Why North Korea is sending troops to Russia – and how it risks an ‘escalation spiral’

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North Korea is sending troops to military training areas in Russia, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin confirmed this week, calling the development a “very, very serious” escalation.

Some 3,000 North Korean troops arrived in Russia’s far east earlier this month courtesy of Russian naval transport ships, according to U.S. officials. South Korean intelligence agencies estimate that some 12,000 North Korean troops in total are in training. 

Why We Wrote This

North Korea’s decision to send troops to support Russia’s war in Ukraine further escalates that conflict – and points to growing collaboration among antidemocratic nations.

“What exactly they’re doing is left to be seen,” Secretary Austin said Wednesday. “We’re trying to gain better fidelity on it.” 

During a June summit in Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a mutual defense pact, promising military support if either country is attacked. It was ratified by Russia’s lower parliament Thursday. 

Ukraine’s August incursion into Russia’s Kursk region could, by Moscow’s reckoning, constitute such an attack. 

What’s clear is that “Russia is paying a price” for North Korean aid, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said last week. “In return, it means that they have to deliver innovation.” 

More broadly, the deepening military ties between North Korea and Russia raise the larger question of what a partnership of antidemocratic nations can accomplish – particularly as a destabilizing force.   

North Korea is sending troops to military training areas in Russia, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin confirmed this week, calling the development a “very, very serious” escalation in the war.

It is a charge that South Korea and Ukraine have made repeatedly in past days, which the United States had yet to corroborate.

Officials in Kyiv last week released a video showing North Korean troops collecting military fatigues at Russian bases. These troops could begin showing up in Russia’s Kursk region – which Ukraine invaded this summer – as early as this week, they say.

Why We Wrote This

North Korea’s decision to send troops to support Russia’s war in Ukraine further escalates that conflict – and points to growing collaboration among antidemocratic nations.

Some 3,000 North Korean troops arrived in Russia’s far east earlier this month courtesy of Russian naval transport ships, according to U.S. officials. South Korean intelligence agencies estimate that some 12,000 North Korean troops in total are in training.

“What exactly they’re doing is left to be seen,” Secretary Austin said Wednesday. “We’re trying to gain better fidelity on it.”

Why would North Korea do this?

During a June summit in Pyongyang, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin – in his first visit to the country in nearly a quarter century – signed a mutual defense pact, promising military support if either country is attacked. It was ratified by Russia’s lower parliament Thursday.

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