North Korean leader Kim Jong Un assured the Russian president of his “full support” for Russia’s war in Ukraine as the suspicions rise that two countries have a deal potentially trading munitions for economic and technological assistance.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un signed a pact that includes a vow of mutual aid if either country is attacked after a two-hour one-on-one meeting on Wednesday.
The deal, described as a “comprehensive strategic partnership”, will replace treaties from 1961 and 2000-2001, Russian state-owned news agency Tass reported.
At a press conference after the signing Kim called the agreement the “strongest treaty ever” between the two countries.
The pact includes co-operation in various areas including economy, politics, culture and military with Putin quoted as saying military-technical cooperation between the two would not be ruled out.
Russian presidential assistant Yuri Ushakov told the Russian outlet the document would not be directed against any other country and would comply with international law.
Putin was welcomed in a lavish ceremony before talks began while huge crowds lined the streets waving North Korean and Russian flags ahead of the meeting.
During the meeting, Kim assured Putin of his “full support” for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Putin began discussions by expressing appreciation for North Korea’s support, stating that Russia is battling “decades of imposed US imperialist policies”. The leaders of the two countries are both vocal critics of the West.
Russia and North Korea are under stringent sanctions, with Pyongyang subject to penalisation from the United Nations for its nuclear weapons programmes and Russia facing economic sanctions from the West due to its invasion of Ukraine.