Explainer
Ukraine
war briefing: North Korea says it will back Russia until it achieves victory
Foreign
ministers’ meeting in Moscow forges closer ties amid imminent deployment of
thousands of North Korean troops against Ukraine. What we know on day 983
Guardian
staff and agencies
Fri 1 Nov
2024 22.46 EDT
The North
Korean foreign minister, Choe Son Hui, said her country will back Russia until
it achieves victory in Ukraine during talks in Moscow on Friday with the
Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov. She said Pyongyang had no doubt that
under Putin’s “wise leadership” Russia will “achieve a great victory in their
sacred struggle to protect the sovereign rights and security interests”.
Sergei
Lavrov said “very close contacts” have been established between Russian and
North Korean militaries, and was “deeply grateful to our Korean friends for
their principled position regarding the events that have now unfolded in
Ukraine”. Thousands of North Korean troops have recently been sent to Russia,
with the US warning that Moscow is preparing to deploy those troops into combat
“in the coming days”.
The
Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, called on Ukraine’s allies to stop
“watching” and take action to tackle the presence of North Korean troops in
Russia before they start confronting his country in combat. In a video posted
on Telegram, he said North Korea had made progress in its military capability,
missile deployment and weapons production and “now unfortunately they will
learn modern warfare”. “The first thousands of soldiers from North Korea are
near the Ukrainian border. Ukrainians will be forced to defend themselves
against them,” he said. “And the world will watch again.”
Zelenskyy
said Ukraine needed permission from its allies to fire long-range missiles into
Russia in the face of the North Korean troop deployment. “We see every site
where Russia is amassing these North Korean soldiers on its territory – all
their camps. We could strike preventively, if we had the ability to strike long
enough,” Zelenskyy said in his evening address on Friday.
China has
insisted that growing ties between Pyongyang and Moscow are not its concern.
“North Korea and Russia are two independent sovereign states. How they develop
bilateral relations is their own matter,” Beijing’s foreign ministry spokesman
Lin Jian said. Zelenskyy had said he was surprised by the “silence” of China.
In response, Lin said “China’s position of hoping various parties will promote
an easing of the situation and work for a political solution to the Ukraine
crisis has not changed”.
The US
announced on Friday that it will provide an additional $425m in military aid to
Ukraine. The assistance “will provide Ukraine additional capabilities to meet
its most urgent needs, including: air defence interceptors; munitions for
rocket systems and artillery; armoured vehicles; and anti-tank weapons”, the
defence department said in a statement. The package, which will be drawn from
US stocks, also includes air-to-ground munitions, medical equipment, demolition
munitions and spare parts.
A Russian
missile attack on Kharkiv hit a location used by police on Friday, killing a
senior officer and injuring 40 other people, the prosecutor general’s office
said. Nine civilians and a rescue worker were among the injured in the late
afternoon attack, the office said on Telegram. Police said S-400 missiles had
been deployed by Russian forces.
Ukrainian
air defences destroyed 31 out of 48 drones launched by Russia over various
regions of Ukraine during an overnight strike, Kyiv’s air force said on Friday.
Another 14 drones were “locationally lost” and one out of three cruise missiles
launched was also destroyed, it said.
Russian
investigators said on Friday that a Ukrainian drone attack had killed two
people at a convent in the Kursk region of western Russia. The state
investigative committee said the attack took place in late October. A Russian
military blogger said the victims were two young men who were trying to
evacuate people.
Ukraine has
increased production of mortar shells from zero before Russia’s invasion to
millions per year now, but a global explosives shortage is constraining the
push to ramp up the weapons industry, Kyiv’s top arms official said. “The main
problem we have now are powders and explosives. However much explosive comes
into Ukraine, that’s how many shells we will have,” Herman Smetanin said.
Ukraine, he said, was now producing its own artillery shells, including the
coveted 155mm calibre used by heavy artillery pieces donated to Ukraine by
allied Nato countries. He declined to provide figures.
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