate in war not for fighting but healing the wounded soldiers. This humanitarian approach of India has touched Korea since then.”

Optical imaging for national defence: Safeguarding borders and strengthening security
Sharing further details, Rajput who has done ground reporting from the Korean Peninsula, shares his views in an exclusive interaction with Financial Express Online. “Indians had again played an important role when the war ended with a cease fire and PoWs (Prisoners of War) were exchanged between two Korean countries. The (Non) Repatriation Commission formed under the aegis of the UN was led by none other than India’s top most military commander since Independence, Maj Gen KS Thimayya (who later became the COAS). “

“The repatriation of the PoWs had taken place from the ‘Bridge of No return’ on the DMZ (Demilitarised Zone) between North and South Korea. The bridge was seen in the ‘02 James Bond flick, Die Another Day. Gen Pande also visited the DMZ during his visit to South Korea earlier this week,” he adds.

Source: Financial Express
 

Fun fact: Same pacts also took place before WW1​

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NATO chief says Russia, North Korea pact shows mutual support by authoritarian powers​

Russia's new defensive pact with North Korea shows increasing alignment among authoritarian powers and underscores the importance of democracies presenting a united front, the head of NATO said on Wednesday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a deal with North Korea's Kim Jong Un that included a mutual defense pledge, a move that overhauls Moscow's policy towards Pyongyang.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said North Korea had provided "an enormous amount of ammunition" to Russia while both China and Iran were supporting Moscow militarily in its war against Ukraine.

"We need to be aware that authoritarian powers are aligning more and more. They are supporting each other in a way we haven't seen before," he told a panel discussion during an official visit to Ottawa.

"When they are more and more aligned - authoritarian regimes like North Korea and China, Iran, Russia - then it's even more important that we are aligned as countries believing in freedom and democracy," he said.

The growing closeness between Russia and other Asian nations means it is all the more important that NATO works with allies in the Asia-Pacific, he said, adding this was why leaders from Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea had been invited to a NATO summit in Washington next month.

Stoltenberg also said he expected Canada to meet the NATO target of spending 2% of gross domestic product on defense.
Canada's Liberal government, which has poured billions into social programs, only spends 1.37% of GDP on its military. In April it issued a plan to reach 1.76% by 2030.

Other NATO members "are concerned about the fiscal balance, they want to spend money on health (and) education" he said, adding that "if we're not able to preserve peace, then what we do on health and climate change and education ... will fail".

Source: Reuters
 
China will also be with Russia and NK too. Most likely Turkey and Iran as well where as us Pak's as always won't know where we stand!
 
Than why is Russia so poor and miserable
Bro have a read, and as so know they have been under crippling sanctions for like too long now but still doing well
====

Why Sanctions Haven’t Hobbled Russia​

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/16/briefing/russian-sanctions.html#site-content
Back in 2022, Western nations imposed the most extensive sanctions and trade restrictions in history on Moscow.

Today, Russia appears to be doing OK.

Its economy is growing steadily. Russia can’t buy much from the West but has found new providers for drones, surveillance gear, computer chips and other gear. Its oil and gas sales are still strong, despite attempts to stop them. Russian officials say they have plenty of money to pay for their war.

Moscow’s continued strength is a humbling result for the U.S. and its allies. These nations make up more than half of the global economy, and they tried to weaponize their influence over trade and finance to weaken Russia. They hoped to make President Vladimir Putin a pariah and maybe even stop the war. Today, I’ll explain why those efforts have fallen short — and whether they can be made to work again.

 
Putin says Russia may send weapons to North Korea

President Vladimir Putin said that Russia might supply weapons to North Korea in what he suggested would be a mirror response to the Western arming of Ukraine.

Putin was speaking to reporters in Vietnam on Thursday, a day after visiting nuclear-armed North Korea and signing a mutual defence agreement with its leader, Kim Jong Un.

Western countries have shunned North Korea because of its development of nuclear and ballistic missiles in defiance of United Nations sanctions, and view the growing ties between Moscow and Pyongyang with concern.

Putin threatened earlier this month that Russia might supply arms to Western adversaries because the West was providing high-precision weapons to Ukraine and giving it permission to fire them at targets inside Russia.


 
Lol.. 😂 Hypocrisy of western media. Well who were the first and only user of nuclear weapons.
xEtz1ju.jpeg
 
Lol..why China would resist it, stupid from US
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The United States will confront Russia at the United Nations Security Council on Friday over violating a North Korea arms embargo, and will push for China's view on growing ties between Moscow and Pyongyang, said deputy US Ambassador Robert Wood

The meeting of the 15-member council comes after Russian President Vladimir Putin traveled to Pyongyang last week to sign a pact with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in which they agreed to provide military assistance if either faces armed aggression.

"This should be of great concern to the entire global community," Wood told Reuters ahead of the meeting, accusing Russia of "in essence siding with a rogue state to violate countless UN Security Council resolutions." "This is unprecedented, and we need to call it out for what it is," he said. "We also want to see what China has to say about this growing military cooperation between DPRK and Russia.

They cannot view this as a positive development." China reacted guardedly last week. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that the summit was a bilateral exchange between Russia and North Korea, but did not elaborate.

Formally known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), North Korea has been under UN sanctions since 2006 for its nuclear and ballistic missile programs, and those measures have been strengthened over the years - with Russia's support.

But over the past year the United States has repeatedly accused North Korea of sending weapons to Russia to use in its war against Ukraine, which it invaded in February 2022. Both Moscow and Pyongyang have denied the accusations.

Source: Business Standard
 

India plays down US ambassador Garcetti’s swipe over PM Modi’s Russia trip​

India on Friday sought to play down US ambassador Eric Garcetti’s remarks critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Russia and New Delhi’s policy of strategic autonomy, saying the comprehensive ties between New Delhi and Washington give both sides the “space to agree to disagree”.

Last week, Garcetti took a swipe against Modi’s trip to Russia, saying strategic autonomy cannot apply in times of conflict and that India and the US must uphold principles when other countries go against the rules-based order or violate sovereign borders. His remarks were seen as a criticism of India’s position on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Asked about the comments at a regular media briefing on Friday, external affairs ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal contended that the India-US comprehensive global strategic partnership gave both sides the latitude to adopt different approaches on certain matters. He also defended New Delhi’s policy of strategic autonomy.

“India, like many other countries, values its strategic autonomy. The US ambassador is entitled obviously to his opinion. We also have our own and different views,” Jaiswal said.

Source: Hindustan Times
 
Putin vows ‘mirror measures’ if US puts missiles in Germany in 2026, as planned

Russian dictator Vladimir Putin promised to “mirror measures” if the United States follows through on plans to station longer-range and hypersonic missiles in Germany — claiming the move would free Russia from a moratorium on deploying its own long-range, lethal weapons.

Speaking Sunday at a naval parade in St. Petersburg, Putin said Russia may deploy the missiles in response to a US announcement earlier this month that it would affirm its commitment to NATO — and the defense of Europe — by installing its weapons in Germany, starting in 2026.

“If the U.S. implements such plans, we will consider ourselves free from the previously imposed unilateral moratorium on the deployment of intermediate and shorter-range strike weapons, including increasing the capability of the coastal forces of our navy,” Putin said.

He also claimed Moscow is in the final stages of developing such systems.


 
North Korean military engineers have been deployed to help Russia target Ukraine with ballistic missiles, and fighters operating in occupied areas of the country have already been killed, senior officials in Kyiv and Seoul said

There are dozens of North Koreans behind Russian lines, in teams that “support launcher systems for KN-23 missiles”, a source in Ukraine told the Guardian.

Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, last year travelled to Russia for a summit with Vladimir Putin where the two men bolstered their deepening ties with a secret arms deal.

Pyongyang’s ammunition shipments were vital in allowing Russian forces to advance in a grinding war of attrition in eastern Ukraine this summer. But it appears increasingly clear that the agreement went beyond supplying materiel.

North Koreans were among the dead after a Ukrainian missile strike on Russian-occupied territory near Donetsk last week, South Korean and Ukrainian officials said. It was not clear if they were military engineers or other forces.

Russia and North Korea: what can they do for each other?
Foreigners have fought as mercenaries for Russia, but if North Koreans are on the ground it would mark the first time a foreign government has sent troops in uniform to support Moscow’s war.

South Korea’s defence minister, Kim Yong-hyun, told MPs in Seoul this week that it was “highly likely” that North Korean officers had been deployed to fight alongside Russians, and several had died in the attack, although he did not give further details.

Andriy Kovalenko, the head of Ukraine’s Centre for Countering Disinformation, said in a post on Telegram that some North Koreans had been killed in Russia. His organisation is part of the national security and defence council.

On Wednesday the Ukrainian military said they had destroyed North Korean ammunition in a strike on a depot in the Bryansk region, 75 miles (120 km) from the Ukrainian border.

Source: The Guardian
 
N Korea to send troops to fight with Russia: Seoul

South Korea's spy agency says North Korea is set to send as many as 12,000 troops to fight with Russia in Ukraine, in what Seoul described as a "grave security threat".

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky earlier said 10,000 North Korean soldiers could join the war, based on intelligence information.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol called for a security meeting on Friday and said the international community must respond with "all available means".

This comes as evidence mounts that North Korea is supplying Russia with ammunition, as recently demonstrated by the recovery of a missile in Ukraine’s Poltava region.

Moscow and Pyongyang have also been deepening their cooperation in recent months. Last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un greeted Russian President Vladimir Putin on his birthday, calling him his "closest comrade".

Friday's security meeting was attended by key officials from South Korea's National Security Office, the Ministry of National Defence, and the National Intelligence Service, Yoon's office said.

"[The participants] decided not to ignore the situation and to jointly respond to it with the international community using all available means," it said.

The allegation from the National Intelligence Service comes days after Ukrainian military intelligence sources said that Russia's army is forming a unit of North Koreans.

The BBC has reached out to the NIS for comment.

Earlier this week, Putin introduced a bill to ratify a military pact he made with Kim, which pledges that Russia and North Korea will help each other in the event of "aggression" against either country.

A military source in Russia’s Far East told BBC Russian this week that “a number of North Koreans have arrived” and were stationed in one of the military bases near Ussuriysk, to the north of Vladivostok.

However, some military experts believe the Russian military units will have difficulties incorporating North Korean troops into their frontlines.

Apart from the language barrier, the North Korean army has no recent experience of combat operations, they said.

“They could guard some sections of the Russian-Ukrainian border, which would free Russian units for fighting elsewhere,” said Valeriy Ryabykh, editor of the Ukrainian publication Defence Express.

“I would rule out the possibility that these units will immediately appear on the front line.”

BBC
 
Russia’s Putin kicks off strategic nuclear training exercise

President Vladimir Putin kicked off a new exercise of Russia’s nuclear forces on Tuesday at a critical point in the Ukraine war, the second such drill that Moscow has held in two weeks.

The 2-1/2-year-old war is entering what Russian officials say is its most dangerous phase as Russian forces are advancing in eastern Ukraine and the West considers how to shore up Ukraine.

Russia has been signaling for weeks to the West that Moscow will respond if the United States and its allies help Ukraine fire longer-range missiles deep into Russia, while NATO says that North Korea has sent troops to western Russia.


 
Even such a declaration would be a nightmare for West, but don't know why Indians hating this idea
China will neither help nor attack anyone. They are all about posturing and bullying their weak south east asian neighbors.

Russia cannot beat Ukraine let alone NATO.

Iran is a joke and North Korea is an even bigger joke. The only countries missing in that alliance are Sudan and Somalia. I heard they are great warriors.
 
China will neither help nor attack anyone. They are all about posturing and bullying their weak south east asian neighbors.

Russia cannot beat Ukraine let alone NATO.

Iran is a joke and North Korea is an even bigger joke. The only countries missing in that alliance are Sudan and Somalia. I heard they are great warriors.
Nope Russia under Putin is no all talk but no action if he leads such an alliance then certainly an article 5 like invocation would be deadly for the opposing country or countries.
 
Nope Russia under Putin is no all talk but no action if he leads such an alliance then certainly an article 5 like invocation would be deadly for the opposing country or countries.
So you think China, India, Brazil will come to Iran's aid if it gets attacked? :vk2

BRICS is not NATO. NATO has one superpower and the rest are side kicks. They are all liberal democracies not divided by religion and culture.

BRICS nations have polar opposite ideologies with a lot of internal squabbles. They cannot put a united front when it comes to war. Every BRIC nation has its own personal agenda. They may unite economically, but ideologically, they are fractured.
 
Russia, Iran, China, and North Korea should form a pact like NATO.

Attack on one is attack on all.
@Champ_Pal, this is what I answered too, no mention of India or Brazil here
So you think China, India, Brazil will come to Iran's aid if it gets attacked? :vk2

BRICS is not NATO. NATO has one superpower and the rest are side kicks. They are all liberal democracies not divided by religion and culture.

BRICS nations have polar opposite ideologies with a lot of internal squabbles. They cannot put a united front when it comes to war. Every BRIC nation has its own personal agenda. They may unite economically, but ideologically, they are fractured.
 
China, Russia meet over Ukraine war as West slams N. Korea troops

The roughly 10,000 North Korean soldiers sent to train "will probably augment Russian forces near Ukraine over the next several weeks," Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh told journalists this week

While Pyongyang denies its troops are training in Russia, North Korea's vice foreign minister, Kim Jong Gyu, said that were such a deployment to happen, it would be in line with international law.

China considers both Russia and North Korea its close partners.

The U.S. government has expressed with China its concerns over Pyongyang's deepening military engagement.

When asked about talks with Washington during a regular news conference Wednesday, China's foreign ministry declined to comment.

The foreign ministry also declined to confirm whether Wang raised the issue of North Korean troops in Russia with Rudenko when they met.

Source: Daily Sabah
 

North Korea pledges to stand by Russia until ‘victory’ in Ukraine​

North Korea will back Russia until it achieves victory in Ukraine, Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui said in Moscow as the United States warned thousands of Pyongyang’s troops were at the Ukrainian border and could soon be deployed into combat.

In her meeting on Friday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Choe also accused the US and South Korea of plotting a nuclear strike against her country.

“Our traditional, historically friendly relations, which have travelled the tested path of history, today … are rising to a new level of relations of invincible military comradeship,” she said, praising the role played in this by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

She said North Korea had no doubt that under Putin’s “wise leadership” the Russian army and people would “achieve a great victory in their sacred struggle to protect the sovereign rights and security interests of their state”.

“And we also assure that until the day of victory we will firmly stand alongside our Russian comrades,” Choe said.

Lavrov spoke of the “very close ties” between the two countries’ militaries and said this enabled them to solve important security tasks together.

The two did not address statements by leaders in Ukraine, South Korea and their Western allies that Pyongyang had deployed some 10,000 North Korean soldiers to Russia to fight in Ukraine.

On Thursday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said as many as 8,000 North Korean soldiers were in the Kursk region, where Ukrainian troops crossed the border into Russia in a surprise incursion in August, and that he expected them to go into combat against Ukraine in the coming days.

“We are deeply grateful to our Korean friends for their principled position regarding the events that have now unfolded in Ukraine as a result of the West’s course of advancing NATO to the east and encouraging an openly racist regime to exterminate everything Russian,” Lavrov said.

Choe told Lavrov that the situation on the Korean Peninsula could become “explosive” any moment, given the threats from Washington and Seoul, but did not provide any evidence to back her allegations.

She said North Korea needed to strengthen its nuclear arsenal and perfect its readiness to deliver a retaliatory nuclear strike if necessary.

Source: Al Jazeera
 

Russian senators ratify North Korean defense pact​


Russian lawmakers on Wednesday voted unanimously to ratify a landmark mutual defense pact with North Korea, as Kyiv and the West say Pyongyang sent thousands of troops to fight for Russia against Ukraine.

The agreement formalizes months of deepening security cooperation between the two nations, which were Communist allies throughout the Cold War.

North Korea has become one of the most vocal and important backers of Russia’s full-scale offensive on Ukraine.

The West has long accused Pyongyang of supplying artillery shells and missiles to Moscow to fire on Ukraine.

The latest accusations, based on intelligence reports, that North Korea has deployed around 10,000 troops to Russia suggest even deeper involvement in the conflict and have triggered an outcry and warnings in Seoul, Kyiv and Western capitals.

Ahead of the vote, presidential official Andrei Rudenko addressed the house, saying Moscow’s relations with Pyongyang have reached new heights.

Rudenko praised North Korea for being the “only country in the world to publicly support” Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and 2022 annexation of eastern Ukraine following Moscow’s full-scale offensive.

“I believe this treaty is very timely,” he told the house.

The vote came as Donald Trump claimed a victory in the US presidential election.

‘Mutual assistance’

Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un signed the strategic partnership treaty in June, during the Kremlin chief’s visit to Pyongyang.

They said it would obligate “mutual assistance in case of aggression,” with Putin calling it at the time a “breakthrough document.”

It also commits them to cooperate internationally to oppose Western sanctions and coordinate positions at the United Nations.

Putin visited Pyongyang this summer in his first trip to North Korea in 24 years.

Kim has called Putin his “closest comrade” while Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui said last week that North Korea would “stand firmly by our Russian comrades until victory day.

She called Moscow’s offensive against Ukraine a “sacred struggle” and said Pyongyang believed in Putin’s “wise leadership.”

‘Frontline’

The treaty will now go back to Putin’s desk for a final signature.

The ratification comes as North Korea faces growing international pressure not to send its troops into combat alongside Russia.

South Korea warned Tuesday that a substantial deployment was already near the combat zone, including in Russia’s western Kursk region, where Kyiv has been mounting a cross-border offensive since the summer.

“More than 10,000 North Korean soldiers are currently in Russia, and we assess that a significant portion of them are deployed to frontline areas, including Kursk,” Jeon Ha-gyu, a spokesman for the South Korean Defense Ministry, said Tuesday.

Asked directly about the reports last month, Putin did not deny that North Korean troops had been sent to Russia.

And several other Russian officials have deflected requests to comment on Western intelligence.

“The Kyiv regime is trying to do everything to involve Seoul” in the conflict, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday, refusing to comment on the substance of the allegations.

Missile tests

In exchange for sending troops, the West fears Russia is offering North Korea technological support that could advance Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.

The reclusive state fired a salvo of short-range ballistic missiles early Tuesday, Seoul’s military said, its second launch in days.

But sending North Korean troops to fight against Ukraine would be a major escalation in the conflict, more than two and a half years after Moscow launched its full-scale offensive.

Russia has seized the momentum on the battlefield this year as it grinds through the eastern Donbas region, capturing a string of towns and villages as Ukraine struggles with manpower and ammunition shortages.

 

Russia fires dozens of missiles and drones at Ukraine's capital as North Korean troops start fighting in Kursk​

Russia attacked the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on Wednesday with a sophisticated combination of missiles and drones for the first time in 73 days, authorities reported, as the Pentagon said most of the North Korean troops sent to help Moscow's war effort were fighting to drive Ukraine's army off Russian soil in the Kursk border region. South Korea's spy agency also said North Korean troops were "engaging in combat" in the Kursk region, hours after the U.S. military shared its assessment of the growing Russian-North Korean cooperation.

Air raid warnings blared for hours as Russia targeted eight regions of Ukraine, firing six ballistic and cruise missiles and 90 drones, the Ukrainian air force said. Air defenses downed four missiles and 37 drones, and another 47 drones were stopped by electronic jamming, the statement said.

The air assault came as most of the more than 10,000 North Korean troops sent by Pyongyang to help Moscow in the war were engaged in fighting in Kursk, where a Ukrainian army incursion three months ago has succeeded in holding a broad area of land, embarrassing the Kremlin.

Russia's military has trained the North Korean soldiers in artillery, drone skills and basic infantry operations, including trench clearing, Pentagon deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel told a briefing Tuesday. The cooperation faces challenges, according to the Pentagon, including how to achieve military interoperability and overcoming the language barrier.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said previously that the deployment of North Korean troops to Russia was a sign of Russian President Vladimir Putin's "growing desperation" as the full-scale war he launched against Ukraine nears the end of its third year, but he also said it marked "a significant escalation" in North Korea's involvement in the conflict, and "a dangerous expansion of Russia's war."

Source: CBS News
 

Ukraine war briefing: North Korean soldiers ‘fighting in Russian elite units’​


Some of 10,900 North Korean troops sent to Kursk have been fighting in elite Russian airborne and marine units against Ukraine, according to a lawmaker on the intelligence committee of the South Korean parliament. Park Sun-won, citing the South’s spy agency, said North Korea had also shipped additional arms for the war in Ukraine, including self-propelled howitzers and multiple rocket launchers.

Park added that the North Korean foreign minister Choe Son Hui’s meeting with Vladimir Putin in Moscow this month was unusual in terms of protocol, and likely went beyond exchanging greetings, to cover more significant issues including a possible visit to Russia by Kim Jong-un. The spy agency was still trying to determine the exact number of North Korean troop casualties and whether any had surrendered amid conflicting information, Park said.

Source: The Guardian
 
Putin gifts lion and brown bears to North Korea zoo

Russian President Vladimir Putin has gifted North Korea's main zoo more than 70 animals, including a lion and two brown bears, in yet another display of burgeoning relations between Moscow and Pyongyang.

Putin's environment minister, Alexander Kozlov, brought the animals to the North Korean capital on board a cargo plane, Kozlov's office said on its official Telegram channel on Wednesday.

The shipment of animals from Moscow also included two yaks, five cockatoos and dozens of pheasants as well as mandarin ducks, Kozlov's office said.

The gift comes weeks after the US and South Korea revealed that North Korea had sent thousands of troops to fight alongside Russia in Ukraine.

While in Pyongyang the Russian environment minister also paid a courtesy visit to Kim.

This isn't the first time in recent memory that Russia has sent animals to North Korea.

Earlier this year, Putin gifted North Korean leader Kim Jong Un 24 pure-bred horses, reportedly as thanks for artillery shells provided by North Korea.

Putin and Kim have strengthened their alliance in recent months as both countries face sanctions from the West.

The Russian president needs support for his war in Ukraine while North Korea needs Russia's space technology which could aid its missile programme.

That burgeoning alliance was on full display in June when Putin visited North Korea and signed an agreement with Kim to protect each other's nations from "aggression".

During that visit, Putin gifted Kim with a Russian-made Aurus limousine, tea set and artwork.

Kim is believed to be a car enthusiast and has been seen in a Maybach limousine, several Mercedes, a Rolls-Royce Phantom and a Lexus sports utility vehicle.

Putin had also gifted Kim with an Aurus in February, five months after Kim visited the Vostochny space centre in Russia's Far East.

BBC
 
Russia gives North Korea a million barrels of oil, report finds

Russia is estimated to have supplied North Korea with more than a million barrels of oil since March this year, according to satellite imagery analysis from the Open Source Centre, a non-profit research group based in the UK.

The oil is payment for the weapons and troops Pyongyang has sent Moscow to fuel its war in Ukraine, leading experts and UK Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, have told the BBC.

These transfers violate UN sanctions, which ban countries from selling oil to North Korea, except in small quantities, in an attempt to stifle its economy to prevent it from further developing nuclear weapons.

The satellite images, shared exclusively with the BBC, show more than a dozen different North Korean oil tankers arriving at an oil terminal in Russia’s Far East a total of 43 times over the past eight months.

Further pictures, taken of the ships at sea, appear to show the tankers arriving empty, and leaving almost full.

North Korea is the only country in the world not allowed to buy oil on the open market. The number of barrels of refined petroleum it can receive is capped by the United Nations at 500,000 annually, well below the amount it needs.

Russia’s foreign ministry did not respond to our request for comment.

The first oil transfer documented by the Open Source Centre in a new report, was on 7 March 2024, seven months after it first emerged Pyongyang was sending Moscow weapons.

The shipments have continued as thousands of North Korean troops are reported to have been sent to Russia to fight, with the last one recorded on 5 November.

“While Kim Jong Un is providing Vladimir Putin with a lifeline to continue his war, Russia is quietly providing North Korea with a lifeline of its own,” says Joe Byrne from the Open Source Centre.

“This steady flow of oil gives North Korea a level of stability it hasn’t had since these sanctions were introduced.”

Four former members of a UN panel responsible for tracking the sanctions on North Korea have told the BBC the transfers are a consequence of increasing ties between Moscow and Pyongyang.

“These transfers are fuelling Putin’s war machine – this is oil for missiles, oil for artillery and now oil for soldiers,” says Hugh Griffiths, who led the panel from 2014 to 2019.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy has told the BBC in a statement: “To keep fighting in Ukraine, Russia has become increasingly reliant on North Korea for troops and weapons in exchange for oil."

He added that this was “having a direct impact on security in the Korean peninsula, Europe and Indo-Pacific".

Easy and cheap oil supply

While most people in North Korea rely on coal for their daily lives, oil is essential for running the country’s military. Diesel and petrol are used to transport missile launchers and troops around the country, run munitions factories and fuel the cars of Pyongyang’s elite.

The 500,000 barrels North Korea is allowed to receive fall far short of the nine million it consumes – meaning that since the cap was introduced in 2017, the country has been forced to buy oil illicitly from criminal networks to make up this deficit.

This involves transferring the oil between ships out at sea – a risky, expensive and time-consuming business, according to Dr Go Myong-hyun, a senior research fellow at South Korea’s Institute for National Security Strategy, which is linked to the country’s spy agency.

“Now Kim Jong Un is getting oil directly, it’s likely better quality, and chances are he’s getting it for free, as quid pro quo for supplying munitions. What could be better than that?"

“A million barrels is nothing for a large oil producer like Russia to release, but it is a substantial amount for North Korea to receive,” Dr Go adds.

Tracking the ‘silent’ transfers

In all 43 of the journeys tracked by the Open Source Centre using satellite images, the North Korean-flagged tankers arrived at Russia’s Vostochny Port with their trackers switched off, concealing their movements.

The images show they then made their way back to one of four ports on North Korea’s east and west coast.

“The vessels appear silently, almost every week,” says Joe Byrne, the researcher from the Open Source Centre. “Since March there’s been a fairly constant flow.”

The team, which has been tracking these tankers since the oil sanctions were first introduced, used their knowledge of each ship’s capacity to calculate how many oil barrels they could carry.

Then they studied images of the ships entering and leaving Vostochny and, in most instances, could see how low they sat in the water and, therefore, how full they were.

The tankers, they assess, were loaded to 90% of their capacity.

“We can see from some of the images that if the ships were any fuller they would sink,” Mr Byrne says.

in 2023.

This follows an assessment by the US government in May that Moscow had already supplied more than 500,000 barrels’ worth of oil.

Cloud cover means the researchers cannot get a clear image of the port every day.

“The whole of August was cloudy, so we weren’t able to document a single trip,” Mr Byrne says, leading his team to believe that one million barrels is a “baseline” figure.

A ‘new level of contempt’ for sanctions

Not only do these oil deliveries breach UN sanctions on North Korea, that Russia, as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, signed off on – but also, more than half of the journeys tracked by the Open Source Centre were made by vessels that have been individually sanctioned by the UN.

This means they should have been impounded upon entering Russian waters.

But in March 2024, three weeks after the first oil transfer was documented, Russia disbanded the UN panel responsible for monitoring sanctions violations, by using its veto at the UN Security Council.

Ashley Hess, who was working on the panel up until its collapse, says they saw evidence the transfers had started.

“We were tracking some of the ships and companies involved, but our work was stopped, possibly after they had already breached the 500,000-barrel cap”.

Eric Penton-Voak, who led the group from 2021-2023, says the Russian members on the panel tried to censor its work.

“Now the panel is gone, they can simply ignore the rules,” he adds. “The fact that Russia is now encouraging these ships to visit its ports and load up with oil shows a new level of contempt for these sanctions.”

But Mr Penton-Voak, who is on the board of the Open Source Centre, thinks the problem runs much deeper.

“You now have these autocratic regimes increasingly working together to help one another achieve whatever it is they want, and ignoring the wishes of the international community.”

This is an “increasingly dangerous” playbook, he argues.

“The last thing you want is a North Korean tactical nuclear weapon turning up in Iran, for instance.”

Oil the tip of the iceberg?

As Kim Jong Un steps up his support for Vladimir Putin’s war, concern is growing over what else he will receive in return.

The US and South Korea estimate Pyongyang has now sent Moscow 16,000 shipping containers filled with artillery shells and rockets, while remnants of exploded North Korean ballistic missiles have been recovered on the battlefield in Ukraine.

More recently, Putin and Kim signed a defence pact, leading to thousands of North Korean troops being sent to Russia’s Kursk region, where intelligence reports indicate they are now engaged in battle.

The South Korean government has told the BBC it would “sternly respond to the violation of the UN Security Council resolutions by Russia and North Korea”.

Its biggest worry is that Moscow will provide Pyongyang with technology to improve its spy satellites and ballistic missiles.

Last month, Seoul’s defence minister, Kim Yong-hyun, stated there was a “high chance” North Korea was asking for such help.

“If you’re sending your people to die in a foreign war, a million barrels of oil is just not sufficient reward,” Dr Go says.

Andrei Lankov, an expert in North Korea-Russia relations at Seoul’s Kookmin University, agrees.

“I used to think it was not in Russia’s interest to share military technology, but perhaps its calculus has changed. The Russians need these troops, and this gives the North Koreans more leverage.”

BBC
 
Russia cannot beat Ukraine let alone NATO.

Iran is a joke and North Korea is an even bigger joke.
I think you are completely unaware of the reality. It's almost as if you get your news from the CNN.

Firstly Russia are winning and in a few weeks when they are given Crimea and the Donbas officially. Their goal of liberating the Donbas and keeping Ukraine out of nato will be achieved. That despite the collective might of the west enforcing so many sanctions and giving so much funding and weapons to help Ukraine.

It isn't just a win, it's a big win. Now tell me, how many wars have the Americans won recently?

Iran and NK are also sanctioned like you wouldn't believe and yet they stand firm. Iran has shown recently that they can easily penetrative Israeli air defences, why else would they not allow independent international journalists and agencies see the results?
 
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At least 100 North Koreans dead in Ukraine war, says South

At least 100 North Korean soldiers have been killed in fighting in the Ukraine war since entering combat on the Russian side earlier this month, a South Korean MP has said.

Lee Sung-kwon, speaking to reporters after parliament was briefed by the country's National Intelligence Service, said another 1,000 had been injured.

He said the casualties included high-ranking officials, and could be explained by the troops lack of familiarity with the terrain, and with drone warfare.

The first reports of North Korean casualties came earlier this week. It emerged in October that the North had sent 10,000 troops to help Russia's war effort.

On Monday a US Pentagon spokesman said North Koreans had been killed, without giving a number, and a day later an unnamed US official said that there had been "several hundred" killed or wounded.

The BBC has not independently verified the claims.

The North Korean troops, none of whom will have any previous combat experience, are believed to have spent their first weeks in Russia in training and then in support roles.

The casualties are thought to have occurred in Russia's Kursk region, where Ukrainians are defending a small area of territory captured during a surprise incursion in August.

Last Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had begun to use a "significant number" of North Koreans in its assaults in Kursk.

They are not thought to have been deployed in Ukraine itself, where Russian troops have been advancing in eastern parts of the country in recent months.

Lee Sung-kwon said there were reports of preparations for additional deployment, and that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un could oversee training.

He quoted intelligence officials as saying the high number of casualties could be attributed to an "unfamiliar battlefield environment, where North Korean forces are being utilised as expendable frontline assault units, and their lack of capability to counter drone attacks".

"Within the Russian military, complaints have reportedly surfaced that the North Korean troops, due to their lack of knowledge about drones, are more of a burden than an asset," he added.

Neither Russia nor the North have acknowledged the troop deployments, but a North Korean statement on Thursday carried by state news agency KCNA said the country's alliance with Moscow was "deterring the US and the West's ill-intended extension of influence".

BBC
 
North Korea’s Kim vows to further solidify Russia ties in letter to Putin

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un pledged to solidify the country’s comprehensive strategic partnership with Russia in his letter to President Vladimir Putin on Monday, state media KCNA reported on Tuesday.

In the message, Kim sent New Year greetings to Putin and all Russians, including their troops and expressed his willingness to further step up bilateral ties, which he said the two leaders have elevated to a new height this year, through new projects, KCNA said.

Kim “wished that the New Year 2025 would be recorded as the first year of victory in the 21st century when the Russian army and people would defeat neo-Nazism and achieve a great victory,” KCNA said.

Kim and Putin signed a mutual defence treaty at a summit in June, which calls for each side to come to the other’s aid in case of an armed attack.

North Korea has since dispatched tens of thousands of troops to Russia to support its war against Ukraine, and Seoul and Washington said that more than a thousand of them have been killed or wounded.

Earlier this month, Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and agreed to boost military cooperation between the two isolated nations.

BBC
 
North Korea learning from fighting with Russia against Ukraine, US warns

North Korea is benefiting from its troops fighting alongside Russia against Ukraine, gaining experience that makes Pyongyang “more capable of waging war against its neighbours” a senior US official has warned.

Russia has forged closer diplomatic and military ties with North Korea since Moscow’s full invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

More than 12,000 North Korean troops are in Russia and last month began fighting against Ukrainian forces in Russia’s Kursk region, Dorothy Camille Shea, the deputy US ambassador to the UN, told the UN security council.

North Korea “is significantly benefiting from receiving Russian military equipment, technology and experience, rendering it more capable of waging war against its neighbours”, Shea told the 15-member council, which met over what Pyongyang said was a test of a new intermediate-range hypersonic ballistic missile on Monday.

“In turn, the DPRK will likely be eager to leverage these improvements to promote weapons sales and military training contracts globally,” she said, using the acronym for North Korea’s formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

North Korea’s UN ambassador, Kim Song, justified Monday’s missile test as part of a plan to enhance the country’s defence capabilities. He accused the US of double standards.

“When the civilian death toll exceeded 45,000 in Gaza, United States embellished Israel’s nefarious mass killing atrocity as the right to self-defence … Meanwhile, it takes issue with legitimate exercise of the right to self-defence of the DPRK,” Kim told the security council.

Russia’s UN ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, repeated Moscow’s longstanding accusation that the US, South Korea and Japan provoke North Korea with military exercises. He also rejected as “wholly unsubstantiated” a US allegation that Russia intends to share satellite and space technology with Pyongyang.

“Such statements are the latest example of baseless conjecture which is geared towards smearing bilateral cooperation between the Russian Federation and the friendly nation of the DPRK,” said Nebenzia, who also congratulated North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on his birthday on Wednesday.

South Korea’s UN ambassador, Joonkook Hwang, told the council that North Korea’s soldiers were “essentially slaves to Kim Jong-un, brainwashed to sacrifice their lives on faraway battlefields to raise money for his regime and secure advanced military technology from Russia”.

North Korea has been under UN sanctions since 2006, and the measures have been steadily strengthened over the years with the aim of halting Pyongyang’s development of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles. Russia has veto power on the 15-member body, so any further council action is unlikely.

SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...fighting-with-russia-against-ukraine-us-warns
 

Boris Johnson brands Vladimir Putin a 'f****** idiot' over alleged imperial ambitions​


Boris Johnson has branded Russian President Vladimir Putin a "f****** idiot" over his alleged imperial ambitions.

The former prime minister used the colourful language in an interview with news website Delfi.

Mr Johnson is known for his vocal support for Ukraine and was leading the UK when Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.

During the interview, Mr Johnson reflected on the end of Britain's own empire and said that Mr Putin needed to understand Moscow was no longer an imperial power either.

"He needs to understand that Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania ... none of these countries are part of the Russian imperium anymore," he said.

He continued: "And nor is Ukraine. It's over. Over. Over. Over. No more empire Vladimir you f****** idiot - excuse my language - okay?"

The war goes on

His comments come as Russia has claimed to have taken two villages in eastern Ukraine.

The country's defence ministry claimed its troops had taken control of the villages of Yantarne in the Donetsk region and Kalynove in the Kharkiv region.

Its claims have not been verified by Sky News.

Russia's forces have been steadily advancing westward in the Donetsk region for several months, edging closer to important towns like Pokrovsk.

Separately, Ukraine's air force said Russia had launched 94 drones overnight into Sunday - around two-thirds of which were downed by defences.

On Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his forces had captured two North Korean soldiers.

In a post on social media, he shared images of the captives in prison.

 

About 1,000 North Koreans killed fighting Ukraine in Kursk, officials say​

Western officials have told the BBC that North Korean troops have already suffered nearly 40% casualties in the fighting in Russia's western Kursk region, in just three months.

The officials, who spoke on grounds of anonymity, said that out of the estimated 11,000 troops sent from North Korea, known as DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea), 4,000 were battle casualties.

That term comprises those killed, wounded, missing or captured. Of the 4,000, the officials said around 1,000 are believed to have been killed by mid-January.

These losses, if confirmed, are unsustainable by the North Koreans.

It is not clear where the wounded are being treated, nor even when and to what extent they will be replaced.

But the figures point to an extraordinarily high cost being incurred by President Vladimir Putin's ally, akin Kim Jong Un, as he seeks to help him evict Ukrainian forces from Russia ahead of any possible ceasefire negotiations later in the year.

Ukraine launched a lightning thrust into the Russian oblast of Kursk last August, taking Russian border guards by surprise.

The government in Kyiv made it clear at the time that it had no intention of holding onto the territory seized, merely to use it as a bargaining chip in future peace negotiations.

Ukraine's early gains in Kursk have since been steadily pushed back, partly due to the arrival in Russia of the North Koreans in October.

But Ukraine still retains several hundred square kilometres of Russian territory and is inflicting huge losses on its enemy.

The North Korean troops, reportedly from an "elite" unit called the Storm Corps, appear to have been thrown into the fight with comparatively little training or protection.

"These are barely trained troops led by Russian officers who they don't understand," says the former British Army tank commander, Col Hamish de Bretton-Gordon.

"Quite frankly they don't stand a chance. They are being thrown into the meat grinder with little chance of survival. They are cannon fodder, and the Russian officers care even less for them than they do for their own men."

Reports attributed to South Korean intelligence say the North Koreans are unprepared for the realities of modern warfare, and appear especially vulnerable to being targeted by Ukrainian First-Person-View (FPV) drones, a weapon that has been a familiar part of the battle space further south in Ukraine's Donbas region for years now.

Despite this, Ukraine's top military commander Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi warned earlier this week that North Korean soldiers were posing a significant problem for Ukrainian fighters on the front line.

"They are numerous. An additional 11,000-12,000 highly motivated and well-prepared soldiers who are conducting offensive actions. They operate based on Soviet tactics. They act in platoons, companies. They rely on their numbers," the general told Ukraine's TSN Tyzhden news programme.

Source: BBC
 
North Korea suspected of preparing to send more troops to Russia, Seoul says

South Korea's military said on Friday that it suspects North Korea is preparing to send more troops to Russia to fight Ukrainian forces, even after suffering losses and seeing some of its soldiers captured.

"As four months have passed for the dispatch of troops for the Russia-Ukraine war, and multiple casualties and captives have occurred, (North Korea) is suspected to be accelerating follow-up measures and preparation for an additional dispatch of troops," the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a statement.

The JCS analysis did not specify what other follow-up measures Pyongyang might take.

North Korea is also preparing to launch a spy satellite and an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), though there were no signs of immediate action, the JCS said.

This month, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said two North Korean soldiers had been captured in Russia's Kursk region, marking the first time Ukraine had taken North Korean soldiers alive since their entry into the war last autumn.

Pyongyang has deployed about 11,000 soldiers to support Moscow's forces in Russia's western Kursk region, according to Ukrainian and Western assessments, which Ukraine seized in a surprise attack last year.

More than 3,000 have been killed or wounded, according to Kyiv.

Although Moscow and Pyongyang initially dismissed reports about the North's troop deployment, Russian President Vladimir Putin in October did not deny that North Korean soldiers were in Russia and a North Korean official said any such deployment would be lawful.

The British teenager who killed three young girls in the English town of Southport was jailed for at least 52 years on Thursday.

The escalating cooperation comes after Putin's visit to Pyongyang in June 2024, where the leaders signed a "Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Treaty", which includes a mutual defence pact.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/world/north...end-more-troops-russia-seoul-says-2025-01-24/
 
North Korea suspected of preparing to send more troops to Russia, Seoul says

South Korea's military said on Friday that it suspects North Korea is preparing to send more troops to Russia to fight Ukrainian forces, even after suffering losses and seeing some of its soldiers captured.

"As four months have passed for the dispatch of troops for the Russia-Ukraine war, and multiple casualties and captives have occurred, (North Korea) is suspected to be accelerating follow-up measures and preparation for an additional dispatch of troops," the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said in a statement.

The JCS analysis did not specify what other follow-up measures Pyongyang might take.

North Korea is also preparing to launch a spy satellite and an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), though there were no signs of immediate action, the JCS said.

This month, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said two North Korean soldiers had been captured in Russia's Kursk region, marking the first time Ukraine had taken North Korean soldiers alive since their entry into the war last autumn.

Pyongyang has deployed about 11,000 soldiers to support Moscow's forces in Russia's western Kursk region, according to Ukrainian and Western assessments, which Ukraine seized in a surprise attack last year.

More than 3,000 have been killed or wounded, according to Kyiv.

Although Moscow and Pyongyang initially dismissed reports about the North's troop deployment, Russian President Vladimir Putin in October did not deny that North Korean soldiers were in Russia and a North Korean official said any such deployment would be lawful.

The British teenager who killed three young girls in the English town of Southport was jailed for at least 52 years on Thursday.

The escalating cooperation comes after Putin's visit to Pyongyang in June 2024, where the leaders signed a "Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Treaty", which includes a mutual defence pact.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/world/north...end-more-troops-russia-seoul-says-2025-01-24/

Surprised that North Korea is agreeing to do this. They are losing soldiers in a war that has nothing to do with North Korea.
 

North Korean troops reportedly pulled back from Russia-Ukraine front line​

North Korean troops sent to support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have been pulled off the front lines after suffering major casualties, according to reports.

The roughly 10,000 soldiers that Pyongyang is believed to have sent to fight alongside Russian forces have been absent from the front line for several weeks, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported on Tuesday. The report supports claims from Ukraine and US media on the withdrawal of the troops, whose arrival raised fears that the war in Ukraine could escalate.

South Korea’s National Intelligence Service (NIS) told AFP news agency that the North Korean units have halted combat operations in Russia’s Kursk region “since mid-January”.

“One reason for this may be the occurrence of many casualties, but the exact details are still being monitored,” said the spy agency.

A Ukrainian military analysis said on Friday that it believed the North Korean soldiers had been pulled back after suffering heavy losses.
Ukraine has previously reported that it had captured or killed numerous North Korean units in Kursk, where it launched a shock cross-border offensive in August.

Source: Al Jazeera
 

North Korea providing 50% of Russia's ammunition, Ukraine says​

KYIV, Feb 23 (Reuters) - North Korea is providing 50% of Russia's ammunition needs at the front in its war against Ukraine, Kyiv's military spy chief Kyrylo Budanov said on Sunday.

North Korea has deployed thousands of troops to support Russian forces, according to Ukrainian, U.S. and South Korean assessments, Pyongyang's first major involvement in a war since the 1950s.

Budanov told a press conference that North Korea had also begun large scale supplies of 170-mm self-propelled howitzers and 240-mm multiple rocket launch systems to Russia.

North Korea has already supplied Russia with ballistic missiles as well, and in 2025 it plans to send 148, he added.

In 2025, Russia plans to produce over 7 million artillery and mortar shells, Ukraine's foreign intelligence chief Oleh Ivashchenko added.

"Russia... understands that in general it produces way more than all European countries," he said.

As for long-range missiles, Ivashchenko said Russia is expected to produce around 3,000 this year.

 
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