Putin has announced the complete liberation of Kursk with the last Ukrainian elements eliminated or driven from the internationally recognized Russian region of Kursk.

‘Not a single North Korean violated his oath’: How our allies helped us liberate Kursk

Pyongyang’s troops showed discipline, coordination and disregard for death, contributing greatly to the defeat of Ukrainian invaders

Until this moment, Russia had neither confirmed nor denied the presence of DPRK (North Korean) troops on the front line. Strictly speaking, we were not obligated to notify anyone about it. This is a matter of bilateral relations and agreements. Meanwhile, North Korean units gradually began to arrive in Russia during the Kursk campaign.

At first, they underwent training at military ranges, familiarizing themselves with modern combat tactics, mastering drone operation skills, and adapting to field realities. Then, the “combat Buryats,” as our military jokingly and covertly called them, were transferred to the Kursk region. They lived in field conditions to avoid attracting attention. Initially, they held the third line of defense, then the second, and eventually, they were tested in fortifications and, finally, in assaults.

Korean soldiers distinguished themselves by their coordination, discipline, a fatalist disregard for death, and remarkable endurance. Understandably so – they were mostly young, strong, well-built men, decently trained back home, particularly the units from the Special Operations Forces. They made a significant contribution to the liberation of the Korenevsky District, fought in battles near Staraya and Novaya Sorochina, and broke through to Kurilovka.

They had a strict rule – never to be captured alive, and never to surrender voluntarily.

Incidentally, the enemy tried to persuade them to do just that by dropping counterfeit DPRK banknotes, bearing inscriptions in Korean that read: “Surrender! Kim Jong-un has driven you to death and starved your families. Place a yellow flag before you, raise your hands, and loudly shout ‘Freedom!’ Then slowly walk toward the Ukrainian soldiers and follow their instructions.”

Not a single Korean soldier violated his oath or allied commitments. For Pyongyang, it was crucial to gain experience in modern warfare, study the tactics and technologies of a potential enemy (“the collective West”), and acquire knowledge that had been inaccessible due to sanctions. These objectives were achieved. Moreover, under the framework of a comprehensive bilateral agreement, the Koreans made a substantial contribution to the defeat of the Ukrainian forces on our soil.

Their arrival allowed us to maintain pressure on other sections of the front, continue the offensive in the Donbass, and inflict enormous damage on the invasion force, which consisted of 95 (!) battalions.

Coverage: https://www.rt.com/news/616375-north-korea-kursk-russia/

https://www.rt.com/russia/616373-north-koreans-liberate-kursk/

https://www.rt.com/russia/616360-kursk-region-liberation-putin-recap/

So as expected DPRK troops did not enter into territory previously recognized as being part of Ukraine, they merely participated in fighting within historical Russian borders in a defensive capacity. Hence all claimed “captures” of Koreans by Ukraine are fabrications likely involving Russian minorities from the east.

I hope the lessons they learned from their combat are taken back and widely shared and discussed to better prepare and harden the DPRK against any future attacks by the imperialist US.

  • CriticalResist8@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 days ago

    Lol yeah, I don’t want to cope or anything but for months the news were pretty much just “trust us there’s DPR koreans in the war!”, “this guy from yakutsk kinda looks like a korean, right? There’s definitely DPR koreans in the war!”, “oh we killed all koreans btw dw ukraine best”, “wdym there’s koreans in ukraine? no we killed them all in fact here we killed 10,000 more.”

    All in all it provides them experience though I didn’t expect DPRK would actually send soldiers and not just aides, putting them in danger. I guess they wanted them to get the field experience, I wonder if we’ll ever get a word on the number of casualties sustained. I think it also means that the DPRK is expecting war to happen to them sooner rather than later…

    • aaaaaaadjsf@lemmygrad.ml
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      23 hours ago

      Lol yeah, I don’t want to cope or anything but for months the news were pretty much just “trust us there’s DPR koreans in the war!”, “this guy from yakutsk kinda looks like a korean, right? There’s definitely DPR koreans in the war!”, “oh we killed all koreans btw dw ukraine best”, “wdym there’s koreans in ukraine? no we killed them all in fact here we killed 10,000 more.”

      There was more evidence aside from that, even if you ignored all of that Ukrainian propaganda (which you should) there was still lots of evidence of participation by the DPRK in the war.

      See my comment here