Evocative gifts: Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un gave each other a rifle during the North Korean leader’s ongoing visit to Russia, the Kremlin said Thursday, confirming that the Russian president had agreed to visit Pyongyang.
These gifts appear to be highly symbolic, at a time when the United States suspects Russia of wanting to buy weapons from Pyongyang to support its assault in Ukraine.
For the moment, however, nothing has been officially communicated concerning a possible agreement for the delivery of equipment or military collaboration between the two regimes, isolated and under international sanctions.
“(Mr. Putin) gave Kim a glove from a space suit, which traveled into space several times. He (also) gave Kim a rifle of the highest quality Russian production. In return , he received a rifle made in North Korea,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Thursday.
According to the North Korean press agency, Kim Jong Un on Wednesday invited his Russian counterpart to visit North Korea “whenever it suits him.”
On Thursday, Dmitri Peskov confirmed that Vladimir Putin had accepted this invitation “with pleasure”.
The North Korean leader’s visit to Russia “continues for a few more days,” Peskov added, without giving further details on the program.
The day before, Vladimir Putin had announced that Kim was to go to Komsomolsk-on-Amur, in the Russian Far East, to visit factories producing “civil and military” aeronautical equipment.
He must then attend Vladivostok, where he had already gone in 2019, to a military “demonstration” of the Russian Pacific Fleet, declared Vladimir Putin.
On Wednesday, during his first trip abroad since the Covid pandemic, Kim Jong Un met Vladimir Putin at the Russian Vostochny cosmodrome for a visit to the site and official discussions lasting more than two hours.
Moscow then offered Pyongyang to send a North Korean cosmonaut into space, according to Russian news agencies. This would be a first for a North Korean, as the country wants to develop its space programs.
Also on Wednesday, Kim Jong Un assured Mr. Putin that Moscow would achieve a “great victory” over its enemies and declared that rapprochement with Russia will be the “top priority” of North Korean foreign policy.
The Russian president, for his part, praised the “future strengthening of cooperation” with Pyongyang, evoking “prospects” of military cooperation despite international sanctions targeting North Korea because of its nuclear programs and its missiles in development.
The White House said Thursday that National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan discussed the Putin-Kim meeting with his South Korean and Japanese counterparts.
“They stressed that any export of weapons from North Korea to Russia would be a direct violation of several United Nations Security Council resolutions, including resolutions that Russia itself had adopted,” detailed a communicated.
“This summit reflects an immense change in geopolitics in Northeast Asia,” said Kim Jong-dae, a former South Korean deputy and visiting scholar at the Yonsei Institute for North Korean Studies.
A stronger alliance between Pyongyang, Moscow and Beijing could lead to “destabilization in the region”, and munitions supplied by Pyongyang would have a significant impact on the conflict in Ukraine, he said.
“I believe that Russia has already tested North Korean shells on the battlefield and is now ready to expand their use. Neither the United States nor South Korea have understood the consequences of “such an arms sale between Russia and the North,” Kim Jong-dae said.
Washington had expressed its “concern”, saying that Russia was interested in purchasing North Korean munitions to support its assault in Ukraine which has lasted for more than a year and a half.
In Vostochny, Mr. Putin raised the possibility of Russia helping Pyongyang build satellites, after North Korea recently failed twice to put a military spy satellite into orbit.
Mr. Putin was the first Russian head of state to visit North Korea in 2000 when it was led by Kim Jong Il, father of the current leader. The Duma then ratified a friendship treaty between the two countries.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu visited Pyongyang in July to mark the anniversary of the end of the fighting between the two Koreas (1950-1953). The head of Russian diplomacy, Sergei Lavrov, is expected there in October, according to the Kremlin.
14/09/2023 19:46:23 – Moscow (AFP) – © 2023 AFP