Seoul responds to North Korean troops in Ukraine
South Korean President Yoon met Polish President Duda amid reports of 3,000 North Korean troops deployed to Russia for training
PTI
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Moscow and Pyongyang have denied the presence of North Korean troops.PHOTO:PTI
Seoul, 24
Oct
South
Korea's president said Thursday his government “won't sit idle” as North Korea
allegedly sends troops to support Russia's war on Ukraine, as he met with the
leader of Poland to discuss expanding defence cooperation amid the ongoing
conflict.
The meeting
between South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Polish President Andrzej Duda
came a day after US and South Korean officials said they believe around 3,000
North Korean troops have been deployed to Russia and are training at several
locations.
South
Korea's spy agency told lawmakers that North Korea likely aims to send a total
of 10,000 troops to Russia by the end of the year.
Both Moscow
and Pyongyang have denied the presence of North Korean troops.
“We agreed
that North Korea's troop deployment to Russia, which is in direct violation of
the UN charter and U.N. Security Council resolutions, is a provocation that
threatens global security,” Yoon said after the summit.
Yoon said
South Korea will work with allies and partners to prepare countermeasures that
could be rolled out in stages depending on the degree of military cooperation
between Pyongyang and Moscow.
Yoon's
office said earlier this week that South Korea is considering various
diplomatic, economic and military options, including supplying Ukraine with
both defensive and offensive weapons systems.
South
Korea, a growing arms exporter, has provided humanitarian aid and other
non-lethal support to Ukraine and supported US-led economic sanctions against
Moscow. But Seoul hasn't directly provided Ukraine with arms, citing a
long-standing policy of not supplying weapons to countries actively engaged in
conflict.
Tensions on
the Korean Peninsula have worsened since 2022 after North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un used Russia's invasion of Ukraine as a distraction to accelerate the
growth of his nuclear weapons and missile program.
Seoul also
worries as experts say the North may seek major technology transfers in return
for sending troops, including Russian know-how on intercontinental ballistic
missiles and submarines that would advance the threat posed by Kim's nuclear
arsenal.
During
their summit, Yoon and Duda agreed to “actively support” additional deliveries
of South Korean military equipment to Poland, including a new deal for Korean
K-2 tanks the governments hope to finalize within this year, Yoon's office
said.
Poland has
signed a series of arms deals with South Korea in the last two years to acquire
tanks, howitzers and missile launchers in an effort to bolster its military
capabilities following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.-AP
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