North Korea's Kim Vows Steadfast Support for Russia’s War in Ukraine

TOPSHOT - This photograph taken and released on November 29, 2024 by the Russian Defense Ministry press service shows Russia's Defense Minister Andrei Belousov (4th-L) and his delegation attending a bilateral talks with North Korean delegation in Pyongyang. (Photo by HANDOUT / Russian Defense Ministry / AFP)
TOPSHOT - This photograph taken and released on November 29, 2024 by the Russian Defense Ministry press service shows Russia's Defense Minister Andrei Belousov (4th-L) and his delegation attending a bilateral talks with North Korean delegation in Pyongyang. (Photo by HANDOUT / Russian Defense Ministry / AFP)
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North Korea's Kim Vows Steadfast Support for Russia’s War in Ukraine

TOPSHOT - This photograph taken and released on November 29, 2024 by the Russian Defense Ministry press service shows Russia's Defense Minister Andrei Belousov (4th-L) and his delegation attending a bilateral talks with North Korean delegation in Pyongyang. (Photo by HANDOUT / Russian Defense Ministry / AFP)
TOPSHOT - This photograph taken and released on November 29, 2024 by the Russian Defense Ministry press service shows Russia's Defense Minister Andrei Belousov (4th-L) and his delegation attending a bilateral talks with North Korean delegation in Pyongyang. (Photo by HANDOUT / Russian Defense Ministry / AFP)

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed his country will “invariably support” Russia’s war in Ukraine as he met Russia's defense chief, the North’s state media reported Saturday.
A Russia military delegation led by Defense Minister Andrei Belousov arrived in North Korea on Friday, amid growing international concern about the two countries’ expanding cooperation after North Korea sent thousands of troops to Russia last month.
The official Korean Central News Agency said that Kim and Belousov reached “a satisfactory consensus” on boosting strategic partnership and defending each country’s sovereignty, security interests and international justice in the face of the rapidly-changing international security environments in a Friday meeting.
Kim said that North Korea “will invariably support the policy of the Russian Federation to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity from the imperialists’ moves for hegemony,” KCNA said.
North Korea has supported Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, calling it a defensive response to what both Moscow and Pyongyang call NATO’s “reckless” eastward advance and US-led moves to stamp out Russia’s position as a powerful state.
Kim slammed a US decision earlier in November to let Ukraine strike targets inside Russia with US-supplied longer-range missiles as a direct intervention in the conflict. He called recent Russian strikes on Ukraine “a timely and effective measure" demonstrate Russia's resolve, KCNA said.
According to US, Ukrainian and South Korean assessments, North Korea has sent more than 10,000 troops to Russia and some of them have already begun engaging in combat on the frontlines. US, South Korean and others say North Korea has also shipped artillery systems, missiles and other conventional weapons to replenish Russia’s exhausted weapons inventory.
Both North Korea and Russia haven’t formally confirmed the North Korean troops’ movements, and have steadfastly denied reports of weapons shipments.
South Korea, the US and their partners are concerned that Russia could give North Korea advanced weapons technology in return, including help to build more powerful nuclear missiles.
Last week, South Korean national security adviser Shin Wonsik told a local SBS TV program that Seoul assessed that Russia has provided air defense missile systems to North Korea. He said Russia also appeared to have given economic assistance to North Korea and various military technologies, including those needed for the North’s efforts to build a reliable space-based surveillance system.
Belousov also met North Korean Defense Minister No Kwang Chol on Friday. During a dinner banquet later the same day, Belousov said the two countries' strategic partnership was crucial to defend their sovereignty from aggression and the arbitrary actions of imperialists, KCNA said.
In June, Kim and Putin signed a treaty requiring both countries to provide immediate military assistance if either is attacked. It's considered the two countries’ biggest defense deal since the end of the Cold War.



Iran Leaves Door Open for 'Indirect' Talks with Washington

Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, during an interview with IRNA.
Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, during an interview with IRNA.
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Iran Leaves Door Open for 'Indirect' Talks with Washington

Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, during an interview with IRNA.
Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, during an interview with IRNA.

Kamal Kharrazi, an adviser to Iran's supreme leader, said on Thursday that Tehran has not closed all doors to resolve its disputes with the United States and is ready for indirect negotiations with Washington.

Iran “has not closed all doors. It is ready for indirect negotiations with the United States in order to evaluate the other party, state its own conditions and make the appropriate decision,” Kharrazi said, according to state media.

“What we see today in the behavior of the US government is a psychological war – pushing a 'war or negotiations' narrative through conflicting messages from US officials,” Kharrazi said.

Tehran has so far rebuffed Trump's warning to make a deal or face military consequences. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei called the message deceptive and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said talks are impossible unless Washington changes its “maximum pressure” policy.

“The recent position of Trump and the vague references of certain US officials to his letter and its widespread coverage in Western and regional media are intended to create a kind 'delusional optimism' in Iran,” Kharrazi said.

He noted that some Iranians believe that the US opened door policy has been created to resolve the old problems between Tehran and Washington and that Trump is seriously seeking to ameliorate the US relations with Iran. “However,” he added, “This policy is opposed by the US ruling make-up.”

Kharrazi's statements reinforce some observers' belief that there is a lot of division within the Trump administration on Iran.

Last Sunday, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said Trump's outreach to Khamenei on a possible new nuclear deal is an effort to avoid military action.

“We don't need to solve everything militarily,” Witkoff told Fox News.

Contrary to Witkoff's diplomatic tone, the White House's national security advisor, Mike Waltz, said the US sought “full dismantlement” of Iran's nuclear program.

“Iran has to give up its program in a way that the entire world can see,” he said in an interview on CBS News.

On Thursday, Kharrazi, who is also head of Iran's Strategic Council on Foreign Relations and a former foreign minister, questioned the true intentions behind the US strategy, which he said was an invitation to negotiate under the shadow of intensified economic sanctions and military threats.

“If Trump had understood Iran and the Iranian spirit, he would have learned from the past and acted differently to resolve the old issues between Iran and the US for the economic benefit of his own country.”

Kharrazi emphasized that Trump should have realized by now that the Iranian people will never bow to pressure or coercion but will respond positively to humility and honesty.

Meanwhile, in a post on his official account on X, Araghchi reposted a leaked message of war plans by top officials from the Trump administration in a group on the commercial messaging app, Signal.

Top Trump administration officials mistakenly disclosed war plans in a messaging group that included a journalist shortly before the US attacked Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthis, the White House said on Monday, following a first-hand account by The Atlantic.

“People around the globe—including Americans—now see how US officials look at world affairs,” Araghchi wrote on X.

“Some highlight severe incompetence and, more importantly, total disregard for human life in the decision making. As for Iran, we see perhaps another reason to take the recent political overtures with a huge grain of salt,” he added.

Later on Thursday, the FM said his country has sent a response through Oman to Trump's letter in which he urged Tehran to reach a new nuclear deal.