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Putin flies into North Korea with promise to back it against the US

Russia's President Vladimir Putin meets with North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un upon his arrival in Pyongyang, North Korea June 19, 2024. Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via REUTERS
Russia's President Vladimir Putin meets with North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un upon his arrival in Pyongyang, North Korea June 19, 2024. Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov

SEOUL/MOSCOW - Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in North Korea on Wednesday for his first visit in 24 years, vowing to deepen trade and security ties with the reclusive nuclear-armed state and to support it against the United States.


Russian state media said Putin's plane touched down in Pyongyang around 2:45 a.m. after a stopover in Russia's far east.


The U.S. and its Asian allies are trying to work out just how far Russia will go in support of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, whose country is the only one to have conducted nuclear weapon tests in the 21st century.


In a signal that Russia, a veto-wielding member of the U.N. Security Council, is reassessing its entire approach to North Korea, Putin praised Pyongyang ahead of his arrival for resisting what he said was U.S. economic pressure, blackmail and threats.


In an article published by North Korean state media, Putin praised "Comrade" Kim, and promised to "jointly resist illegitimate unilateral restrictions", to develop trade and strengthen security across Eurasia.


"Washington, refusing to implement previously reached agreements, continuously puts forward new, increasingly stringent and obviously unacceptable demands," Putin said in the article, printed on the front page of North Korea's Rodong Sinmun, the ruling Workers' Party mouthpiece.


"Russia has always supported and will continue to support the DPRK and the heroic Korean people in their opposition to the insidious, dangerous and aggressive enemy."


Putin issued a presidential order on the eve of the visit saying Moscow was looking to sign a "comprehensive strategic partnership treaty" with North Korea. His foreign policy adviser, Yuri Ushakov, said it would include security issues.


Ushakov said the deal would not be directed against any other country, but would "outline prospects for further cooperation".


Putin noted the Soviet Union was the first to recognise the Democratic People's Republic of Korea founded by Kim's grandfather, Kim Il Sung, less than two years before the 1950 Korean War.


North Korean state media also published articles praising Russia and supporting its military operations in Ukraine, calling them a "sacred war of all Russian citizens".


U.S. CONCERNS


Putin's state visit comes amid U.S. accusations that North Korea has supplied "dozens of ballistic missiles and over 11,000 containers of munitions to Russia" for use in Ukraine. South Korea, a staunch U.S. ally, has raised similar concerns.


The White House said on Monday it was troubled by the deepening relationship between Russia and North Korea. The U.S. State Department said it was "quite certain" Putin would be seeking arms to support his war in Ukraine.


Moscow and Pyongyang have denied arms transfers but have vowed to boost military ties, possibly including joint drills.


Russia is due to outproduce the whole NATO military alliance on ammunition production this year, so Putin's trip is likely aimed at underscoring to Washington just how disruptive Moscow can be on a host of global crises.


Russia in March vetoed the annual renewal of a panel of experts monitoring enforcement of longstanding U.N. sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes.


GALA CONCERT


The visit will include one-on-one discussions between the two leaders, as well as a gala concert, state reception, honour guards, document signings, and a statement to the media, Russia's Interfax news agency quoted Putin's aide Ushakov as saying.


Russian Defence Minister Andrei Belousov, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, the ministers for natural resources, health, and transport, the heads of the Russian space agency and its railways, and Putin's point man for energy, Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, will be part of the delegation.


Ahead of the visit, North Korea appears to have been making preparations for a possible military parade in downtown Pyongyang, commercial satellite imagery showed.




The summit presents the greatest threat to U.S. national security since the Korean War, said Victor Cha, a former U.S. national security official now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.


"This relationship, deep in history and reinvigorated by the war in Ukraine, undermines the security of Europe, Asia, and the U.S. homeland," he wrote in a report on Monday.


He urged Washington to work with Europe and other partners to increase economic and diplomatic pressure on Pyongyang, engage with China, and launch a major human rights and information campaign to flood the North with outside media.


North Korea has been under U.N. sanctions for its ballistic missile and nuclear programs since 2006, and those measures have been strengthened over the years.


The Security Council has been divided over how to deal with Pyongyang.


Russia and China say more sanctions will not help and that joint military drills by the United States and South Korea merely provoke Pyongyang. Two years ago, they vetoed a U.S.-led push to impose more U.N. sanctions on North Korea over its renewed ballistic missile launches.


Washington and its Asian allies accuse Beijing and Moscow of emboldening North Korea by shielding it from more sanctions.


After North Korea, Putin will visit Vietnam on Wednesday and Thursday.



Source: Reuters

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India Ex-DGMO Bhatt: Drones, Space & Cyber Warfare Redefining Conflicts| Defense & Security Insights
37:04

India Ex-DGMO Bhatt: Drones, Space & Cyber Warfare Redefining Conflicts| Defense & Security Insights

Lt. Gen. Anil Bhatt (Retd) reveals how drones, space, and cyberspace are reshaping modern warfare. He reflects on Operation Sindoor, the Doklam standoff, and India's new military paradigm. “War is serious business,” he says, stressing preparation as a deterrent. Don't miss this exclusive Operation Sindoor has brought into sharp focus the importance of drones in modern warfare, which along with space and cyberspace will write the new paradigm of future military conflicts, a former Director General of Military Operation who oversaw the Doklam crisis, has said. In an interview on Thursday, retired Lt. Gen. Anil Kumar Bhatt also expressed his displeasure at suggestions in social media by many war mongers who were unhappy with the conflict ending in four days on the grounds that it was an opportunity to reclaim Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. He said war should be the last option and should not be waged since India had achieved its strategic aims. “Let me tell you, a war or taking back Pak-occupied Kashmir, should be a war of choice, taken by a decision. That is not what was planned this time. Yes, the Indian military was prepared for it, if the escalating ladder took you there,” said Bhatt, who is guiding the growth of the private space technology sector in the country after retirement in June 2020. As DGMO, Bhatt was one of the most senior military officers in the hierarchy in-charge of ensuring that the armed forces were operationally ready at all times. Reporting directly to the army chief, the DGMO is intimately involved in shaping strategies to deal with immediate and long-term security challenges, besides coordinating with the other two services as well as civilian and paramilitary security forces. In times of crisis and escalated tensions, it falls on the DGMO to communicate with his opposite number. Currently, the DGMO is Lt. Gen. Rajiv Ghai. Bhatt was DGMO in 2017 when India was locked in a 73-day military standoff with China in Doklam tri-junction near the Sikkim sector of the Line of Actual Control (LAC). A four-star Lieutenant General is the second highest rank in the army, below a five-star General. A Field Marshal is largely a ceremonial or war-time rank. “So what I would tell all my fellow countrymen is, war is a serious business. A very very serious business. And a nation goes for it when all possible options are over. We had options less than war (during the current crisis) and gave a sense to it,” said Bhatt, who spent 38 years in the Army. Asked how important the drones were in the latest conflict he said the unmanned aerial vehicles have created an entirely new paradigm in warfare and the militaries of the world began focussing on it when they achieved spectacular success for Azerbaijan in winning a nearly-lost war against a well-armed Armenia. The drones were Turkish made. Turkey also supplied drones to Pakistan, which sent swarms of them over Indian air space for surveillance and sometimes lethal payloads. Bhatt agreed that relatively inexpensive drones costing as little as Rs two lakh were able to destroy armoured tanks worth Rs. 20 to 30 crore in the two Azerbaijan-Armenia wars in 2017 and 2020, which made it clear that war theatres of the future will be dotted with drones. To that there are two more new elements, Bhatt noted. “Previously, we used to say that wars are fought on the land, sea and in the air. But, two new domains., very, very effective and important domains – space and cyber space – that are now emerging,” said Bhatt said, who now is the Director General of Indian Space Association, the industry body of the space sector. Bhatt said the space sector was critical to future warfare as satellites play an important role in intelligence gathering, surveillance and reconnaissance, besides guiding missiles and aircraft to their desired targets. “But, in the future every country will have to protect its assets in space and also know what are the adversaries’ assets in space,” he said. Bhatt said several countries have demonstrated anti-satellite weapons and were also developing suicidal satellites that go near an adversary’s satellites and destroy it. He said India has nine or 10 military satellites for surveillance purposes and has plans to put in place a constellation of 52 satellites for space-based surveillance. “These 52 satellites definitely will increase our capability. Today, our gap is filled by companies like Maxar, PlanetM among others. But, we would obviously want our own satellites. Shutter control is very important,” Bhatt said. #Drones #CyberWarfare #SpaceWarfare #IndiaArmy #AnilBhatt #MilitaryTech #OperationSindoor #Doklam #DefenceNews Subscribe to the Amaravati Today, AT World News channel and tap the bell icon to receive notifications whenever we go live https://www.youtube.com/@atnewsroom #atworldnews #atworld #AmaravatiToday
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