ConflictsNorth Korean soldiers face deadly fate in Russian conflict

North Korean soldiers face deadly fate in Russian conflict

According to the BBC, 4,000 of the 11,000 North Korean soldiers in Russia have been killed, wounded, are missing, or have been captured. "They are cannon fodder, and the Russian officers care even less for them than they do for their own men," reports former British Army tank commander Col. Hamish de Bretton-Gordon.

A North Korean soldier captured by Ukrainian forces,
A North Korean soldier captured by Ukrainian forces,
Images source: © Getty Images | 2025 Anadolu

The BBC reports that North Korean soldiers in Russia are being sent to the front lines without proper training and protection. Former British Army tank commander Col. Hamish de Bretton-Gordon emphasizes that these units are poorly trained and led by Russian officers whom they do not understand.

- Quite frankly they don't stand a chance. They are being thrown into the meat grinder with little chance of survival. They are cannon fodder, and the Russian officers care even less for them than they do for their own men, he added.

Posthumous admission to the Workers' Party of Korea

The Radio Free Asia portal revealed that North Korean soldiers who died in Russia are posthumously admitted to the Workers' Party of Korea. Families are not informed about the circumstances of their death or their involvement in the war.

Membership in the Workers' Party of Korea is a special privilege that improves the social status of families, giving them access to better education, jobs, and housing. Posthumous membership is usually granted to those who fell in war, not to soldiers who died while on duty during peacetime.

Koreans in captivity. They told everything

North Korean prisoners of war, interrogated by the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), confirmed information about their transfer to Russian territory and complete isolation from external communications.

- Communication between captured North Korean soldiers and SSU investigators continues. Intelligence data on the movement of such troops to Russian territory, their training and complete information isolation have been confirmed by the prisoners, - wrote Zelenskyy on Telegram.

In the video attached to the post by the President of Ukraine, one North Korean prisoner testified that several soldiers from his country were trained to operate Russian weapons. He stated that he arrived in Russia by ship along with about a hundred compatriots, and then was transported by train to areas involved in the fighting. "Around 100 of us traveled on the ship, a Russian cargo ferry. There were only people onboard, no equipment. The same group of people on the ferry was also on the train," the North Korean recounted.

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