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10,000 North Kore­an troops in Rus­si­a’s Kursk region

The Pen­ta­gon esti­mates there are now at least 10,000” North Kore­an forces inside Rus­si­a’s Kursk Oblast, and Major Gen­er­al Pat Ryder, the Pen­tagon’s press sec­re­tary, said that those num­bers could go up.”

Ryder said that over­all there could be clos­er to 11,000 to 12,000 North Kore­an troops inside of Rus­sia. Ryder said the U.S. ful­ly expects the remain­ing troops still in east­ern Rus­sia to make their way to Kursk.

We’ve seen the press reports about alleged com­bat ops. We’re look­ing into those, but at this point, can­not cor­rob­o­rate those reports,” said Ryder, who made the com­ments at a press brief­ing on Monday.

NATO had con­firmed last month that North Kore­an troops have been deployed along­side their Russ­ian coun­ter­parts in the Kursk region, the area with­in Rus­sia where Ukraine has been wag­ing an assault.

The deploy­ment of North Kore­an troops rep­re­sents: one, a sig­nif­i­cant esca­la­tion in the DPRK ongo­ing involve­ment in Rus­si­a’s ille­gal war,” NATO Sec­re­tary Gen­er­al Mark Rutte said, using the acronym of the coun­try’s offi­cial name — the Demo­c­ra­t­ic Peo­ple’s Repub­lic of Korea.

North Korea has denied the reports of its forces being active in Rus­sia. The coun­try’s for­eign min­is­ter, Choe Son-hui, trav­eled to Moscow last month on an offi­cial visit.

Ryder also said he could not cor­rob­o­rate that there are small num­bers of North Kore­an engi­neers inside Ukraine.

But as you heard Sec­re­tary [of Defense Lloyd] Austin say last week, should these troops engage in com­bat sup­port oper­a­tions against Ukraine, they would become legit­i­mate mil­i­tary tar­gets,” he said.

Ryder said it remained unclear exact­ly how the North Kore­an troops would be employed by Rus­sia and referred back to last week’s com­ments that they are receiv­ing train­ing in drone oper­a­tions, artillery, and infantry.

We would ful­ly expect that the Ukraini­ans would do what they need to do to defend them­selves and their per­son­nel,” he said.

In so much is that these are poten­tial­ly forces that are com­ing in to replace the mas­sive num­bers of loss­es that Rus­sia is expe­ri­enc­ing,” said Ryder. I think that’s prob­a­bly a fair assess­ment, and I cer­tain­ly would not want to be a North Kore­an sol­dier, right?”

Mov­ing about 10,000 addi­tion­al troops into a bat­tle­zone may sound like a large move­ment, but Ryder did not have any infor­ma­tion about what per­cent­age of troops those North Kore­an sol­diers might make up on the Russ­ian side of the battle.

I don’t even have a ball­park num­ber, oth­er than to say, broad­ly speak­ing, what we saw in the past was essen­tial­ly a con­glom­er­a­tion of var­i­ous units on the Russ­ian side, to include ter­ri­to­r­i­al defense forces attempt­ing to push the Ukraini­ans back,” said Ryder.

But Ryder said that the addi­tion of the 10,000 to 12,000 North Kore­an forces could be sig­nif­i­cant” from a com­bat capa­bil­i­ty, but a lot of that will depend on how those forces are employed, how they’re inte­grat­ed into the Russ­ian com­mand and control.”

Ryder said that if Ukrain­ian forces con­tin­ue to demon­strate their will­ing­ness to fight they’ll be able to hold onto the ground they’ve gained in Kursk.

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