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Armed and Dangerous
Newsweek Europe
|February 21, 2025
A Ukrainian colonel reveals how North Korean soldiers compared with their Russian allies

AFTER MONTHS OF RAPT ATTENtion focusing on the thousands of North Koreans battling alongside Moscow's troops close to Russia's border with Ukraine, Pyongyang's fighters appear to have vanished.
It has been more than a month since Ukraine detected North Korean soldiers being involved in Russia's attempts to push Kyiv's forces from Kursk, said Colonel Oleksandr Kindratenko, a spokesperson for the Ukrainian Special Operations Forces.
Russia has been trying to end Ukrainian control of a chunk of territory in its Kursk region after Kyiv launched a surprise incursion in late summer.
Moscow has managed to peel back some of Ukraine's grip, but Kyiv has retained its hold over a significant amount of territory, including the town of Sudzha.
North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un a staunch ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin-sent an estimated 12,000 North Korean soldiers to Russia that were quickly directed toward Kursk, intelligence reports suggested in the fall. Estimates from Ukraine have put roughly half this number as having been killed or injured, although this is not possible to independently verify.
Reports have been split on the effectiveness of the troops, which, while hailing from a heavily militarized society, had no real combat experience.
Some slapped the troops with the label of "cannon fodder," while other Ukrainian sources have described the fighters as disciplined, in good shape and adept with weapons. Ukraine also said these highly trained forces were thrown into combat in waves of infantry assaults likely to yield high numbers of casualties.
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