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Ukraine conflict: Special forces capture North Korea fighters | policy

Ukraine conflict: Special forces capture North Korea fighters | policy

Kiev – Up to 12,000 soldiers from North Korea are said to be fighting for Kremlin ruler Putin against Ukraine; thousands have probably already died. A Ukrainian special unit has now apparently managed a coup: the men were able to capture two North Korea fighters in the Kursk area!

On platform X, President Volodymyr reported Zelensky: “Two soldiers survived, although they were wounded.” They were taken to Kiev. There the soldiers of investigators of the Ukrainian people would die Secret services SBU interrogated.

The two men are said to have taken part in fighting in the Kursk region

The two men are said to have taken part in fighting in the Kursk region

Photo: ZelenskyyUa/X

This seems to be a rare catch for Ukraine, because Russia traditionally tries to conceal by all possible means, that the use of soldiers from North Korea comes to light: the Kim warriors are given fake passports, and faces of the fallen are said to have been deliberately burned by Russian soldiers.

This Russian army ID card was also confiscated

This Russian army ID card was also confiscated

Photo: ZelenskyyUa/X

The document was issued to a 26-year-old from the Turwa region

The document was issued to a 26-year-old from the Turwa region

Photo: ZelenskyyUa/X

Soldier believed he was going to Russia “for training.”

︎ Selenskyj published photos of the two injured men on X. They have Asian facial features. Additional photos show a Russian army ID card issued to a 26-year-old man from Russia’s Tuva region, near the border with Mongolia. There is currently no clear evidence that these are actually North Koreans.

The SBU secret service said the soldiers should speak neither Russian nor Ukrainian

The SBU secret service said the soldiers should speak neither Russian nor Ukrainian

Photo: ZelenskyyUa/X

According to the Ukrainian secret service SBU, the two prisoners speak neither Russian nor Ukrainian. Their questioning is being conducted “in cooperation” with South Korean intelligence using Korean interpreters.

One of the prisoners told the SBU that his Russian army ID had been given to him in the fall when he came to Russia for a week of joint training with Russian units. The man further said he was born in 2005 and has been a grenadier in the North Korean army since 2021. He believed he was being sent to Russia “for training” and “not to wage war against Ukraine.”

Zelensky announced that he would give journalists access to the prisoners of war because “the world needs to know what is happening.”