Joining Russia and China, North Korea sees Belarus as a European anchor, expert says

2 July, 02:16 AM
World
Kim Jong Un and Alexander Lukashenko (Photo: REUTERS)

Kim Jong Un and Alexander Lukashenko (Photo: REUTERS)

Relations between Belarus and North Korea are intensifying because Minsk represents a tool to further “undermine the international rules-based order,” Arthur Kharytonov, an expert on East and Southeast Asia and president of the Liberal Democratic League of Ukraine, told NV Radio on July 1.

“Belarus serves as a shared ‘black’ window of opportunity for Russia and China — for their transactions, various autocratic cooperation, and efforts to undermine the rules-based international order,” Kharytonov said.

“Russians boast about this, and analysts in democracies say Belarus and North Korea are becoming indistinguishable states.”

Ad

He added that Belarus and North Korea play the same role as “black jurisdictions” and as extralegal networks that allow China and Russia to “do terrible things.”

“That’s why ties between North Korea and Belarus have intensified — something Ukraine has shamefully paid little attention to, [unless it] is about how North Korea is appearing on our borders; North Korea, in reality, is really about China,” he said.

The military war may be swinging in our favor, but the information war continues.

Just as an army needs soldiers, so does a free society need its journalists to ensure that people have access to honest, trustworthy voices to understand the world around them.

For the past five years, The New Voice of Ukraine has been working tirelessly to push back against Russian narratives and defend democracy. But we cannot do it alone.

Please consider supporting us on Patreon for just $5 a month – your donation does directly to supporting journalists and ensuring that this front of the infowar says solid and defended.

Thank you.

Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Google News

Show more news