RT.com
02 Jun 2025, 16:15 GMT+10
Pyongyang says the paper demonizes legitimate relations between sovereign states
North Korea has slammed a report by a Western sanctions monitoring group's on its ties with Russia, calling it a "political provocation." Cooperation with Moscow is a "legitimate exercise of the DPRK's sovereign rights," Pyongyang has insisted.
The report was released last week by the Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Group (MSMT), created by the US and South Korea to monitor enforcement of UN sanctions against North Korea.
It alleges "illegal" military cooperation between Moscow and Pyongyang, including purported arms transfers from North Korea to Russia, troop deployments and training, excess petroleum shipments, and financial coordination.
Citing data from its 11 members and open-source intelligence, the report claims these actions violate UN Security Council resolutions aimed at curbing North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.
Pyongyang considers the MSMT report a "hostile act" and the organization a "ghost group without any legitimacy" and a "political tool" operating "according to the geopolitical interests of the West."
"The hostile acts of the MSMT... are a flagrant violation of the international legal principles of sovereign equality and non-interference in internal affairs and a mockery of the fair and just international community," the country's Foreign Affairs Ministry said in its statement on Sunday, as cited by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). The ministry called the report a fabrication and denounced it as politically biased and "provocative."
Military cooperation between Moscow and Pyongyang is "aimed at protecting the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security interests" of the countries and "ensuring peace and stability in the Eurasian region," the ministry claimed. It stressed that it is a "legitimate exercise of sovereign rights" of both countries in accordance with the UN Charter.
Moscow has not yet commented on the MSMT report.
In June 2024, Russia and North Korea signed the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Agreement, which includes a clause providing for military and other assistance in the event of armed invasion of either side. Several weeks later, South Korean and US media reported the deployment of North Korean troops to Russia's Kursk Region, which at the time was under Ukrainian attack. Moscow and Pyongyang confirmed the military presence in late April after Russian forces declared the region fully liberated.
The MSMT group was created last October after the disbandment of the UN Panel of Experts on DPRK, which had monitored the implementation of UN sanctions on North Korea until a Russian veto ended its mandate. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova at the time called MSMT "illegal," saying it was created by "uninvited enthusiasts bypassing the UN Security Council" who "demonstrate blatant disregard for international law."
(RT.com)
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