On 18 October, South Korean intelligence reported that Pyongyang planned to send up to 12,000 troops to bolster the Russian military in Ukraine, and that at least 1,500 soldiers had already arrived in Russia.
The soldiers had allegedly been issued with forged documents stating that they were Buryats and Yakuts, so Russian citizens, South Korean intelligence said. Several days later, Seoul announced that North Korea had also sent fighter pilots to Russia.
According to Ukrainian military intelligence, as many as 11,000 North Korean soldiers are already undergoing training in Russia, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Tuesday that two North Korea brigades of 6,000 soldiers each were being trained to fight with the Russian military.
Meanwhile, South Korean media reported that the country was examining the possibility of sending groups of its own military intelligence officers to Ukraine. Initially, they would not take part in military operations, but would observe the North Korean troops fighting with Russia.