By Eric Schmitt, David E. Sanger and Anatoly Kurmanaev
North Korea has sent troops to Russia to join the fight against Ukraine, a major shift in Moscow’s effort to win the war, U.S. officials confirmed on Wednesday. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin called the North’s presence a “very, very serious” escalation that would have ramifications in both Europe and Asia.
“What exactly are they doing?” Austin told reporters at a military base in Italy after a trip to Ukraine. “Left to be seen.” He gave no details about the number of troops already there or the number expected to arrive.
Austin cast President Vladimir Putin’s need for North Korean mercenaries as a sign of desperation.
“This is an indication that he may be in even more trouble than most people realize,” he said. “He went tin-cupping early on to get additional weapons and materials from the DPRK,” he said, using the abbreviation for Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, “and then from Iran, and now he’s making a move to get more people.”
But he said intelligence analysts were still trying to discern whether the troops were moving toward Ukraine.
Ukrainian officials insist they are headed there, and Ukraine’s defense minister was quoted on Wednesday saying he expected to see North Korean troops in Kursk, the Russian territory that Ukraine has occupied, in the coming days.
Austin’s statement came as U.S. intelligence officials said they were preparing to release a trove of intelligence, including satellite photographs, that show troop ships moving from North Korea to training areas in Vladivostok on Russia’s east coast and other Russian territory farther to the north.
For two weeks, there have been reports of the movements, fueled by the Ukrainian and South Korean governments, that more than 12,000 North Koreans were training to fight alongside Russian soldiers.
John Kirby, a national security spokesperson at the White House, said on Wednesday that between early and mid-October, the United States tracked about 3,000 North Korean troops who were transported by ship from the North Korean port city of Wonsan to Vladivostok in Russia. Those troops have since been taken to three separate training sites in the Russian Far East, he said.
Kirby said he had no specific assessment of what kind of training the North Korean troops were receiving nor was it known for certain that they would be deployed to the war in Ukraine or how useful they would be given the language and cultural differences. “But,” he added, “this is certainly a highly concerning possibility.”
He said the United States had not yet seen any specific quid pro quo for North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un. “What does Kim Jong Un think he’s getting out of it?” Kirby asked, suggesting it could be some form of technology transfer or other help with North Korea’s military capability. “That’s what’s so concerning to us.”
Anton A. Kobyakov, an adviser to Putin, did not explicitly confirm or deny the reports during a summit on Wednesday in Kazan, Russia. “The Pentagon is not an accountable organization,” he said in response to a reporter’s question.
Russia has denied earlier reports on North Korea’s troop presence. But Moscow is straining to maintain its costly offensives in Ukraine without destabilizing Russian society. U.S. officials estimate that Russia is recruiting 25,000 to 30,000 new soldiers a month, just enough to replace the dead and the wounded. Some military analysts believe the Kremlin will have a hard time maintaining that pace without resorting to another round of unpopular mobilization.
To avoid the political cost of a draft, the Russian government has resorted to increasingly unorthodox recruitment tactics. Many Russian regions have sharply increased sign-up bonuses paid to volunteer soldiers and expanded recruitment from prisons and from poor nations such as Cuba and Nepal.
Nonetheless, both Russia and North Korea experts called the arrival of North Korean troops a watershed moment. Desperate not to stir up domestic resentments about the huge casualties Russia has taken — more than 600,000 killed or wounded, U.S. officials recently estimated — Putin is now reaching for mercenary forces, supplied by the same country that has sold him more than 1 million artillery rounds, many of them defective.
For Kim, the war in Ukraine has been a pathway out of geopolitical isolation. For the first time in decades, the North has assets that a major power is willing to pay for.
His longer-term plan, experts say, may be to improve the reach of his intercontinental ballistic missiles. He is eager, U.S. intelligence agencies believe, to make it clear that his arsenal of nuclear-tipped weapons is capable of hitting U.S. cities.
“This is the real ‘no-limits’ partnership,” said Victor Cha, a North Korea expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who was a member of President George W. Bush’s National Security Council. “We are in a whole different era if North Korean soldiers are dying for Putin. It will raise the ask when Kim makes demands, and Putin will give him what he wants.”
In comments to reporters on Monday, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine sought to portray North Korea’s presence as an attempt by Putin to avoid an unpopular mobilization.
“I wouldn’t say they have run out of personnel,” the Ukrainian leader said of Russia. “However, the reluctance to mobilize their own people is certainly increasing, and there are formats for mobilizing North Korean troops. This is definitely happening.”
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