
N Korea, Russia bound in âbloodâ of war, Kim tells Putin in New Year note
N Korea, Russia bound in âbloodâ of war, Kim tells Putin in New Year note North Korean, Russian leaders send New Yearâs greetings hailing their âpreciousâ shared experience of âblood, life and deathâ in Ukraine war. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said that his countryâs ties with Russia had been strengthened through âsharing blood, life and death in the same trenchâ in the Ukraine war, as he sent a New Yearâs greeting to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Kimâs message followed President Putinâs own New Yearâs greeting to the North Korean leader on December 18, which praised the âheroicâ role played by Pyongyangâs troops in Russiaâs western Kursk region and âclearly proved the invincible friendshipâ between the two countries, state media reported. Recommended Stories list of 4 items list 1 of 4 New York to require social media platforms to display mental health labels list 2 of 4 Keir Starmer says Egyptian-British activist Alaa Abd El-Fattah back in UK list 3 of 4 Has the fight against al-Shabab failed? list 4 of 4 Israeli forces kill Palestinian in Gaza, carry out raids across West Bank In his message to Putin, published by the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Saturday, Kim said 2025 was a âreally meaningful yearâ for bilateral ties, and called relations between Moscow and Pyongyang a âprecious common asset to be carried forward forever not only in the present era but also by posterity generation after generationâ. âNow no one can break the relations between the peoples of the two countries and their unity,â Kim said, according to South Koreaâs Yonhap news agency. South Korean and Western intelligence agencies say North Korea deployed thousands of troops to support Moscow in its war against Ukraine. North Korea officially confirmed in April that it had deployed troops to support Russiaâs military campaign against Ukraine and that its soldiers had been killed in combat. Earlier this month, Kim acknowledged that North Korean troops were sent to clear landmines in Russiaâs Kursk region in August 2025, following a Ukrainian incursion, and that at least nine soldiers from an engineering regiment were killed during the 120-day deployment. Kimâs New Year message to Putin was sent a day after he instructed his officials to increase missile production and build more factories to produce munitions. North Korea has also stepped up missile testing in recent years, which analysts say is aimed at improving the accuracy of its arsenal of short-, medium- and long-range rockets in order to deter what Kim sees as threats from the United States and South Korea. Intensified testing of weapons could also be linked to North Koreaâs exports of military equipment to Russia, the analysts say. Alongside troop deployments, Pyongyang is believed to have supplied Moscow with artillery shells, missiles and long-range rocket systems, while Russia has provided financial assistance, military technology, and food and energy supplies to the North.
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