MOSCOW, Russia
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un told Russian officials during his visit that he is confident in Russia's victory over Ukraine, the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported on Sept. 13.
"I am strongly convinced
that the heroic Russian army and people will follow excellently the tradition
of Victory, and will confidently demonstrate virtue and honor on the front of
the (Russo-Ukrainian War) and in building a strong state," Kim said in the
footage of the speech, surrounded by North Korean and Russian officials.
The North Korean leader also
claimed "the Russian army and people will achieve a great victory in the
sacred battle against the great evil."
Delivering a toast to the
Kremlin leader's health, Kim said he appreciated the role of his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin in "building a strong, modern Russia."
Kim said that he wants to
continue developing relations with Russia, which are now Pyongyang's first
priority: "I hope that we will always be together in the fight against
imperialism."
According to Russian news
agencies, the two leaders concluded talks that lasted for four to five hours.
The North Korean leader arrived in Russia's far-eastern Amur Oblast earlier on Sept. 13 for expected arms sales talks.
Meeting his guest at the
Vostochny Cosmodrome, Putin claimed that the two leaders would discuss
cooperation in missile and space technology.Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un examine a launch pad of Soyuz rockets during their meeting at the Vostochny cosmodrome outside the city of Tsiolkovsky.
Citing Kremlin spokesperson
Dmitry Peskov, the TASS news agency said that Russia sees prospects in
cooperating with North Korea in space and that Pyongyang is interested in
developing cooperation in aviation and transport.
However, Washington believes that the talks also concerned possible
arms sales and North Korean military aid to support Russia's war in Ukraine.
North Korea provided infantry
rockets and missiles to Russia in 2022, and Moscow has since been seeking
further arms supplies since then to bolster its war efforts in Ukraine.
In the spring of 2023, Moscow
reportedly approached Pyongyang with the offer of food supplies in
exchange for weapons. North Korea has been heavily militarized since the end of
the war with its Southern Korean neighbors in 1953 but suffers from chronic
food shortages.
Earlier in August, Russian
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu visited North Korea's capital to convince the
country's leadership to provide artillery ammunition that Russian forces could
use in its war against Ukraine.
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