North Korea has deployed more troops to Russia: Seoul

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FILE PHOTO: Russian and North Korean flags fly at the Vostochny Сosmodrome, the venue of the meeting between Russia's President Vladimir Putin and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un, in the far eastern Amur region, Russia, September 13, 2023. Sputnik/Artem Geodakyan/Pool via REUTERS/ File Photo

More than 10,000 soldiers from North Korea were sent to Russia in 2024 to help it fight a shock Ukrainian offensive into the Kursk border region.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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SEOUL – North Korea has sent more soldiers to Russia and re-deployed several to the front line in Kursk, Seoul’s spy agency told AFP on Feb 27.

South Korean and Western intelligence agencies have said that more than 10,000 soldiers from the reclusive state were sent to Russia in 2024 to help it fight a shock Ukrainian offensive into the Kursk border region.

Earlier in February, Seoul said North Korean soldiers previously fighting alongside Russia’s army on the Kursk front line had not been engaged in combat since mid-January.

Ukraine also said they had been withdrawn following heavy losses.

On Feb 27, an official from Seoul’s National Intelligence Agency said they had been “redeployed” there.

That came alongside “some additional troop deployments appearing to have taken place”, the official added.

“The exact scale is still being assessed,” the official said.

Neither Moscow nor Pyongyang have confirmed the deployment.

But the two countries signed an agreement, including a mutual defence clause, when Russian President Vladimir Putin made a rare visit to nuclear-armed North Korea in 2024.

‘Brutal’ fighting

Ukraine has previously said it

captured or killed several North Korean soldiers in Kursk.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has also released footage of interrogations with what he said were North Korean prisoners captured by the Ukrainian army there.

And in February, Seoul’s Chosun Ilbo newspaper published an interview with a North Korean soldier describing “brutal” fighting on the front line.

The soldier, who was visibly wounded, told the paper that many of his fellow North Korean soldiers had been killed by drones and artillery fire.

“Everyone who joined the army with me is dead,” he said.

Pyongyang and Moscow have deepened political, military and cultural ties since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In a New Year’s letter, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hailed Mr Putin and made a possible reference to the war in Ukraine.

He said 2025 would be the year “when the Russian army and people defeat neo-Nazism and achieve a great victory”.

On Feb 26, North Korean state media reported Mr Kim had visited a major military academy, urging troops to harness the “actual experiences of modern warfare”. AFP

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