The U.S. has said North Korean troops may have been deployed to a key front in Russia’s war against Ukraine, as speculation grows over how the international community may respond to a third party entering combat.
The U.S. confirmed on October 23 that Pyongyang was joining Russia’s war against Ukraine, a claim made days earlier by Ukraine and South Korea. There remains uncertainty, however, over what role troops from the secretive state may play.
John Kirby, a spokesperson for the U.S. National Security Council, said Friday, “It is certainly possible, and I’d just go so far as to say perhaps even likely, that at least some of these North Korean troops could be deployed to the Kursk area.”
On August 6, Ukraine staged an incursion against Russia in Kursk.
On the day Kirby made his remarks, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned that North Korean troops could be deployed to unspecified combat zones as early as Sunday.
“This is an obvious escalatory step by Russia,” Zelensky wrote on Telegram. He added, “That is why a principled and strong response from world leaders is needed.”
Tetiana Hranchak, a visiting assistant teaching professor in the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, said: “North Korean troops in Ukraine would be another confirmation that the Russian war in Ukraine is not a local or regional conflict.”
Read more at Newsweek.com