Russia
withdraws North Korean troops in Kursk after losses, Seoul says
South
Korea’s National Intelligence Service confirms reports that Kim Jong-un’s
battered forces have been off the frontline since mid-January
Justin
McCurry in Tokyo
Fri 7 Feb
2025 05.05 GMT
North Korean
troops sent to fight alongside Russia in its war against Ukraine have not been
seen in battle for several weeks, raising speculation that they have been
withdrawn after suffering heavy losses, according to South Korea’s spy agency.
The National
Intelligence Service in Seoul this week confirmed media reports that North
Korean troops had been pulled from the frontline around the middle of January.
North Korea
began sending an estimated 11,000 troops to the Russian Kursk region in late
2024, soon after the North’s ruler, Kim Jong-un, and the Russian president,
Vladimir Putin, agreed a mutual defence pact designed to strengthen their
alliance against what they called a US-led “western hegemony”.
Their
involvement has come at a heavy price. Intelligence officials in South Korea
said about 300 North Koreans had been killed and about 2,700 wounded. In
January the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, posted a clip showing two
captured North Korean soldiers, one of whom said his commanders had told him he
was being sent on a “training exercise”.
The North’s
soldiers, who had not seen combat before being deployed, were said to have been
unprepared for the harsh realities of warfare in unfamiliar terrain and
particularly vulnerable to Ukrainian drones.
Intelligence
officials in the South claimed notes had been found on dead North Korean
soldiers indicating that the regime expected them to kill themselves rather
than be taken prisoner.
The arrival
of North Korean troops triggered fears that the war could take a dangerous turn
for Ukraine, amid claims by military officials in South Korea that the regime
in Pyongyang was preparing to send even more troops.
In return
for sending personnel, weapons and ammunition, the North is hoping to gain
access to sophisticated Russian satellite technology and earn foreign currency
to fund its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
The South’s
intelligence service said the large number of casualties was a factor in the
apparent decision to withdraw North Korean soldiers from Kursk, where Ukrainian
forces launched a surprise offensive in August 2024.
Seth Jones
of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington estimated
this week that as many as half of the North Korean troops sent to Ukraine had
been killed or injured in Russia’s “war of attrition”.
“The
casualty rates were significant,” Jones said during a podcast appearance,
according to the Yonhap news agency. “By most accounts we were able to take a
look at somewhere between a third and probably on the real high end, maybe 50%
casualties among the North Korean forces.
“Again,
[it’s] hard to know exactly what reality is … with as many as 1,000 killed.
Those are pretty staggering casualties for a force of 11,000 [to] 12,000.”
North Korea
has not publicly acknowledged its role in the war, but in October Putin did not
deny that the North’s forces had arrived in Russia. North Korean vice-foreign
minister Kim Jong-gyu said any such deployment would be in line with
international law.

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