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Peter Dickinson: Putin’s North Korean escalation is a direct result of Western weakness

#Opinion
November 5,2024 413
Peter Dickinson: Putin’s North Korean escalation is a direct result of Western weakness

by Peter Dickinson, UK journalist and researcher, editor of Atlantic Council’s UkraineAlert service and publisher of Business Ukraine Magazine and Lviv Today magazine

Source: Atlantic Council

Pentagon officials and NATO chief Mark Rutte have this week confirmed that thousands of North Korean troops are currently in the process of joining Russia’s war against Ukraine. The arrival of North Korean soldiers on the battlefields of Europe is an historically unprecedented event that represents a major escalation in the largest European invasion since World War II. Nevertheless, the Western reaction has so far been strikingly muted, with plenty of condemnation but little attempt to impose any actual costs on Moscow or Pyongyang. This lack of resolve is exactly what Vladimir Putin was counting on.

Ever since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine first began more than a decade ago with the 2014 seizure of Crimea, the West’s response to Russian aggression has been defined by a crippling fear of escalation that has only served to embolden Putin further. During the initial armed takeover of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula, Western leaders refused to intervene and urged Kyiv not to resist for fear of sparking a larger conflict. Instead, the international community limited itself to imposing a series of modest economic sanctions. Understandably, Moscow interpreted this as a tacit green light to go further. Weeks later, Kremlin forces started a separatist war in eastern Ukraine that would simmer and flare for the following eight years, setting the stage for the full-scale Russian invasion of February 2022.

The West’s failure to hold Russia accountable for the 2014 invasion of Ukraine revealed a deep-seated desire to avoid direct confrontation with the Kremlin that continues to shape Western policy toward the war in Ukraine. Putin has skillfully exploited this fear of escalation, employing a combination of nuclear blackmail and talk of Russian red lines to intimidate Western leaders and convince them to limit their military support for Kyiv while imposing restrictions on Ukraine’s ability to defend itself. As a result, the Ukrainian army finds itself forced to wage war against a military superpower with one hand tied behind its back.

Persistent displays of Western weakness over the past ten years have encouraged Putin to believe he has little to fear from further escalation. On the first day of the full-scale invasion, he claimed that Russia had no intention of annexing any more Ukrainian lands. Within six months, however, he was comparing himself to Peter the Great and declaring that twenty percent of Ukraine was now “forever” Russian. As anticipated, Western leaders voiced their disapproval at this naked imperialism but stopped short of adopting any measures that might cause the Russian dictator to think twice before escalating again.

North Korea’s deepening involvement in the Russian invasion now confirms the folly of the West’s failed escalation management policies. When North Korea began supplying Russia with artillery shells in late 2022, the West took no action. A year later, the first reports started to emerge of Russia launching North Korean ballistic missiles at Ukrainian targets. By early October 2024, Western intelligence sources were claiming that North Korea was now providing half of all the shells being used by Russia in Ukraine. Sending troops to fight in Ukraine was the logical next step for the Hermit Kingdom.

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Cover: Ng Han Guan/AP Photo

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