The War in the Ukraine

muddie

Junior Member
And I still remember how people in this thread were in such deep denial that North Korean troops were fighting in Kursk.
I was one of those people in denial initially because it's so random.

It looks like more info is rolling out and being released by NK themselves, including combat footage from the NK POV engaging the AFU. Depending on which source you cite, NK could of had anywhere between 6K to 15K troops involved in the Kursk operations. IMO, the casualty stat is real because NK troops likely participated in offensive operations but mostly played a supporting role to Russians.

Based on the combat footage released though, it seems like NK troops were well equipped and well trained, not much difference compared to Russian regulars.
 

TK3600

Major
Registered Member
I was one of those people in denial initially because it's so random.

It looks like more info is rolling out and being released by NK themselves, including combat footage from the NK POV engaging the AFU. Depending on which source you cite, NK could of had anywhere between 6K to 15K troops involved in the Kursk operations. IMO, the casualty stat is real because NK troops likely participated in offensive operations but mostly played a supporting role to Russians.

Based on the combat footage released though, it seems like NK troops were well equipped and well trained, not much difference compared to Russian regulars.
North Korea definitely picked their best for the task at hand. Their experience will be invaluable, and they would want to pick the best unit to gain most experience.
 

Temstar

Brigadier
Registered Member
I'm wondering how NK sell this to their people to justify people coming back in coffins. We helped one former USSR state fight another former USSR state, basically a Soviet civil war.

Fighting a war to get experience is something you don't tell your people.
Their military-first policy is actually vindicated by this. It proves to their people that all that spending on KPA actually does yield great soldiers that can deliver result on the modern battlefield.

And in the process they're making a lot of money from Russia, there's a whole building boom near the Chinese border that's actually making construction material company bosses in Northern China rich.

There may be people who grumble before that all those artillery rounds in storage from Kim Il Sung days were a waste of resources, now the state can just point at the ammo trade with Russia and say see how much foresight our leaders have.
 

GulfLander

Colonel
Registered Member
I'm wondering how NK sell this to their people to justify people coming back in coffins. We helped one former USSR state fight another former USSR state, basically a Soviet civil war.

Fighting a war to get experience is something you don't tell your people.
Maybe its more of NK "binding" Russia to send troops to NK incase NK is ever invaded...
 
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