US official warns of growing North Korean military support for Russia's
war
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[October 16, 2024]
By KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell
said Wednesday that Washington and its allies are “alarmed” by North
Korea’s nuclear and missile threats as well as its increasing military
support for Russia's war in Ukraine, but said he couldn’t confirm
Ukrainian claims that Pyongyang was also sending soldiers to fight for
Moscow.
Campbell spoke with reporters following discussions with South Korean
and Japanese counterparts on reinvigorating an international pressure
campaign against North Korea, which faltered in recent years amid a
deepening divide at the U.N. Security Council.
Earlier on Wednesday, Washington, Seoul and Tokyo announced plans with
eight Western governments to launch a new multinational team to monitor
the enforcement of sanctions against North Korea.
Russia in March vetoed a U.N. resolution in a move that effectively
abolished monitoring by U.N. experts of Security Council sanctions
against North Korea, which prompted Western accusations that Moscow was
acting to shield its arms purchases from Pyongyang to fuel its war in
Ukraine.
Campbell said there are signs that North Korea was increasing its
support of materials, including artillery and missiles, to support
Russia’s war on Ukraine, which he said was “creating further instability
in Europe.” He said the U.S. was still evaluating reports that North
Korea was also sending personnel.
“We are concerned by them and ... we agreed that we will continue to
monitor the situation closely,” Campbell said about the claims.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has claimed that North Korea is
sending military personnel to help Russia’s war effort without providing
details. Ukrainian media reported earlier this month that six North
Koreans were among those killed after a Ukrainian missile strike on Oct.
3.
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United States Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell attends a
trilateral meeting with South Korea's First Vice Foreign Minister
Kim Hong-kyun, unseen, and Japan's Vice Foreign Minister Masataka
Okano, unseen, at the Foreign Ministry in Seoul Wednesday, Oct. 16,
2024. (Jung Yeon-je/Pool Photo via AP)
North Korea has also been making increasingly provocative threats
against rival South Korea, including accusing the South of
infiltrating drones to drop anti-North Korean propaganda leaflets
over Pyongyang and threatening to attack the South if it happens
again. North Korea also on Tuesday blew up the northern sections of
unused road and rail routes that once linked it with South Korea, in
a choreographed demolition aimed at demonstrating its growing anger
with South Korea’s conservative government.
Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have spiked since 2022 as North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un used Russia’s war on Ukraine as a window
to dial up his weapons testing activities and threats. Washington,
Seoul and Tokyo have strengthened their combined military exercises
in response and took steps to sharpen their nuclear deterrence
strategies built around strategic U.S. assets.
Following his talks with Campbell and Japanese Vice Foreign Minister
Masataka Okano, South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Hong Kyun
said that the countries condemn the North’s “intentional moves to
create tensions.”
“We have agreed to maintain a solid South Korea-U.S. combined
posture to respond firmly to North Korean provocations and
strengthen security cooperation through close coordination between
South Korea, the U.S., and Japan,” Kim said.
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