North Korea is supplying Russia with munitions from the 1970s

Kim Jong Un taking care of his friends
South Korean intelligence is investigating
What we know so far
The NIS is investigating
Evidence from Ukraine
122mm rocket artillery shells
Cooperating with Russia
What was among the weapons
Artillery factories working at full swing
What Pyongyang got in return
U.S. estimates dwarf Seoul’s figures
The numbers were upped in July 2024
The latest estimates
More than 6 million shells could have been sent to Russia
Half of Russia's shells come from North Korea
Many of the shells are faulty
Kim Jong Un taking care of his friends

In May 2024, new evidence suggested that North Korea had allegedly supplied Russia with rocket artillery shells dating back to the 1970s. Following these allegations, South Korean intelligence services launched a thorough investigation into the claims.

South Korean intelligence is investigating

On May 12th, South Korea’s National Intelligence Agency revealed it was investigating its suspicion that North Korea provided artillery shells and other weaponry made in the 1970s to Russia amid Moscow’s deepening cooperation with Pyongyang. 

What we know so far

Yonhap News Agency reported the National Intelligence Agency released a statement following a report from a media outlet that asserted 122-millimeter rocket artillery shells made by North Korea in the 1970s were among the many weapons and munitions Pyongyang shipped to Russia. 

The NIS is investigating

"The NIS is analyzing the relevant circumstance in detail and also continues to track overall military cooperation between North Korea and Russia," the National Intelligence Agency (NIS) said according to Yonhap News Agency. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Dmitry A. Mottl - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0

Evidence from Ukraine

Images released by a Ukrainian photographer in 2023 showed Korean letters on some Russian equipment, including the Korean word “방-122”, which Yonhap News Agency reported was inscribed on rocket artillery shells. 

122mm rocket artillery shells

Experts indicated that the shells were likely 122-millimeter rocket artillery shells, which was what likely prompted the interest of South Korea’s National Intelligence Agency. Russia has received significant shipments of military aid from North Korea. 

Cooperating with Russia

In February 2024, South Korean Defense Minister Shin Won-sik revealed North Korea had sent roughly 6,700 shipping containers of the military alliance to Russia as part of an ongoing arms transfer between the two countries. 

What was among the weapons

"It could possibly be a mix of the two, and you can say that at least several million shells have been sent," Minister Shin explained to reporters during a media briefing on February 26th, 2024 according to Reuters. 

Artillery factories working at full swing

Minister Shin also noted that the shipping containers of military aid may have contained more than 3 million 152-millimeter artillery shells or 500,000 122-millimeter rounds, and he said North Korean factories producing shells for Russia were working "at full swing." 

What Pyongyang got in return

In March, Minister Shin reported that North Korea had shipped upwards of 7,000 since it began providing Moscow with military assistance and added that Pyongyang received at least 9,000 containers in return, likely filled with aid according to the Associated Press. 

U.S. estimates dwarf Seoul’s figures

The U.S. State Department also provided an estimate regarding the number of shipping containers of munitions and munition-related help sent to Russia from North Korea but it surpassed South Korean figures, estimating 10,000 containers had been shipped. 

The numbers were upped in July 2024

During an interview with Bloomberg in June 2024, Minister Shin upped the estimation of North Korean shipping containers sent to the Russians to 10,000 and claimed they could have roughly 4.8 million artillery shells. 

The latest estimates

August 2024 estimations pushed the number of shipping containers sent to Russia up to 13,000 according to a Defense Intelligence Agency report Newsweek noted had been submitted to Kang Dae-sik, a South Korean lawmaker and member of the country's ruling People Power Party.

More than 6 million shells could have been sent to Russia

"North Korea delivered weapons shipments that could hold more than 6 million 152-millimeter artillery shells through its eastern port of Najin over the two years following Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine," Billal Rahmen of Newsweek reported.

Half of Russia's shells come from North Korea

A more recent report from The Time published in October 2024 revealed that as many as half the artillery shells Russia is using, in the war against Ukraine, which is about 3 million per year, are coming from North Korea, according to Western intelligence.

Many of the shells are faulty

"Although many of the shells are believed to be faulty, the sheer quantity has allowed Russia to make steady gains, most recently capturing the eastern Ukrainian city of Vuhledar," wrote The Times' George Grylls.

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