Ukraine-Russia live: Thousands of North Koreans in Putin’s ‘meat grinder’ war legitimate target, says Blinken
Around 8,000 North Korean troops expected to enter battlefield in coming days, says US
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Your support makes all the difference.North Korea’s soldiers fighting on behalf of Russia inside Vladimir Putin’s “meat grinder” war will be a legitimate military target, US secretary of state Antony Blinken said.
The top US diplomat said that the North Korean soldiers will enter the war in Ukraine in the “coming days” as he confirmed there are 10,000 North Korean troops in Russia, including as many as 8,000 in the Kursk region.
The US and South Korea have ramped up their pitch calling on North Korea to withdraw their troops already inside Ukraine and fighting alongside Russia.
“Should DPRK’s troops enter Ukraine in support of Russia, they will surely return in body bags. So I would advise Chairman Kim to think twice about engaging in such reckless and dangerous behaviour,” said Robert Wood, US envoy to the UN.
On the war front, at least three people, including a 12-year-old boy and a teenager, were killed in a Russian-guided bomb strike on Kharkiv. A child aged 12 was among the dead in the Wednesday evening strike, and thirty-six people were injured.
Former North Korean soldiers on why troops will volunteer to fight in Ukraine
The thousands of young soldiers North Korea has sent to Russia, reportedly to help fight against Ukraine, are mostly elite special forces, but that hasn’t stopped speculation they’ll be slaughtered because they have no combat experience, no familiarity with the terrain and will likely be dropped onto the most ferocious battlefields.
That may be true, and soon. Observers say the troops are already arriving at the front. From the North Korean perspective, however, these soldiers might not be as miserable as outsiders think.
They may, in fact, view their Russian tour with pride and as a rare chance to make good money, see a foreign country for the first time, and win preferred treatment for their families back home, according to former North Korean soldiers.
Former North Korean soldiers on why troops will volunteer to fight in Ukraine
Thousands of young North Korean elite troops sent to Russia lack combat experience and local knowledge
Why are North Koreans troops in Ukraine? Everything we know about Kim Jong-un’s soldiers joining Putin’s war
The Pentagon has said that North Korea dispatched 10,000 troops to Russia, with some of them believed to be heading to the Kursk border to join Vladimir Putin’s forces in their invasion of Ukraine amid the biggest conflict Europe has seen since the Second World War.
Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh said some North Korean soldiers have already moved closer to Ukraine and were believed to be heading for the Kursk border region. The Russian forces are facing difficulty in pushing back Ukraine’s cross-border incursion launched on 6 August.
This came within hours of Nato secretary general Mark Rutte confirming recent Ukrainian intelligence reports of the presence of North Korean military units deployed to Kursk near the Ukrainian border.
Why are North Koreans soldiers fighting in Ukraine war? Here’s what we know
Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh says North Korean soldiers have already moved closer to Ukraine and were believed to be heading for Kursk
VOICES: Will David Lammy’s trip to Beijing fix the UK’s China problem?
The foreign secretary’s unexpectedly early visit risks exposing the limits of the UK’s influence on the world stage, writes Mary Dejevsky:
Will David Lammy’s trip to Beijing fix the UK’s China problem?
The foreign secretary’s unexpectedly early visit risks exposing the limits of the UK’s influence on the world stage, writes Mary Dejevsky
In photos: Russian bomb hits residential building in Ukraine's 2nd largest city, killing 12-year-old boy
Russia says it is unhappy with Turkish arms supplies to Ukraine
Russia is “surprised” that Turkey continues to supply Ukraine with weapons while trying to act as a mediator in the conflict between the two countries, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told the Hurriyet newspaper.
“Turkish weapons are used by the Ukrainian armed forces to kill Russian military personnel and civilians,” Mr Lavrov said in an interview published yesterday.
“This situation cannot but cause surprise, given the Turkish government’s statements that it is ready to provide mediation services,” he said.
Russia's torture of Ukrainian civilians, prisoners is a crime against humanity, UN expert panel says
Russia’s torture of Ukrainian civilians and prisoners of war is a crime against humanity, UN-backed human rights experts said yesterday.
Erik Mose, chair of the independent commission investigating human rights violations in Ukraine, told reporters that the panel previously described Russia’s widespread and systematic use of torture in Ukraine and Russia against civilians and prisoners, both men and women, as a war crime.
“Our recent findings demonstrate that Russian authorities have committed torture in all provinces of Ukraine that came under their control, as well as in the detention facilities that the commission has investigated in the Russian Federation,” he said.
Mose said the commission is an investigative body. He noted that Ukraine‘s prosecutor general and the International Criminal Court are investigating possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Ukraine and the commission may be asked for evidence.
The commissioners examined reports from 41 different detention centers, from makeshift centers to well-established facilities, in nine occupied regions of Ukraine and eight areas in Russia, Mose said.
He said the commission identified further evidence that violent practices common in Russian detention facilities were also practiced in similar facilities in Russian-occupied areas in eastern Ukraine, he said.
The commission also found additional evidence of the recurrent use of sexual violence as a form of torture, Mose said.
Detainees were subjected to rape, long periods of forced nudity, body searches and more, commission member Vrinda Gover said. She said most prisoners of war reported being subjected to sexual violence and suffering long-lasting psychological trauma.
Russia claims UK using Black Sea corridor to supply Ukraine with arms
Russia has claimed Britain is using a Black Sea grain corridor to deliver arms to Ukraine, after denying London's allegations that Russian attacks on Ukrainian ports had disrupted crucial grain supplies for other countries.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said last week that an increase in Russian attacks on Ukraine's Black Sea ports was delaying vital aid reaching the Palestinians and stopping crucial grain supplies from being delivered to the global south.
The United Nations said last week that Russian attacks on Ukrainian Black Sea ports had damaged six civilian vessels as well as grain infrastructure since 1 September, calling the ramp-up in strikes "distressing".
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that Starmer's allegations that Moscow was damaging global food security with such strikes were wide of the mark.
"Such baseless yet thunderous outrage from London once again confirms just the opposite: the direct involvement of the UK in supplying arms to the Kiev regime using the Black Sea sea corridor," she alleged in a press briefing.
Zakharova referred to what she said was recent video evidence concerning the port of Yuzhny, in Ukraine's Odesa region, and purported arms supplies published by Russia's Ministry of Defence.
Her claims could not be independently verified and there was no immediate response to them from London.
Putin’s illegal war on Ukraine is reckless and self-harming, UK tells UNSC
Vladimir Putin’s illegal war on Ukraine is reckless and self-harming, a top UK official has told the UN Security Council.
Fergus Eckersley, UK minister counsellor, briefed a UNSC meeting on threats to international peace and security yesterday, where he said Russia’s domestic interests are severely harmed by Mr Putin’s invasion.
“It is clear where president Putin’s priorities lie: defence and national security will consume over 40 per cent of Russia’s entire federal spending next year – a post-Soviet record high, exceeding expenditure on healthcare, education, and the environment combined,” Mr Eckersley said.
He went on: “Let me repeat that: the Russian government is spending more on killing Ukrainians and trying to steal their land than it is on the health and education of its own people, and the environmental protection of its own territory, all put together. It is reckless and it is self-harming.”
The Russian invasion has “fuelled inflation, forced interest rates up to a 20-year high, and increased dramatically the cost of government, corporate and household borrowing,” he said.
US calls on a silent China to use its sway over Russia and North Korea
The US and South Korea have turned to China to use its influence over Russia and North Korea to prevent escalation after Pyongyang sent thousands of troops to Russia to aid Moscow’s war against Ukraine. Beijing has so far stayed quiet.
In a rare meeting earlier this week, three top US diplomats met with China’s ambassador to the United States to emphasise US concerns and urge China to use its sway with North Korea to try to curtail the cooperation, according to a State Department official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Secretary of state Antony Blinken said yesterday that the sides had “a robust conversation just this week” and that China knows US expectations are that “they’ll use the influence that they have to work to curb these activities.”
“But I think this is a demand signal that’s coming not just from us, but from countries around the world,” he said at a news conference in Washington with defence secretary Lloyd Austin and their South Korean counterparts.
Liu Pengyu, spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said in a statement that China’s position on the Ukraine crisis is “consistent and clear.”
North Koreans training in ‘basic infantry operations’ in Ukraine, says Blinken
Russia has been training North Korean soldiers in artillery, drones and “basic infantry operations, including trench clearing, indicating that they fully intend to use these forces in front line operations,” US secretary of state Antony Blinken said.
North Korea’s efforts to tighten its relationship with Russia has raised concerns around the world about how that may expand the war in Ukraine and what Russian military aid will be delivered in exchange.
It’s become a key topic as US and South Korean leaders met this week in Washington, fuelling concerns that the presence of those soldiers will further destabilise the Asia-Pacific region and broaden Moscow’s war on Ukraine.
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