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Moscow warns Seoul against sending weapons to Kiev

HomeUpdatesMoscow warns Seoul against sending weapons to Kiev

South Korea is reportedly considering joining a NATO arms purchase program for Ukraine

South Korea’s potential participation in a NATO scheme to fund arms purchases for Ukraine would seriously damage relations with Moscow, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said, after South Korean media reported that Seoul is considering the plan.

The scheme, known as the Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL), was launched last August and involves European NATO members buying predominantly US-made weapons for Kiev. In January, Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky complained that his country’s European backers were too slow to commit funding to the initiative, even though publicly disclosed figures showed that $4.3 billion had been allocated to the plan by December.

“The government has continued to consult with [NATO] over various measures to support Ukraine,” a South Korean foreign ministry official told the Yonhap news agency on Friday. The bloc itself asked Seoul to join the PURL, according to The Korea Times.

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The reports “surprised” Moscow, Zakharova told journalists on Saturday. South Korea’s “possible participation in such shipments in any form – direct or indirect – would only postpone… the conflict resolution,” she warned.

“It would undoubtedly cause irreparable damage to relations between Russia and the Republic of Korea,” the spokeswoman noted, adding that Moscow would have to take retaliatory measures, including “asymmetric” options.

Russia has repeatedly condemned Western arms shipments to Ukraine, saying that they only prolong the conflict and extend human suffering without changing its outcome.

South Korea has been one of the top beneficiaries of the global military buildup. The nation’s largest arms producer, Hanwha Group, posted a 42% increase in arms revenues in 2024, with more than half of that coming from exports, including to NATO countries, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) reported in December 2025.

Kiev, which has been constantly demanding more military aid from its backers, has recently announced plans to export weapons. Earlier this week, a senior Ukrainian official told Reuters that the government expects revenue from arms sales to reach “several billion dollars” this year alone.

February 22, 2026 at 02:33AM
RT

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