Ukrainian soldiers have "picked up a few Korean phrases: ‘Hands up, drop your weapon and come to us slowly. Also: ‘Throw off your body armor and helmet.’” Three months on, Kyiv controls a significant chunk of Russian territory. The frontline had stabilised in the Kursk region after a thwarted Russian counter-offensive and Ukraine’s defences are holding. Moscow has been unable to end this embarrassing situation (so) has turned to North Korean troops. The Kursk raid had been a success, the unwelcome arrival of four North Korean brigades and early clashes notwithstanding. “We’ve achieved more than we wanted or expected. Things are not easy in a war. But we feel positive.”
Soldiers holding chunk of enemy territory in Kursk have been learning Korean phrases and are unconcerned by threat from reinforcements.
Vitalii Ovcharenko, a Ukrainian soldier, has been learning a new language: Korean. “I’ve picked up a few phrases. They are: ‘Hands up, drop your weapon and come to us slowly,’” he said. “Also: ‘Throw off your body armour and helmet.’”
Ovcharenko has been mugging up with the help of a three-page printed guide. It lists words in Ukrainian, their Korean equivalent, and a helpful transliteration.
The guide now lives next to a shelf of detective novels and histories celebrating Stalin at his temporary home in Russia’s Kursk region. The books belong to the property’s former owner, who fled in August when Ukraine launched a counter-invasion. Three months on, Kyiv controls a significant chunk of Russian territory around the border town of Sudzha.
So far, Moscow has been unable to end this embarrassing situation. It has launched air attacks on Ukrainian positions using kamikaze drones and guided bombs – up to 100 a day – and carries out assaults using small infantry groups. Amid heavy losses, Vladimir Putin has turned to a new and extraordinary source of manpower: North Korean troops, sent by the regime’s supreme leader, Kim Jong-un.
According to US intelligence, 10,000 North Korean soldiers have arrived in Russia, a figure that Ukraine’s military intelligence chief says includes 500 officers and three generals. These reinforcements – seen in videos gathering at ranges in Russia’s far eastern Khabarovsk region – are already fighting near Sudzha, and Kyiv says a “small engagement” took place this week. North Korea has pledged to support Moscow until it achieves a “great victory” in Ukraine. What exactly their impact will be on the battlefield is unclear. Ukrainian soldiers seem largely unconcerned. “We don’t know how Moscow will train them or communicate with them. They might be fanatical professionals with totalitarian souls. Or guys lacking experience from another continent. Either way, we’re ready for the threat,” Ovcharenko said. He predicted: “They will just die uselessly.”
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has hinted that Ukraine’s Kursk salient could play a role in negotiations after Donald Trump’s return to the White House. Zelenskyy has accused the US, UK and Germany of passively “watching” as North Korea “fights in Europe”, and he has called on allies to lift restrictions on the use of long-range weapons, saying they could wipe out North Korean troops mustering in western Russia. Kyiv was no longer fighting one country but two, he posted on X.
North Korea has already given Russia 3.5m artillery shells and short-range missiles, used to hit Kharkiv. As well as fighting, North Koreans could be sent to work in munitions factories and to guard border areas, freeing up Russian troops. Moscow is reportedly helping its ally with rice, space technology, and providing $2,000 a month for soldiers.
“Five years ago it would have seemed fantastical. This is our reality,” Lt Col Artem Kholodkevych, the chief of staff of Ukraine’s 61st mechanised brigade, told the Guardian. “European countries need to consider how to respond.” He suggested Pyongyang’s involvement showed Putin desired a long and bloody conflict.
Kholodkevych said the frontline had stabilised in the past two weeks in the Kursk region after a Russian counter-offensive and Ukraine’s defences were holding. Last week his units thwarted a raid on a frontline village, knocking out one enemy armoured vehicle with a drone and chasing away a second. Ten Russian soldiers dismounted. “We killed them,” he said.
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