Feb 27, 2024


PIERRE CROM/GETTY IMAGES
Half of more than a million artillery shells shipped to Russia from North Korea are faulty, a senior Ukrainian defense official has said.
Vadym Skibitsky, No. 2 at Ukraine‘s Main Intelligence Directorate, the defense intelligence agency also known as the GUR, said the Kremlin had turned to its reclusive Asian neighbor to complement Russia’s limited arms production, but with mixed results.
Skibitsky’s comments were given to the Interfax Ukraine news agency on February 23, on the eve of the two-year anniversary of Russia‘s full-scale invasion, which has become a gruelling war of attrition that continues to test the resolve of Kyiv’s backers in the West.
“Today, if we take the available statistical data, the Russians have already imported 1.5 million rounds of ammunition from the DPRK,” Skibitsky said, referring to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, also known as North Korea.
“But these munitions are from the 70s and 80s. Half of them do not function, and the rest require either restoration or inspection before use,” the GUR official said, citing Ukraine‘s latest assessment.
Kim Jong Un benefits by “giving away” old munitions while demanding an increase in production in North Korea’s own ammunition plants, according to Skibitsky.
Pyongyang was also able to ask Moscow for certain technologies in return, including those that would facilitate its missile and submarine development, he said.
The Ukrainian official said North Korea was undoubtedly requesting technologies related to its nuclear weapons program, a development that would add further uncertainties to already sky-high tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
Aside from artillery shells, Russia continues to produce its own rockets while firing North Korean-made ballistic missiles, too, said Skibitsky.
The Russian defense industry was still struggling to overcome its lack of access to foreign-made electronic components—largely cut off by Western sanctions—which is impacting the quality of the missiles used by Russia’s forces, the GUR official said.
“From the debris of the rockets, we can see that rockets manufactured in the fourth quarter of last year are in use now. That is, they were manufactured in October, November, and they are being used right off the assembly line,” Skibitsky said.
“But we also see that the rockets no longer meet their stated characteristics. That is, the quality is getting much worse,” he said.
Roman Holodivskyi, a Ukrainian artillery brigade commander, told the Kyiv Independent website last week that the Russian army was firing rounds produced in 2022 and 2023, suggesting a consistent munitions supply.
Pyongyang’s alleged arms trade with Moscow was flagged by the White House last October when National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said Russia took delivery of “military equipment” between September 7 and October 1.
The U.K. later handed evidence to the United Nations that suggested the same. U.N. Security Council resolutions—including those backed by Moscow’s representatives—prohibit the transfer of arms to and from North Korea.
Russia and North Korea both deny dealing in arms. The Russia Foreign Ministry and North Korea’s embassy in Beijing did not immediately respond to written requests for comment before publication.
The dates of the alleged arms shipments coincided with Kim’s September visit to the Russian Far East, where Russian President Vladimir Putin hosted him at the country’s main spaceport, Vostochny Cosmodrome.
It was there that observers believe the pair struck an agreement to cooperate more closely on defense and space matters. Pyongyang launched its first successful spy satellite—with suspected technical assistance from Moscow—in November.
South Korean Defense Minister Shin Won-sik told reporters on Monday that the North had shipped around 6,700 containers to Russia since the summit, enough to accommodate either 3 million rounds of 152-millimeter artillery shells or 500,000 122-millimeter rounds, according to Yonhap News Agency.
In return, Pyongyang was receiving food and other necessities, including materials for weapons manufacturing, Shin was quoted as saying.
Hwang Joon-kook, South Korea‘s ambassador to the U.N., told the Security Council last month that Russia was helping the North by using Ukraine “as a test site” for its nuclear-capable missiles.
From Seoul’s perspective, “it amounts to a “simulated attack,” Hwang said.

It shows the very sad state of affairs of the West when a small trash country like north korea is able to send several times more ammo to mafia land than the collective West can, and this in the fraction of time (ditto for iran). In trash countries, there are no Scholzes, Orbans, and no Trumps, either, who refuse certain arms or stop shipping aid altogether. The little mafia runt goes to pyongjang (or tehran), begs, and gets what he needs right away.
It’s a good thing and great luck that north korean ammo is plain junk.
We now know that disgracefully no countries now or ever, will send troops to Ukraine. In effect they are hiding behind the NATO membership that they worked so hard to block from Ukraine and the Budapest signatories acknowledge no obligation to honour the Memorandum. If putler puppet regimes like Orbanistan are attacked, Nato troops will swing into action. Fucking sick. What about if the govts of pro-Ukraine western democracies all invest in ammo producers immediately to get them tooled up for mass production? That’s the very least they can do. Here’s another thing they can do:
Ask all taxpayers to have $5/month directly debited from their salaries, but with an opt out option. $10/m if their income is greater than $100,000/year. Give the $100k plus earners the option to contribute extra if they wish.
Call it the price of freedom. One under-equipped, under-manned army is doing all the work and paying in their own blood to hold back a filthy horde of savages.
I despair at the incredible lack of integrity in the world.
Scradge, unfortunately common sense is something that is not a part of Western thinking, at least for the majority of jellyfish. Common sense says, that if Ukraine falls, the trenches before Berlin or Warsaw will be superfluous. Once drones, missiles and bombs visit Western capital cities, it’ll be too late. Then, there will be a great amount of tearful “if only we had done this and that while there still was time”. I would welcome this very much in some ways if it weren’t for the fact that Ukraine must first die for this to happen.
I especially like those NK shells that explode in the barrel. Excellent work by brave Korean pacifists! 😁
Those are my favorite, too.