Being There in Ukraine

Being There in Ukraine

Being There in Ukraine

Out­rage over the alleged pres­ence of North Kore­an troops in Ukraine over­looks the pres­ence of West­ern per­son­nel. 

Donetsk,Reg.,,Ukraine,-,Mar.,21,,2023:,War,Of,Russia


Cred­it: image via Shut­ter­stock

A great deal has been made of the alleged pres­ence of 10,000 North Kore­an troops in Rus­sia. The West has judged this to be an esca­la­tion on the part of Russia—a major esca­la­tion.

“That is a major esca­la­tion by Rus­sia,” the State Depart­ment spokesman Matthew Miller said. The British For­eign Sec­re­tary David Lam­my went one “major” fur­ther, call­ing it a “major, major esca­la­tion.” Germany’s Chan­cel­lor Olaf Scholz told Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin that the inser­tion of North Kore­an troops into the war was a “grave esca­la­tion.”

This esca­la­tion was judged to be so great that, of all the hor­rors on the bat­tle­field, it was that sin­gle move that report­ed­ly tipped the scales in favor of the Biden admin­is­tra­tion grant­i­ng per­mis­sion to Ukraine to fire U.S.-supplied long-range ATACMS mis­siles deep­er into Russ­ian ter­ri­to­ry.

The Amer­i­can response mys­te­ri­ous­ly places great weight on being there. It pre­tends that the only way a country’s armed forces can par­tic­i­pate in the war is by bod­i­ly being present on the bat­tle­field. In Ukraine, the U.S. has par­tic­i­pat­ed in the war in every way but being there. The U.S. is fight­ing a proxy war in which, while Rus­sia is bod­i­ly there, the U.S. fights with Ukrain­ian bod­ies as inter­me­di­aries. The U.S. is sup­ply­ing the financ­ing, the weapons, the weapons main­te­nance, the weapons train­ing, the wargam­ing, the intel­li­gence, and the tar­get­ing. Ukrain­ian sol­diers, though, pro­vide the bod­ies doing the fight­ing and the dying. If North Korea has entered the war by send­ing bod­ies, the U.S. has long been in the war in a far more sig­nif­i­cant way by pro­vid­ing every­thing but the bod­ies.

It is not yet estab­lished, beyond the state­ments of Amer­i­can, Ukrain­ian, and South Kore­an offi­cials, that there are actu­al­ly North Kore­an troops fight­ing in Rus­sia. There may be. Or there may not be. There may be North Kore­an troops in Rus­sia for some non-com­bat role like train­ing. Or they may be fight­ing in Kursk. But there has been no inde­pen­dent evi­dence pro­vid­ed for that yet.

Rus­sia lacks motive. The U.S. says that recruit­ing North Kore­an troops shows Russia’s lack of man­pow­er and des­per­a­tion. “This is an indi­ca­tion that [Putin] may be [in even] more trou­ble than most peo­ple real­ize,” Sec­re­tary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin said. But the Russ­ian armed forces are grow­ing by 30,000 vol­un­teers a month. 10,000 North Kore­ans rep­re­sents only about ten days worth of sol­diers. Rus­sia is nei­ther des­per­ate for troops in the Don­bas, where they are rapid­ly advanc­ing, nor in Kursk, where U.S. offi­cials say they have amassed a force of tens of thou­sands of sol­diers with­out hav­ing to pull a sin­gle sol­dier out of Ukraine.

The Pen­ta­gon and NATO claim to have knowl­edge that the North Kore­an troops are elite troops, of the move­ment of those troops, and that they are dis­guised as Rus­sians. But, with all that knowl­edge, they have yet to pro­vide evi­dence, though it would seem­ing­ly be ben­e­fi­cial to call Rus­sia out and put the proof on the table.

On Novem­ber 21, The Wall Street Jour­nal report­ed that a “senior North Kore­an gen­er­al was wound­ed in a recent Ukrain­ian strike in Russia’s Kursk region.” West­ern offi­cials, though, passed on the oppor­tu­ni­ty to “dis­close how the senior North Kore­an offi­cer was wound­ed or his iden­ti­ty.”

On Novem­ber 25, the Wall Street Jour­nal report­ed that “Ukrain­ian offi­cials say 10,000 North Kore­an troops have been deployed to the Kursk region.” They then add that “no sol­diers who talked to the Jour­nal had encoun­tered them in bat­tle.”

Though there may or may not be North Kore­an troops fight­ing in Rus­sia, there are West­ern bod­ies, mil­i­tary and civil­ian, in Ukraine.

Accord­ing to Defense Depart­ment doc­u­ments leaked in March 2023, there were at that time at least 97 NATO spe­cial forces in Ukraine: 50 British, 17 Lat­vian, 15 French, 14 Amer­i­can and 1 Dutch. At the time, Nation­al Secu­ri­ty Coun­cil spokesper­son John Kir­by refused to con­firm the num­ber but con­firmed “a small U.S. mil­i­tary pres­ence” there.

And there is not only a mil­i­tary pres­ence, but an intel­li­gence pres­ence too. A recent New York Times report revealed that there were “scores” of CIA offi­cers in Ukraine. A tran­script of an inter­cept­ed Feb­ru­ary 19 con­ver­sa­tion between senior Ger­man air force offi­cials exposed that “the Eng­lish…. have sev­er­al peo­ple on-site.” Scholz has said that there are British and French on the ground in Ukraine, pro­vid­ing tar­get­ing infor­ma­tion for West­ern mis­siles. In March, Poland’s For­eign Min­is­ter Radoslaw Siko­rs­ki also con­firmed that “NATO sol­diers are already present in Ukraine.”

And in a recent pol­i­cy rever­sal, the Biden admin­is­tra­tion has autho­rized deploy­ing U.S. mil­i­tary con­trac­tors to Ukraine. The con­trac­tors will pro­vide the exper­tise to main­tain and repair com­plex U.S. sup­plied weapons sys­tems like the Patri­ot air defense sys­tem and the F‑16 fight­er jets.

And there is talk in Euro­pean cap­i­tals of push­ing the pol­i­cy of West­ern boots on the ground in Ukraine even fur­ther. Though the idea is like­ly to face strong oppo­si­tion, dur­ing his Novem­ber 11 vis­it to France, the British Prime Min­is­ter Keir Starmer and the French Pres­i­dent Emmanuel Macron dis­cussed the idea of deploy­ing troops to Ukraine. When he was asked on Novem­ber 23 if France could deploy troops to Ukraine, France’s For­eign Min­is­ter Jean-Noël Bar­rot respond­ed, “We are not rul­ing out any options.”

There is a fine line between the proxy war the U.S. is fight­ing in which they pro­vide every­thing but the troops and the phys­i­cal pres­ence of North Kore­an troops. If it turns out that there are North Kore­an troops fight­ing in Kursk, the esca­la­tion would be more one of quan­ti­ty than qual­i­ty.

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