Lavrov praises ‘fraternal ties’ with North Korea

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Pyongyang is a key ally in Russia’s vision of a multipolar world, the foreign minister has said

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has described North Korea as one of Moscow’s most reliable allies in Asia, citing decades of fraternal and military ties, and praising Pyongyang’s support amid the ongoing Ukraine conflict.

Speaking at the ‘Territory of Meanings’ youth forum on Monday, Lavrov named the DPRK as a core partner in what he called the emerging multipolar world order.

“We have a great many partners, like-minded states, and allies,” he said. “Together, we are laying the foundation for a new world order based on sovereignty and civilizational continuity.”

“Our closest ally in the West is certainly the Republic of Belarus. In the East, our closest ally is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, with which we are linked by decades of fraternal, military ties,” Lavrov added.

We helped our Korean neighbors gain independence; they helped us liberate the Kursk Region from Ukrainian neo-Nazis.

Lavrov positioned North Korea alongside China, India, Turkey, and Iran as “great civilizations” of Eurasia contributing to what he called the objective and unstoppable formation of a multipolar world.

“A multipolar world is taking shape,” he said. “No sanctions, no trade wars, no provocations of ‘hot conflicts’ will stop it. The multipolar world will prevail over this attempt to delay the natural course of history.”

He accused the United States and its allies of provoking instability in Northeast Asia, pointing to growing military activity near the Korean Peninsula. Lavrov warned that joint exercises involving the US, South Korea, and Japan increasingly include nuclear components and represent a dangerous escalation.

He also condemned the expansion of NATO’s presence into the region and dismissed Washington’s “Indo-Pacific” strategy as a tool for containing China and isolating Russia. The strategy, he said, undermines regional cooperation and encourages militarization under Western control.

Russia and North Korea signed a defense pact in June 2024, after which Pyongyang dispatched troops to help expel Ukrainian forces from Russia’s Kursk Region later that year. Russian officials have since announced that thousands of North Korean personnel, including mine clearance experts and military engineers, will be deployed to support post-conflict recovery efforts in the area.

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