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North Korean troops assemble in Russia's Kursk region, say US officials

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Several thousand North Korean soldiers have arrived in Russia's western Kursk region, where they are expected to participate in a coming counteroffensive meant to dislodge the Ukrainian troops who have occupied a portion of the region since August, one Ukrainian and two U.S. officials said Friday.

The North Korean troops have not yet entered the fight, and it is not yet clear what role they will play, the officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters. Whatever their role, the officials said, any significant contingent of North Korean troops will allow Russia to keep more of its forces in eastern Ukraine, where they can stay focused on seizing as much Ukrainian territory as possible before the harsh winter weather sets in.

For weeks, the governments of South Korea and Ukraine have warned that thousands of North Koreans were training alongside Russian soldiers, with Ukraine putting the figure as high as 12,000 troops. This week, U.S. officials confirmed that a contingent of North Korean troops had been transported by ship to Vladivostok, a Russian city on the Pacific Ocean, in what U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin called a "very, very serious" escalation.

On Wednesday, the first North Korean troops had made the nearly 4,000-mile journey to the Kursk region, with thousands more arriving each day since. A senior Ukrainian official with knowledge of the troop movements said that as many as 5,000 North Korean troops were expected to have mustered by Monday.

The troops, according to the officials, are part of an elite unit of the Korean People's Army. They are being flown from Vladivostok to a military airfield in western Russia, then driven into the battle zone, the Ukrainian official said.

There were mixed signals about whether additional North Korean troops would be sent to fight on Ukrainian territory, the Ukrainian official said. Currently, they are only concentrating in Kursk.

Ukrainian troops entered the Kursk region in August, taking about 400 square miles of territory in the initial weeks of the incursion. But throughout October, Russian forces have been ratcheting up their attacks on Ukrainian positions in the region.

But after more than two months on Russian soil, Ukraine has so far failed to achieve one of its main goals in Kursk: diverting Russian troops from the fight in the Donbas region of Ukraine.
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