Main news content: South Korea’s Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back disclosed in parliament on Monday that North Korea is “likely receiving various technologies” from Russia to advance its submarine program. This intelligence highlights a dangerous deepening of the Pyongyang-Moscow military nexus, which Seoul’s agencies estimate has seen North Korea send over 10,000 troops to Ukraine in exchange for critical aid. This cooperation is directly fueling North Korea’s goal of developing Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM)-capable vessels and, critically, the parallel pursuit of nuclear-powered submarines, a platform that would grant Pyongyang a formidable and covert second-strike nuclear capability.
The potential transfer of advanced submarine or missile technology constitutes a major escalation in global proliferation networks. Experts warn that this collaboration not only strengthens North Korea’s nuclear deterrent but also severely undercuts international sanctions designed to contain the regime’s weapons programs. Such a development would fundamentally shift the military balance in Northeast Asia, posing a direct threat to the security interests of the U.S. and South Korea and complicating diplomatic efforts to manage both defiant regimes.In response, Washington has fiercely condemned Russia, accusing it of violating U.N. Security Council resolutions and demanding an immediate cessation of all arms-related cooperation. While Moscow officially denies transferring military technology, claiming its ties remain within “legal frameworks,” the recent high-level defense exchanges suggest a partnership that has moved far beyond rhetoric. As Pyongyang celebrates the alliance as a means of “mutual resistance against imperialist powers,” analysts anticipate intensified intelligence surveillance on North Korea’s naval facilities, particularly the Sinpo shipyard, as Seoul and Washington prepare for a new phase of strategic defiance from the growing Moscow-Pyongyang axis.



