North Korean troops will become 'cannon fodder' if they aid Russia in Ukraine, Pentagon says
- North Korean soldiers sent to aid Russia in Ukraine would be "cannon fodder," the Pentagon said.
- The two nations signed a new security pact, and some Korean units look set to go to Ukraine.
North Korean troops that are sent to Ukraine to aid in Russia's war would become "cannon fodder," the Pentagon said.
Pentagon Press Secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said on Tuesday that "I think that if I were North Korean military personnel management, I would be questioning my choices on sending my forces to be cannon fodder in an illegal war against Ukraine."
Ryder was responding to a question about North Korea potentially dispatching army engineering units to Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, which is occupied by Russia.
According to South Korea's TV Chosun, citing a South Korean government official and referenced by Reuters, North Korea is planning to send construction and engineering forces to occupied Ukraine as soon as next month for rebuilding work.
Earlier this month, Russia and North Korea signed a pact agreeing to give each other military assistance if the other is attacked.
Countries including the US and Japan condemned the move, with South Korea saying it was considering sending weapons to Ukraine as a result. South Korea's president described the pact as a threat to his nation's security.
Ryder described North Korea potentially sending military forces to Russia as "certainly something to keep an eye on," and hinted at the high number of Russian casualties throughout the war.
The UK Ministry of Defence said at the end of May that the total number of killed or wounded Russian soldiers since February 2022 was around 500,000.
It also said that the average daily number of Russian personnel casualties in May was over 1,200.
Russia is known for treating its own troops as highly disposable.
This includes through using "meat wave" tactics, where it sends waves of poorly trained and unsupported soldiers toward Ukrainian positions to try to overwhelm them.
A Russian soldier who plans offensives said this month that he has to send men forward knowing they will likely die, but doesn't tell them how low their chances of survival are.
"I can't tell the men, otherwise they wouldn't fight with the hope of winning," he said.