Russia’s president and Kim Jong Un are set to explore a range of “sensitive topics” during talks on Wednesday.
Vladimir Putin met his North Korean counterpart in eastern Russia, according to a video released by the Kremlin on Wednesday.
Accompanied by top military brass and senior government figures, Kim Jong Un implied to the Russian president he supported Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
“Russia has risen to a sacred fight to protect its sovereignty and security against the hegemonic forces,” he told reporters. “North Korea supports all Putin’s decisions.”
“I’m sure we will remain together in [the] fight against imperialism,” Kim said earlier, expressing his gratitude to the Russian leader for the visit.
The two men are due to discuss a range of “sensitive topics”, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
Removed by mod
The US is an unreliable security partner, what if trump wins next year for example? The only way South Korea (and Taiwan to be fair) can secure their independence and sovereignty is a nuclear deterrent
Removed by mod
I’m sure that kind of thing makes the residents of Seoul much less agreeable to getting a nuclear deterrent
Don’t you get it? We’re on the same side, I think the US should stay out of Taiwan and South Korea also, that’s why they need nuclear weapons! Probably Japan too, if history is anything to go by. Vietnam as well
Removed by mod
I can’t wait to glow with you
not the glow up i wanted
Maybe once capitalism finishes winning in Vietnam we can revisit the nukes discussion but under no circumstances can you trust commies with nuclear weapons.
Lmao. Yeah that’s the reputation the US has - totally unwilling to get into wars against communists.
South Korea is not some contested alliance. They’re the actual Korea the way Taiwan is the actual China. Neither of these places will fall and the US will absolutely go to war for them, and I find it kind of crazy that anyone thinks we wouldn’t.
What in our history suggests we would allow communist states to conquer their last remaining bastions of liberal democracy?