With defiant summit, Putin and North Korea's Kim send rivals a warning
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[September 14, 2023]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - Whatever practical cooperation emerges from this
week's summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un, their deepening relationship is aimed at sending
their rivals a warning, analysts said.
Calling each other "comrade", the men toasted their friendship on
Wednesday after Putin showed Kim around Russia's most modern space
launch facility and they held talks alongside their defense ministers.
The two countries have an interest in demonstrating that, despite their
geopolitical isolation, they have partners they can call on. And both
seek to weaken U.S.-led sanctions and pressure campaigns, against Russia
over the war in Ukraine and against North Korea for its nuclear weapons
and missile programs, analysts said.
"Putin and Kim would both gain from a transactional bargain but they
would also gain geopolitically by giving off the impression that their
nuclear-armed countries are cooperating militarily and sending a warning
about potential consequences to America’s allies and like-minded
partners that support Ukraine," said Duyeon Kim, of the Center for a New
American Security.
"Kim would also be signaling to Washington, Seoul and Tokyo that Russia
has his back in Northeast Asia."
Both Russia and North Korea have denied U.S. claims that they plan to
provide each other with weapons, but the leaders promised to deepen
defense cooperation, and Putin said Russia would help the North build
satellites.
If they simply wanted a secret arms deal, the two leaders did not have
to meet in person, said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University
in Seoul.
"Putin and Kim’s diplomatic display is meant to claim success in
challenging the U.S.-led international order, avoiding over-reliance on
China, and increasing pressure on rivals in Ukraine and South Korea," he
said.
Discussions of any open violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions
on North Korea would signal that major international agencies will be
paralyzed, said Andrei Lankov, a Korea expert at Seoul's Kookmin
University.
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Russia's President Vladimir Putin and North Korea's leader Kim Jong
Un attend a meeting at the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the far eastern
Amur region, Russia, September 13, 2023 in this image released by
North Korea's Korean Central News Agency. KCNA via REUTERS
The summit is an indicator that North Korea-related Security Council
resolutions are dead, as are all attempts to stop North Korea or
penalize it for having a nuclear program, he said.
"It creates an important precedent that is likely to be used not
only by Russia but pretty much every major international player that
if you don't like a UNSC resolution you just ignore it," Lankov
said.
UKRAINE FACTOR
Lankov also said that Russia may be unlikely to provide North Korea
with advanced technology that it could eventually lose control of.
But its "excessive" signaling at defense cooperation allows it to
send a strong message to South Korea not to directly provide
military aid to Ukraine, he said.
Despite pressure from Kyiv and Washington, South Korea has only
given Ukraine non-lethal aid, sold massive numbers of weapons to
neighboring Poland, and provided the United States with artillery
shells to fill dwindling reserves, while insisting it has no plans
to provide lethal aid.
If Russia, North Korea and China feel that they are threatened, it
makes sense they would seek to support each other through
partnerships or even alliances to counter the United States. But
each country has a limited history of making such relationships
work, said Mason Richey, a professor at Hankuk University of Foreign
Studies in Seoul.
"It's just difficult for me to imagine that Xi Jinping and Kim Jong
Un and Vladimir Putin can trust each other enough for a real long
term concerted alliance formation," he said. "It might be in their
interest... [but] it's just difficult for dictators to cooperate
with each other."
(Reporting by Josh Smith; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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