North Korea Deploys 100,000 Soldiers to Support Russia in Conflict

North Korea Deploys 100,000 Soldiers to Support Russia in Conflict

North Korea’s Quiet Troop Queue: A Peek Inside the Military Shuffle

Rumors are swirling that a whole squad of North Korean soldiers—upwards of 100 000—are lining up like commuters on a public‑transport line, all ready to hop into Ukraine and back—fighting for Vladimir Putin. That’s what fresh intel from South Korea’s services has tipped off a Russian battlefield specialist.

Who’s Speaking?

  • Andrei Klintsevich – a Russian military whisperer who’s all in for those numbers “to speed up many processes.”
  • Timur Syrtlanov – another Russian military pundit who’s claiming that the North Koreans were actually doing a starring role in the Kursk region, flexing their boots to wrest back Ukrainian lands.

Syrtlanov dropped a gem to MK: North Korean troops can snap up combat missions on Russian soil. We talk future tasks guarding borders—Kursk, Belgorod, Bryansk—where they could swing into action.

Seeing the Human Side

Kim Jong‑un, the North Korean leader, couldn’t keep his knuckles firm when he only got to “face the reality” of those fallen soldiers. He said:

My heart aches. I’m bitter, seeing the brave figures die for a victory, only remembered by photos on a memorial wall. Standing in front of families of fallen comrades, I feel how I failed to protect our heroes.

Meanwhile, a January report from Korea’s Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) alerted that the DPRK had shipped up to 12 million artillery shells to Russia—28,000 cargo containers full of weaponry. Some says these are 152mm shells, but the exact count could be bigger.

What’s Next?

According to an assessment from unnamed Ukrainian sources, CNN reports that North Korea could drop another 25 000 to 30 000 troops to join the Russian forces. That’s a bulk of foot soldiers ready to step into the ongoing conflict.

Stay tuned—this story is rolling faster than a convoy on a battlefield.