Kim backs all Russian efforts on Ukraine as Pyongyang hosts Lavrov
Russia's top diplomat in North Korea for second round of strategic talks as both sides pledge deeper cooperation
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has told Russia’s top diplomat that Pyongyang is fully prepared to support all of Moscow’s efforts to resolve the conflict in Ukraine "unconditionally," according to state media on Sunday, as both sides held top-level strategic talks.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is on a three-day visit to North Korea, which has provided troops and arms for Russia's war with Ukraine and pledged more military support as Moscow tries to make advances in the conflict.
Kim met Lavrov in the eastern coastal city of Wonsan, where the two countries' foreign ministers held their second strategic dialogue, pledging further cooperation under a partnership treaty signed last year that includes a mutual defence pact.
Kim told Lavrov the steps taken by the allies in response to radically evolving global geopolitics will contribute greatly to securing peace and security around the world, North Korea's state news agency KCNA reported.
"Kim Jong Un reaffirmed the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) is ready to unconditionally support and encourage all the measures taken by the Russian leadership as regards the tackling of the root cause of the Ukrainian crisis," KCNA said.
Lavrov earlier held talks with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son Hui in Wonsan, and they issued a joint statement pledging support to safeguard the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of each other's countries, KCNA said.
On Saturday, Russian media reported that Lavrov described the two countries' ties as "an invincible fighting brotherhood" in his meeting with Kim and thanked him for the troops deployed to Russia.
Relations between Russia and North Korea have deepened dramatically during the last two years of the war in Ukraine, which started in February 2022, with Pyongyang deploying more than 10,000 troops and arms to Russia to back Moscow's military campaign.
Kim's government has pledged to send about 6,000 military engineers and builders to help with reconstruction work in Russia's Kursk region.
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