The head of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff said that it is not known how many weapons North Korea will give to the Russian Federation and when exactly this will happen.
North Korea will probably increase its supply of artillery ammunition to Russia, but it is unlikely to make much of a difference. This is what the head of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley, said in an Associated Press (AP) report on Saturday, September 16.
He said the recent meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong In and Russian President Vladimir Putin is likely to “result in North Korea providing 152mm Soviet-era artillery shells to Moscow.”
At the same time, he emphasized that it is now unclear how many of these shells there are and how soon the DPRK will transfer them to Russia.
“Will it make a big difference? I’m skeptical about it,” he said.
Milley added that while he doesn’t want to cut arms aid, he “doubts it will be decisive.”
Earlier, Mark Milley said that Ukraine, due to weather conditions, has another 30-45 days for a counter-offensive.
Meanwhile, the head of the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, Kirill Budanov, assured that time will not stop in the counter-offensive of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
Source: korrespondent
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