Kim’s terrified troops will FLEE Putin’s army when they reach Ukraine frontline

Emmanuel McDammy
7 Min Read

ENTIRE units of North Korea’s troops fighting for Vladimir Putin will desert as soon as they get to the frontline, a defector has claimed.

Hyun-Seung Lee, a soldier in the Kim army in the early 2000s, says the troops in Russia will be looking to escape the battle in Ukraine “from the beginning”.

He believes the troops are not ready for the frontline and will be used as “human shields” by Russian soldiers.

Kim Jong-un has sent his Storm Corps, the country’s equivalent of special forces, to fight for Vlad as his war continues to stall.

The 10,000-strong force is set to be used on the battlefield in the coming days as the Russian tyrant looks to claw back Kursk.

Questions have been raised about how well the Korean soldiers will fight having not seen combat since the Vietnam War and with the units armed, clothed, and run by the Russians.

Lee told Maris Post the soldiers in North Korea will have been forced to go and they will be young, so they won’t be that committed to the fighting.

He said: “It will be individuals at first, but more like as time passes, I think there’ll be like a larger number of group defections, including officers.”

That’s because, Lee says, the Russians will likely treat them as “expendable”  and even more poorly than their own troops.

He said: “Russian soldiers don’t respect them as their fellow warriors.

“They will treat them as their human shields.”

Eventually, the North Koreans will realise the hierarchy and how they are being seen as “disposable” by the Russians and look to flee, Lee said.

He added: “I think they’ll die without any impact.

“Putin and Kim Jong-un would expect more from them… they won’t get the expected results.”

But North Korean soldiers could be thinking twice about defecting as it could see their families thrown in prison.

Pyongyang has a guilty by association policy; if the North’s soldiers are seen defecting by colleagues their families could be put in jail.

High-ranking families would likely face a more severe punishment if authorities knew their relative had fled.

But Lee, whose family fled Pyongyang in 2014, said some families might not even know their brother, son or father are in Russia fighting as North Korea keeps all troop movements secret.

The troops will be watched over by a Worker’s Party political officer who will administer two hours of ideological training a day.

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