South Korea’s spy agency yesterday said that it had confirmed that a North Korean soldier sent to back Russia’s war against Ukraine had been captured by Ukrainian forces.
Pyongyang has deployed thousands of troops to reinforce Russia’s military, including in the Kursk border region where Ukraine mounted a shock border incursion in August.
“Through real-time information sharing with an allied country’s intelligence agency, it has been confirmed that one injured North Korean soldier has been captured,” the South Korean National Intelligence Service said in a statement.
Photo: AFP / Handout / Ukrainian Presidential Press Service
The soldier was captured by the Ukrainian army, a South Korean intelligence source said, adding that the location where he was seized was not known.
The confirmation came days after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that nearly 3,000 North Korean troops had been “killed or wounded” so far after they joined Russian troops in combat.
South Korea’s intelligence service had previously put the number of killed or wounded North Koreans at 1,000, saying the high casualty rate could be down to an unfamiliar battlefield environment and their lack of capability to counter drone attacks.
Pyongyang’s soldiers were also being “utilized as expendable frontline assault units,” South Korean lawmaker Lee Seong-kweun said, speaking last week after a briefing by the spy agency.
North Korea and Russia have strengthened their military ties since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. A landmark defense pact between Pyongyang and Moscow signed in June came into force this month, with Russian President Vladimir Putin hailing it as a “breakthrough document.”
North Korean state media yesterday said that Putin sent a New Year’s message to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, saying “the bilateral ties between our two countries have been elevated after our talks in June in Pyongyang.”
Ukraine’s allies have called Pyongyang’s growing involvement in Russia’s war in Ukraine a “dangerous expansion” of the conflict.
South Korea’s military believes that North Korea is seeking to modernize its conventional warfare capabilities through combat experience gained in the Russia-Ukraine war.
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has said that Moscow is providing support to Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear programs in exchange for troops.
The South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff on Monday said that Pyongyang is reportedly “preparing for the rotation or additional deployment of soldiers” and supplying “240mm rocket launchers and 170mm self-propelled artillery” to the Russian army.
Pyongyang’s involvement in Russia’s war against Ukraine had prompted warnings from Seoul.
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, currently suspended, last month said that Seoul was “not ruling out the possibility of providing weapons” to Ukraine, which would mark a major shift to a long-standing policy barring the sale of weapons to nations in active conflict.
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