North Korea and Russia agree to expand their economic cooperation
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[November 21, 2024] By
KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korea and Russia reached a new agreement
for expanding economic cooperation following high-level talks in
Pyongyang this week, the North’s state media said Thursday, as they
continue to align in the face of their confrontations with Washington.
North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency didn’t elaborate on
the details of the agreement signed Wednesday between its senior trade
officials and a Russian delegation led by Alexandr Kozlov, the country’s
minister of natural resources and ecology. The Russian news agency Tass
on Tuesday said officials following an earlier round of talks agreed to
increase the number of charter flights between the countries to promote
tourism.
Kozlov, who arrived in North Korea on Sunday, met with North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un and his top economic official, Premier Kim Tok Hun,
before returning home on Wednesday, KCNA said. During Kozlov’s visit,
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s gifted Pyongyang’s Central Zoo with
more than 70 animals, including lions, bears and several species of
birds, according to Tass, in another display of the countries’ growing
ties.
Kim Jong Un in recent months has prioritized relations with Moscow as he
attempts to break out of international isolation and strengthen his
footing, actively supporting Putin’s war on Ukraine while portraying the
North as a player in a united front against Washington.
Kim has yet to directly acknowledge that he has been providing military
equipment and troops to Russia to support its fighting against Ukraine.
South Korea’s National Intelligence Service told lawmakers in a
closed-door briefing on Wednesday that an estimated 11,000 North Korean
soldiers in late October were moved to Russia’s Kursk region, where
Ukrainian troops seized parts of its territory this year, following
their training in Russia’s northeast.
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The spy agency believes the North
Korean soldiers were assigned to Russia’s marine and airborne forces
units and some of them have already begun fighting alongside the
Russians on the frontlines, said Lee Seong Kweun, a lawmaker who
attended the meeting. U.S., South Korean and Ukrainian officials
have claimed that the North has also been supplying Russia with
artillery systems, missiles and other equipment.
North Korea would be possibly getting anywhere between $320 million
to $1.3 billion annually from Russia for sending its troops to
Ukraine, considering the scale of the dispatch and the level of
payments Russia has been providing to foreign mercenaries, according
to a recent study by Lim Soo-ho, a South Korean analyst at an
NIS-run think tank.
While that would be meaningful income for North Korea’s crippled and
heavily sanctioned economy, it could be lower than the money the
North earns from illicit coal exports or supplying military
equipment to Russia, Lim said. This suggests that North Korea’s
troop dispatch is less about money than acquiring key Russian
technologies to further advance its nuclear weapons and missile
program, which is a major concern in Seoul, Lim said.
Amid the stalemate in larger nuclear negotiations with Washington,
Kim has been dialing up pressure on South Korea, abandoning his
country’s long-standing goal of inter-Korean reconciliation and
verbally threatening to attack the South with nukes if provoked. He
has used Russia’s war on Ukraine as a distraction to accelerate the
development of his nuclear-armed military, which now has various
nuclear-capable systems targeting South Korea and intercontinental
ballistic missiles that can potentially reach the U.S. mainland.
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