North Korean general
reportedly wounded by Ukrainian attack on Russia
By
David Choi and Yoo Kyong
Chang
Stars and Stripes • November
22, 2024
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaks with
military leaders at the Academy of Defense Sciences in Pyongyang, North Korea,
in this image released by the state-run Korean Central News Agency on May 28,
2024. (KCNA)
A recent
Ukrainian attack wounded a North Korean general, the first senior officer
casualty reported among thousands of North Korean troops sent to bolster
Russian forces, a report said.
The
unidentified general was wounded in an unspecified attack in the Kursk region,
according to unnamed Western officials cited by the Wall Street Journal on
Thursday.
North Korean
troops deployed to that area are a “fair target” and the U.S. Defense
Department “absolutely” expects them to be engaged in the fight, Pentagon
spokeswoman Sabrina Singh said Thursday at a news conference in Washington,
D.C.
South Korean
officials had not commented on the Journal report as of Friday evening. The
country’s Ministry of National Defense did not immediately respond to a request
for comment by phone that day.
The
potential sacrifice of one general amounts to little in the grand scheme of the
two-year war in Ukraine, said former North Korean soldier Kim Seongmin, chief
executive of Free North Korea Radio, a broadcast station ran by North Korean
defectors.
Kim said he
served as a captain in the North Korean army between 1988 and 1995.
“Pyongyang
put its head into the lion’s mouth for money and the safety of the [North
Korean leader] Kim Jong Un regime,” he said by phone Friday. “How could
infantrymen survive in such a battlefield? It will not end with just a
general.”
North
Korea’s state-run Korean Central News Agency has yet to confirm it has deployed
troops for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The country’s Foreign Ministry in a
statement last month said it reserved the right to deploy them to support
Russia.
South Korean
lawmakers briefed by intelligence officials Oct. 29 said they received reports
that Col. Gen. Kim Yong Bok, deputy chief of the General Staff of the North
Korean army, was among the troops sent to Russia, according to a Yonhap News
report that day.
At a June
summit in Pyongyang, Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged
mutual military aid if either of their countries were at war.
Last month,
South Korea’s National Intelligence Service said that over 10,000 North Korean
troops were deployed to Russia’s western border. The Pentagon earlier this
month estimated between 11,000 and 12,000 North Korean troops are in Russia.
The North
Koreans “will provide some type of combat or combat support capability,”
Defense Department spokesman Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said during a news
conference Nov. 4.
“Should
those troops engage in combat support operations against Ukraine, they would
become legitimate military targets,” he said.
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