Russian delegation in North Korea: Bolstering artillery alliance
Russian Defence Minister Andrey Belousov went on a visit to North Korea. Ukrainian media suggest that talks may once again occur regarding the support Pyongyang provides to Moscow. They remind us that the scale of arms supplies to Putin's army is already considerable.
29 November 2024 14:21
The Defence Express portal drew attention to the composition of the Russian delegation, which included several high-ranking politicians and military officers. Social media videos show that Andrey Belousov arrived in the allied country accompanied by, among others, Alexei Krivoruchko, responsible for arms supplies in Russia, and the head of the Main Rocket and Artillery Directorate (GRAU).
Russians with another visit to North Korea
Based on this, Ukrainians suspect that one of the key topics of negotiations from the Russian side will be issues related to ammunition, as well as artillery and rocket weaponry.
North Korea is Russia's largest ally. Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, it has been providing ammunition to Putin's army. According to US and South Korean intelligence services, Pyongyang has already sent Moscow about 20,000 containers, which could hold approximately 9.4 million 152 mm artillery shells. Such shells are used by the Russians in their artillery, which plays a key role in the ongoing war in Ukraine.
Weapons from North Korea in service of Russia
The cooperation between the two countries has progressed even further. North Korea also supported Russia by sending over 12,000 of its soldiers to the Kursk region, where Ukrainian forces launched an offensive in August of this year.
Among the weapons supplied to Russia are also KN-23 (Hwasong-11A) ballistic missiles. According to information revealed by CNN, Russia has already launched about 60 such missiles this year. This is nearly one-third of all ballistic missiles launched towards Ukraine in the past 12 months. The range of the KN-23 is about 600 kilometres.
In November, the first evidence appeared of Russians using North Korean M1989 "Koksan" artillery systems. This is the most formidable weapon of its type available to Pyongyang. It uses a 170 mm gun and can reportedly hit targets at a distance of up to 50-60 kilometres.
Analysts have doubts about the technical condition of the North Korean equipment. The systematic appearance of more systems from North Korea in Russia and Ukraine is also seen as a sign of the growing problems of the Russians and their dwindling supplies of their own weapons.