产品展示
  • 雪佛兰科鲁泽/科沃兹/沃兰多/创酷创界探界者赛欧启停电瓶EFB70AH
  • 适用于蔚来es6 ec6辛巴中控下储物盒置物盒es8收纳盒内饰配件改装
  • 瓦尔塔蓄电池汽车电瓶12V60AH速锐名图iX35朗动H6花冠威驰K3途胜
  • 适配东风雪铁龙世嘉三厢 新款老款 高位刹车灯第三制动灯汽车配件
  • 老款别克陆尊扶手箱新GL8系列越野专用储物商务车收纳盒配件18款
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车音响

Wagner mutiny may have killed North Korea's dream project

2024-05-20 00:50:28      点击:308
Russian President Vladimir Putin,<strong></strong> right, welcomes North Korean leader Kim Jong-un for talks in Vladivostok, Russia, in this, April 25, 2019 photo. The Wagner Group's recent rebellion may have killed North Korea's dream project in Russia, an expert said Monday. AP-Yonhap
Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, welcomes North Korean leader Kim Jong-un for talks in Vladivostok, Russia, in this, April 25, 2019 photo. The Wagner Group's recent rebellion may have killed North Korea's dream project in Russia, an expert said Monday. AP-Yonhap

Expert says Pyongyang's hopes of taking advantage of Moscow ties now look dim

By Jung Min-ho

When Russia's military forces took control of Luhansk and Donetsk, two separatist regions in eastern Ukraine, North Korea seized an opportunity, becoming only the second state after Syria to recognize their independence in a move to back Moscow.

Then followed the news that the North was offering 100,000 soldiers to help stabilize the regions and that it was supplying munitions to the Kremlin through the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary group with close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

All this suggests that North Korea was keen to take advantage of the war. First, by selling Russia weapons during the conflict and then by taking part in its reconstruction. That plan may now have been seriously ― perhaps fatally ― disrupted after Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of the Wagner Group, initiated an open military rebellion, an analyst told The Korea Times, Monday.

"It is very possible that North Korea made several deals with the group. The cancellations of the deals would cause immediate damage to the regime," said Cho Han-bum, an expert on Russia at the Korea Institute for National Unification, a think tank.

But to North Korea, more serious damage from Prigozhin's one-day revolt that began Friday night has been inflicted on its long-term diplomatic strategy regarding Russia, its critical ally that can offer far more than money, he noted.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, welcomes North Korean leader Kim Jong-un for talks in Vladivostok, Russia, in this, April 25, 2019 photo. The Wagner Group's recent rebellion may have killed North Korea's dream project in Russia, an expert said Monday. AP-Yonhap
Wagner Group mercenaries pull out of the headquarters of the Southern Military District to return to base, in the city of Rostov-on-Don, Russia, Saturday. Reuters-Yonhap

"North Korea's best-case scenario was probably Russia achieving a partial win in the war, which would allow it to strengthen its ties with Russia through reconstruction projects that might take years to finish. In exchange, North Korea could gain food, energy, weapons technology and Russia's diplomatic support," Cho said. "But the Wagner mutiny has spoiled those efforts."

Many experts believe the insurrection has revealed cracks in Putin's hold on power and could have a significant impact on the ongoing war. Cho agrees. He reckons that the Wagner Group has lost Putin's trust and will eventually be disbanded and punished thus weakening Russia's chances of victory in the war in the process.

"The Wagner Group has tens of thousands of mercenaries in Ukraine, where it has played a role in the war. Even with their support, Russia is badly struggling. If Moscow decides to get rid of them, which it will, it will be its loss. In addition, Russia will need more military resources to safely manage all the repercussions of the mutiny. All this may well lead Putin to seek a ceasefire," he said. "And that's not the scenario the North was banking on."

Apparently shocked by the uprising of Putin's close confidant, Pyongyang on Sunday offered its full support to the Russian government.

Speaking at a meeting with the Russian Ambassador to North Korea Alexander Matsegora, Vice Foreign Minister Im Chon-il expressed his "firm belief that the recent armed rebellion in Russia would be successfully put down" and said it will "strongly support any option and decision by the Russian leadership," according to North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency.


有奖征集!河源农特产品十佳手信由你票选!
人勤春来早!全国多地春茶抢“鲜”开采