
Russia and North Korea begin building first road bridge linking the two countries
North Korea and Russia have begun building their first road link, the two countries announced, hailing the construction of a bridge over a border river as a major development that will further expand their political and economic ties. The kilometer-long Tumangang Road bridge, which is expected to take 18 months to construct, aims to expand cross-border travel of people, tourism and circulation of commodities, Russian and North Korean news agencies reported. Relations and exchange programs between the two countries have been flourishing in recent years, with North Korea supplying ammunition and troops to support Russia's war against Ukraine.
On Thursday, North Korea and Russia simultaneously held a ground-breaking ceremony for the bridge's construction in their respective border cities of Tumangang and Khasan on either side of the Tumen River, close to their existing rail 'Friendship Bridge'. North Korean Premier Pak Thae Song said the bridge's construction would be remembered as 'a historic monument' in bilateral ties, North Korea's KCNA reported Thursday. 'This is a big milestone for Russian-Korean relations,' Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin added, according to Russian news agency TASS.
'We are creating a reliable basis for closer cooperation between our two countries, a road for an open and fruitful dialogue.' It comes days after Pyongyang confirmed for the first time that it had sent combat troops to Russia to help it reclaim parts of the Kursk region that Ukrainian forces seized in a stunning incursion last year. Russian President Vladimir Putin thanked North Korea and promised not to forget the sacrifices of North Korean soldiers for Russia.
According to a South Korean government intelligence assessment shared with lawmakers on Wednesday, North Korea has sent about 15,000 soldiers to Russia, and 4,700 of them have been killed or wounded. Pyongyang is believed to have provided Moscow with ballistic missiles, 120 long-range artillery systems and 120 multiple-launch rocket systems, according to Ukraine's military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov, along with millions of artillery shells. That represents the most significant direct military package handed to the Russians by any country since the war broke out.
State media in North Korea said its fighters had made an 'important contribution' to Russia's war effort by driving Ukrainians out of Russian territory - assumed to be a reference to Kursk. North Korean supreme leader Kim Jong Un was quoted as saying: 'They who fought for justice are all heroes and representatives of the honor of the motherland.' Meanwhile, the Russian chief of general staff Valery Gerasimov, told Putin: 'I want to point out the participation of servicemen from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in the liberation of the Kursk Region's border areas.
'In accordance with the Treaty on Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between our countries, they provided significant assistance in defeating the invading group of the Ukrainian armed forces. 'Soldiers and officers of the Korean People's Army, carrying out combat missions shoulder to shoulder with Russian servicemen, displayed high professionalism, fortitude, courage and heroism in repulsing the Ukrainian invasion,' he said. But a slew of reports suggest North Korean soldiers performed woefully on the battlefield as they contended with modern warfare tactics, including Ukraine's widespread use of drones.
Zelensky said in a post to X: 'According to preliminary information, the Russians used a ballistic missile manufactured in North Korea. Our special services are verifying all the details. 'If the information that this missile was made in North Korea is confirmed, this will be further proof of the criminal nature of the alliance between Russia and Pyongyang. They kill people and torment lives together – that is the only meaning behind their cooperation.
'Russia continuously uses such weapons – missiles, artillery. In return, Pyongyang got the opportunity to make its weapons more deadly under real wartime conditions.' In return for North Korea's supply of troops and arms, Russia has given it air defense missiles, electronic warfare equipment, drones and technology for spy satellite launches, according to the South Korean assessment. North Korea has also been receiving Russian tourists since February 2024 amid slowly easing pandemic curbs.
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an hour ago
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In the years since the invasion of Ukraine, Europe has seen a dramatic surge in Russia-affiliated acts of sabotage: exploding DHL packages, arson attacks carried out on energy substations and warehouses – and even potentially on properties belonging to Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Many of the saboteurs in these cases aren't Russian, seemingly hired unknowingly by the GRU – Russia's foreign intelligence branch – through the internet. This model, Khodorkovsky says, 'is beautiful in its danger'. He compares it to the augmented reality game Pokemon Go, in which players complete virtual challenges, capturing, training and fighting Pokemon, in the real world. 'The GRU took this model and began to give such tasks to all sorts of idiots who, for very little money, do God knows what.' This type of warfare won't end when the last Russian soldier puts down his gun in Ukraine, Khodorkovsky says. 'And I do not know how ready the West is for this.' 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