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Monday, April 28, 2025

Russia would help defend North Korea – Kremlin

Moscow is obliged to provide military assistance to Pyongyang in line with a bilateral treaty, according to Dmitry Peskov

Russia would surely help North Korea defend itself if such a need arises, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said.

On Saturday, Russian General Staff Chief Valery Gerasimov told President Vladimir Putin that North Korean troops had shown “high professionalism, courage, and heroism” assisting in the full liberation of Kursk Region, which had been invaded by Ukrainian forces last August.

When asked by journalists on Monday if Moscow would also be ready to provide military support to Pyongyang, Peskov replied by saying: “definitely.”

“Our agreement is in effect. Under this agreement, the parties are obligated to provide immediate assistance to each other if necessary,” he noted.

The spokesman stressed that “the participation of [North] Korean soldiers in the operation to liberate Kursk Region has shown how effectively this agreement is functioning.”

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FILE PHOTO: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un after Vladimir Putin’s state visit, Pyongyang, June 2024.
Putin thanks North Korean soldiers

Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un signed a compressive partnership treaty between Moscow and Pyongyang in June 2024. One of the articles of the agreement obliges one country to provide immediate military assistance by all available means to the other if its territory is attacked from abroad.

Earlier on Monday, Putin expressed gratitude to Pyongyang’s troops for the role they played in repelling the Ukrainian incursion into Kursk Region.

“We appreciate the heroism, high level of specialized training and bravery of North Korean warriors, who defended our Homeland as their own, standing shoulder to shoulder with Russian fighters,”
he said.

According to the Russian president, the North Korean soldiers who lost their lives in the mission will be honored “on par with their Russian brothers in arms.”

Earlier in the day, Pyongyang described Kiev’s troops which had entered Kursk Region as “neo-Nazi” forces and said it took part in the Russian operation in order to help thwart an “adventurous political and military attempt of the Western forces and the Ukrainian authorities” to turn the tide in the broader conflict.


READ MORE: Kim Jong-un promises monument to heroes fallen in Kursk Region

In a separate statement, Kim stressed that those who “fought for justice” in Kursk Region were “all heroes and representatives of the nation’s honor,” promising that a monument to them would soon be erected in Pyongyang.

April 28, 2025 at 06:20PM
RT

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