North Korean official criticises US for expanding support for Ukraine: KCNA

Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments

Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ride an Aurus car in Pyongyang, North Korea on June 20.

The statement came days after Russian President Vladimir Putin met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang last week.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

SEOUL - A senior North Korean official on June 24 criticised the United States over its expansion of military support for Ukraine, according to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Washington and Seoul have been increasingly alarmed by deepening military cooperation between Russia and the North, and have accused them of violating international laws by trading in arms for Russia to use against Ukraine. Moscow and Pyongyang have denied any arms transfer.

A pact signed by Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during Mr Putin’s visit to Pyongyang last week commits each side to provide immediate military assistance to the other in the event of armed aggression against either one of them.

Analysts say that pact would lay the framework for arms trade between the two countries and facilitate their anti-US and anti-West coalition.

Mr Pak Jong Chon, one of North Korea’s top military officials, said Russia has the “right to opt for any kind of retaliatory strike”, in a statement carried by KCNA, adding that if Washington kept pushing Ukraine to a “proxy war” against Russia, it could provoke a stronger response from Moscow, and a “new world war”.

He also mentioned in the statement comments by the Pentagon last week that Ukrainian forces can use US-supplied weapons to strike Russian forces anywhere across the border into Russia.

Mr Pak added that North Korea will always be together with the Russian army and people in their “struggle for defending sovereign rights”.

Senior officials of South Korea, the US and Japan condemned “in the strongest possible terms” deepening military cooperation between North Korea and Russia, in a joint statement released by Seoul’s Foreign Ministry on June 24.

Russia may have received about 1.6 million artillery shells from North Korea from August to January, the Washington Post reported on June 22, analysing data from US security non-profit C4ADS that shows 74,000 metric tons of explosives were moved from Russia’s far east ports to other sites, mainly along the borders near Ukraine.

Mr Putin’s

mutual defence agreement with North Korea has the potential to create friction with China

, which has long been the isolated state’s main ally, the top US military officer said on June 24.

North Korea plans to send construction and engineering forces to Russia-occupied territories of Ukraine as early as in July for rebuilding work, a South Korean cable TV network TV Chosun reported earlier, citing a South Korean government official.

Those forces, working overseas under the disguise of construction workers to earn hard currency for the regime, would be moved from China to those Russia-held regions, the network said. South Korea’s Foreign Ministry was not immediately available for comment on the TV Chosun reports. REUTERS

See more on