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North Korean leader pledges ‘unconditional' support for Russia's war against Ukraine

North Korean leader pledges ‘unconditional' support for Russia's war against Ukraine

Korea Herald11 hours ago
Deployment of additional North Korean troops likely discussed in latest talks with top Russian diplomat, says expert
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un assured Moscow's top diplomat that Pyongyang will fully support all actions taken by Russia in its war against Ukraine, the North's state media said Sunday.
In a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov the previous day, Kim "reaffirmed that the DPRK is ready to unconditionally support and encourage all the measures taken by the Russian leadership as regards the tackling of the root cause of the Ukrainian crisis,' the KCNA said. DPRK is the acronym for North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
The latest meeting between Kim and Lavrov came during the top diplomat's three-day visit to North Korea amid deepening military cooperation between Pyongyang and Moscow. It also closely follows the US' decision to resume military supplies to Ukraine, including shipments of critical arms, after a brief pause.
According to the KCNA, the talks between Kim and Lavrov touched on the topic of faithfully implementing the agreements made during the summit between the North Korean leader and Putin in June last year. Pyongyang and Moscow signed a partnership treaty last year, which includes a mutual defense pact.
Lavrov, who delivered 'warm greetings' to Kim from Putin, expressed willingness to further bolster 'the strategic and tactical cooperation' between Pyongyang and Moscow.
Though the KCNA did not report on any discussions of a potential North Korea-Russia summit, Russia's state agency Tass claimed Lavrov told Kim that Putin 'hopes for continued direct contact in the very near future.'
South Korea's intelligence agency said the North has deployed some 13,000 troops and provided conventional weapons to Russia since October last year to support Moscow's war against Ukraine. Pyongyang is projected to send additional troops to Russia in July or August, according to the agency last month.
Additionally, the South's Defense Intelligence Agency claimed that the North has so far provided some 28,000 containers of weapons and artillery shells, in a report submitted to a main opposition People Power Party lawmaker and released Sunday. When calculated in single 152 millimeter shells, this is believed to amount to 12 million rounds of such shells, the military intelligence agency under the Defense Ministry explained.
Lavrov's second strategic dialogue with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son-hui, took place on the same day as the meeting between Kim and the top Russian diplomat. According to a statement released by Pyongyang, Lavrov and Choe vowed to advance their cooperation under a partnership treaty signed last year. Both meetings were held at the newly opened Kalma beach resort in the North's eastern coastal city of Wonsan.
'The issues of deploying some additional 6,000 North Korean troops to Russia, cooperation on advanced weapons technology and energy, as well as tourism, were likely discussed in Pyongyang's latest talks with Lavlov,' Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies, said.
'The additional deployment is projected to be a sign of an intensified war between Russia and Ukraine," he added.
Russia has ramped up drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities in recent weeks, leading to record civilian casualties. Moscow launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in early 2022.
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North Korean leader pledges ‘unconditional' support for Russia's war against Ukraine
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