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Seoul slams Russian treaty with N. Korea, Zelensky urges ‘tangible pressure’

South Korea urged Russia to stop its “illegal cooperation” with North Korea and voiced “grave concern” on Friday as Moscow moved to ratify its defence treaty with Pyongyang.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned shortly after that Russia was planning to send North Korean troops into battle against his country as early as Sunday, and urged world leaders to pile “tangible pressure” on Pyongyang.

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Russian lawmakers voted unanimously on Thursday to ratify a defence treaty with North Korea that provides for “mutual assistance” if either party faces aggression. It will now be sent to the upper house of parliament, the Federation Council, for approval.

According to South Korea and the United States, thousands of North Korean troops were training in Russia.

Ukraine said this week that North Korean soldiers had arrived in the “combat zone” in Russia’s Kursk border region.

While stopping short of confirming boots on the ground, a North Korean official said any troop deployment to Russia would be in line with international law.

The South Korean government said it “strongly urges the immediate withdrawal of North Korean troops and the cessation of illegal cooperation”.

Seoul “expresses grave concern over Russia’s ratification of the Russia-North Korea treaty amidst the ongoing deployment of North Korean troops to Russia,” the South Korean foreign ministry said in a statement.

Seoul said it would work with allies to “take appropriate measures” over the move, and the country — a major arms exporter — has suggested it could revise its longstanding policy that prevents sending weapons directly to Kyiv.

The national security advisors of the United States, South Korea and Japan on Friday discussed the North Korean troop deployment, the White House said, with the officials expressing “grave concern” at the development.

“This deployment is the latest in a series of concerning indicators of deepening military cooperation between the DPRK and Russia,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said, using the acronym for the official name of North Korea.

Also on Friday leaders of the Group of Seven wealthy democracies finalized details surrounding a $50 billion loan to aid Kyiv, backed by profits from Russia’s frozen sovereign assets, according to a statement by G7 leaders.

They said they “have reached a consensus on how to deliver” the loans that will “support Ukraine’s budgetary, military and reconstruction assistance”, with an aim to start disbursing funds by the end of this year.

‘Punish escalation’

Zelensky said North Korean troops could be sent to fight Ukrainian troops this weekend.

“The actual involvement of North Korea in hostilities should be met not with a blind eye and confused comments but with tangible pressure on both Moscow and Pyongyang to comply with the UN Charter and to punish escalation,” he said on social media.

A senior official within the Ukrainian president’s office said the North Korean troops could be deployed either to the Russian region of Kursk or in eastern Ukraine.

Branding the prospect “very worrying”, Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz said it showed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was facing difficulties in the war.

“It is serious and, of course, something that escalates the situation further,” he told German media while visiting India.

Putin said in an interview that aired Friday on state television that it was up to Moscow how it uses the new defence treaty’s clause on mutual military assistance.

“It’s our sovereign decision, whether we use something or not,” Putin said. “Where, how, whether we need this, or (if) we, for example, only carry out some exercises, training, passing on some experience — that’s our business.”

Seoul and Washington have long claimed that the nuclear-armed North is shipping arms to Russia.

One of North Korea’s United Nations representatives said at the UN General Assembly’s First Committee on Disarmament and International Security that the country was sending neither weapons nor soldiers to help Moscow.

The allegations by South Korea and others are “nothing more than groundless rumours aimed at tarnishing the image of DPRK”, Rim Mu Song said.

South Korea’s representative flagged videos circulating online of North Korean soldiers in Russian uniforms speaking Korean, but Rim said they “again totally reject the allegation” of troop deployment.

On Friday, a diplomatic official in Pyongyang argued that his country would be well within its rights to deploy soldiers on Russian soil.

“If there is such a thing that the world media is talking about, I think it will be an act conforming with the regulations of international law,” said Kim Jong Gyu, North Korea’s vice foreign minister in charge of Russian affairs.

‘Provocation’

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has called the deployment a “provocation that threatens global security beyond the Korean Peninsula and Europe”.

Yoon also said South Korea will review its stance on providing weapons to Ukraine.

Seoul has already sold billions of dollars of tanks, howitzers, attack aircraft and rocket launchers to Poland, a key ally of Kyiv.

In June, South Korea agreed to transfer the knowledge needed to build K2 tanks to Poland, which experts have said could be a key step towards production inside Ukraine.

South Korea’s Hanwha Aerospace has signed a $1.64-billion deal with Poland to supply rocket artillery units.

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