Putin’s reaching out to Kim Jong-un is a desperate move – and potentially a dangerous one | Sergey Radchenko
The reported meeting of the two dictators reveals a shift in power balances and the threat of a return to old, cold war politics
Reports that North Korea's dictator, Kim Jong-un, may visit Russia soon to meet Vladimir Putin - probably to discuss the supply of North Korean weapons for Putin's war in Ukraine - point to a rather remarkable transformation of Russian-North Korean relations. During the cold war, North Korea was Moscow's key ally in north-east Asia. But at that time, the North Koreans were, at best, poor supplicants to a mighty superpower. Today, Kim's hermit kingdom stands tall and proud as Russia's partner in crime.
Putin's engagement with North Korea is as old as his presidency. But the relationship was generally more exotic than practical. Russia's real partner was South Korea, which consistently ranked among its top 10 trade partners, with nearly $30bn in trade volume in 2021. North Korea was never an attractive partner, and it was subject to very restrictive sanctions that Russia, as a permanent member of the UN security council, had helped craft. Until it invaded Ukraine, Russia tried to abide by them in letter and spirit.
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