North Korea prepares to send more troops to Russia after suffering
casualties, South Korea says
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[January 24, 2025]
By HYUNG-JIN KIM
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s military said Friday it suspects
North Korea is preparing to send additional troops to Russia after its
soldiers fighting in the Russian-Ukraine war suffered heavy casualties.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff also assessed in a report
distributed to journalists that North Korea is continuing its
preparations to test-fire an intercontinental ballistic missile intended
to reach the United States.
President Donald Trump’s return to the White House may brighten
Pyongyang's prospects for high-level diplomacy with Washington, as he
met North Korean leader Kim Jong Un three times during his first term.
Many experts say Kim likely thinks his evolving nuclear program and
expanding military cooperation with Russian President Vladimir Putin
could give him a greater leverage than during his 2018-19 summits with
Trump.
North Korea has been supplying a vast amount of artillery and other
conventional weapons to Russia, and last October it sent about
10,000-12,000 troops to Russia as well, according to U.S., South Korean
and Ukraine intelligences. Seoul, Washington and others worry Russia
could in return transfer to North Korea sophisticated weapons
technologies that can enhance its nuclear program.
North Korean soldiers are considered to be highly disciplined and
well-trained, but their lack of combat experiences and unfamiliarity
with the largely flat plains that make up most battlefields in the
Russian-Ukraine war have made them easy targets for drone and artillery
strikes.
South Korea’s spy agency said last week that it assessed about 300 North
Korean soldiers had died and another 2,700 had been injured. Earlier in
January, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy put the number of
killed or wounded North Koreans at 4,000, though U.S. estimates were
lower at around 1,200.
The South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff said that North Korea is believed
to be accelerating preparations to send more troops to Russia, without
saying how it reached the assessment.
Deepening military ties between North Korea and Russia could embolden
Kim over his dealings with the U.S. and South Korea. In a major
political conference last month, Kim vowed to implement the “toughest”
anti-U.S. policy. But many experts say Kim may eventually want to sit
down for talks with Trump if he thinks the U.S. president could make
concessions.
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A TV screen at Seoul Railway Station in South Korea, on Oct. 21,
2024, shows an image of soldiers believed to be from North Korea
standing in line to receive supplies from Russia. (AP Photo/Ahn
Young-joon, File)
Their previous talks collapsed after Trump rejected Kim’s offer to
dismantle his main nuclear complex, a limited denuclearization step,
in return for extensive sanctions relief. Kim has since sharply
increased the pace of weapons tests to expand an arsenal of nuclear
missiles targeting the U.S. and South Korea.
In South Korea, there are concerns that Trump might give up the goal
of a complete denuclearization of North Korea and focus on
eliminating its long-range missile program that poses a direct
threat to the U.S., while leaving its nuclear attack capabilities
against South Korea intact.
During a Fox News interview broadcast Thursday, Trump called Kim “a
smart guy” and “not a religious zealot.” Asked over whether he will
reach out to Kim again, Trump replied that “I will, yeah.”
On Monday, Trump called North Korea “a nuclear power” as he boasted
of his personal ties with Kim. That created a stir in South Korea,
as Washington, Seoul and their partners have long avoided describing
North Korea as a nuclear state out of worries that it could be seen
as accepting its pursuit of nuclear weapons in violation of U.N.
Security Council resolutions.
“I was very friendly with him. He liked me. I liked him,” Trump said
during a press availability at the Oval Office after his
inauguration. “Now he is a nuclear power. But we got along. I think
he’ll be happy to see I’m coming back.”
Jeon Ha Gyu, a spokesperson for the South Korean Defense Ministry,
told reporters Tuesday that efforts to achieve North Korea’s
denuclearization must be continued as a prerequisite to realize
lasting peace not only on the Korean Peninsula but also in the
world. South Korea’s Foreign Ministry also said it will closely
coordinate with the Trump administration to achieve North Korea's
denuclearization.
North Korea hasn’t responded to Trump’s comments. A state media
report Friday on the closely watched two-day parliament meeting in
Pyongyang this week didn’t say whether Kim attended it, and the
report made no mention of the U.S., South Korea, Russia or other
foreign policy issues.
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