Ukraine braces for Russians to assault with North Korean troops
The United States has warned that North Korean soldiers were moving toward Russia’s western Kursk region, which Ukraine invaded in August, as Ukrainian forces braced for what they said could be imminent assaults involving the new troops.
The United States has warned that North Korean soldiers were moving toward Russia’s western Kursk region, which Ukraine invaded in August, as Ukrainian forces braced for what they said could be imminent assaults involving the new troops.
The Pentagon said North Korea had now sent about 10,000 soldiers to train in eastern Russia, with many moving toward the battlefield in the Kursk region. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte on Monday confirmed that North Korean troops had been deployed in Kursk, saying it represented “a dangerous expansion” of the war. Ukrainian and U.S. officials said last week that several thousand North Korean troops had already arrived in the Kursk area.
Military experts say that is too small a number to affect the overall situation on the broader battlefield, where both sides have deployed hundreds of thousands of soldiers, but potentially enough to help Moscow reclaim its territory in the Kursk region. “As their numbers grow, I expect their impact to be seen by the progress of a steady Russian counterattack,” said John Foreman, a former British defense attaché in Moscow and Kyiv.
A Ukrainian official said Monday that the North Korean soldiers had been deployed to camps and were living in temporary barracks between 25 to 40 miles from the Ukrainian border. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal military information, said the North Koreans had not yet joined the fighting.
It is unclear, however, how exactly North Korean troops will support Russia’s counterattack in the Kursk region.
Analysts say the soldiers could be used in direct attacks or to guard areas behind the combat zone, thus freeing up Russian troops for assaults, but their effectiveness in battle is untested and could be hampered by coordination issues with the Russians. On Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the North Korean troops were expected to enter combat operations early this week.
Two Ukrainian soldiers fighting in the Kursk area said they had been warned by their commanders that an assault could be imminent. “They have warned us about an attack in the near future,” Lt. Col. Artem Kholodkevych, the deputy commander of Ukraine’s 61st Mechanized Brigade said Saturday by text message. “Probably in the next few days.”
The Ukrainian army has also issued a Ukrainian-Korean phrase book for its troops to address North Korean soldiers and urge them to surrender, according to two Ukrainian officers who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.
Russian forces have been battling to reclaim hundreds of square miles of land seized by Ukrainian troops in the Kursk region during a surprise cross-border offensive in August. In recent weeks, Russia has regained several villages, and military experts say the deployment of North Korean soldiers could bolster Russian counterattacks.
Russia’s total recapture of the Ukrainian-occupied area would undermine one of the main goals of Kyiv’s cross-border offensive: seizing land it could use as leverage to push Moscow toward negotiations to end the war.
But how the North Koreans will fare on the battlefield remains to be seen, the experts say. North Korean troops have not fought in a war since the 1950s and, if sent to the front line, would face battle-hardened Ukrainian soldiers. Sabrina Singh, the deputy press secretary for the U.S. Defense Department, said Monday that she did not have details on the type of troops North Korea was sending or what kind of weapons they had.
Viktor Kevliuk, a retired Ukrainian colonel now working for the Kyiv-based Center for Defense Strategies, said coordinating them with Russian troops would also prove complex because they don’t speak the same language, have been trained differently and are not familiar with the terrain where they will fight.
“It could be a huge headache for the Russian army, which is not used to having large foreign units under its command,” said Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to Washington and chair of the Munich Security Conference.
The Ukrainian military intelligence services said Russia planned to assign one interpreter for every 30 North Korean soldiers to better coordinate with Russian troops on the battlefield. That claim could not be independently verified. Ukraine’s surprise offensive in Russia’s western Kursk region in August enabled it to quickly seize around 400 square miles of territory.
Since then, the Russian army has recaptured nearly half of that area, but its response has been hampered by a slow deployment of troops there. Military experts say this is largely attributable to the Kremlin’s decision to prioritize its offensive in eastern Ukraine over its response to the Ukrainian assault on its own territory.
“It could be a huge headache for the Russian army, which is not used to having large foreign units under its command,” said Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to Washington and chair of the Munich Security Conference.
The Ukrainian military intelligence services said Russia planned to assign one interpreter for every 30 North Korean soldiers to better coordinate with Russian troops on the battlefield. That claim could not be independently verified. Ukraine’s surprise offensive in Russia’s western Kursk region in August enabled it to quickly seize around 400 square miles of territory.
Since then, the Russian army has recaptured nearly half of that area, but its response has been hampered by a slow deployment of troops there. Military experts say this is largely attributable to the Kremlin’s decision to prioritize its offensive in eastern Ukraine over its response to the Ukrainian assault on its own territory.
Still, the presence of Ukrainian troops in the Kursk region has been a thorn in the side of Russian President Vladimir Putin, shattering his promise that Russia was safe from attack and exposing his inability to protect civilians living in the borderlands.
In recent days, Putin has hailed his troops’ success in retaking villages captured by the Ukrainians. “He’s determined to evict them from Russia and it has taken too long for his liking,” Foreman said.
Kevliuk said he expected the North Korean troops to be used in assaults against Ukrainian positions, following Russia’s long-held strategy of overwhelming the other side with waves of ground attacks.