Friday, November 1, 2024 - Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy blasted what he called his allies' "zero" response to Russia's deployment of North Korean troops for the war in Ukraine, saying a weak reaction would encourage Russia's Vladimir Putin to beef up the number of North Korean troops.
In an interview with South Korea's KBS television channel,
Zelenskiy said he believed Moscow was already trying to agree for North Korea
to send engineering troops and a "large number of civilians" to work
at Russian military plants.
"Putin is checking the reaction of the West ... And I
believe that after all these reactions, Putin will decide and increase the
contingent ... The reaction that is there today is nothing, it is zero,"
Zelenskiy said.
Zelenskiy began publicly warning of North Korean involvement
in the war on October 13 and even though Western allies have since described
the move as a major escalation, they have not announced retaliatory measures or
said they are preparing to implement any.
South Korea has offered intelligence assistance and wider
cooperation on the matter, and it is considering sending a team of military
monitors to Ukraine, according to South Korean officials.
In prepared remarks to the U.N. Security Council on
Wednesday, Ukraine's delegation named three North Korean generals it says are
accompanying thousands of Korean People's Army troops deployed to Russia in aid
of Moscow's war in Ukraine. The direct tone of Zelenskiy's rhetoric pointed to
mounting Ukrainian frustration over the extent of Western support for Kyiv at a
critical time in the war with Russia, with the clock counting down to Tuesday's
U.S. presidential election.
Russian troops have been slowly advancing for months in
eastern Ukraine and Kyiv's outgunned and outnumbered forces have struggled to
find a way to hold them back.
Russia has not denied the involvement of North Korean troops
in the war. North Korea initially denied involvement, but has since defended
the idea of deploying troops as being in line with international law.
Deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Robert Wood
told the Security Council on Thursday that Washington had received information
indicating that "right now" there are 8,000 North Korean troops in
Russia's southern Kursk region, which borders on northeastern Ukraine.
In his comments, Zelenskiy said he was surprised by the
"silence" out of China, the world's second economy, over the troop
deployment.
"The Russian Federation discussed this issue with the
West and confirmed that yes, there are military personnel from North Korea who
will fight against Ukraine," he said.
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