A group of nearly 200 North Korean defectors living in South Korea is pushing to deploy to Ukraine so they can launch a psychological warfare campaign against their former comrades, now reportedly assembling in Russia.
Drawing on their military backgrounds, this band of ex-soldiers – each with seven to 10 years of military experience – aim to leverage their insider knowledge of North Korea’s military to disrupt and demoralise the troops sent to fight in Ukraine, exploiting their psychological vulnerabilities.

“We are all military veterans who understand North Korea’s military culture and psychological state better than anyone else,” Ahn Chan-il, a 69-year-old defector and member of the group, told This Week in Asia.

Ahn, who leads the World Institute for North Korea Studies and also serves as chair professor emeritus at Open Cyber University of Korea, underlined the ex-soldiers’ readiness to deploy.

“We’re ready to go wherever needed to work as psychological warfare agents – through loudspeaker broadcasts, distributing leaflets, and even acting as interpreters,” he said.

A woman in Seoul looks at a North Korean propaganda leaflet denouncing South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, apparently carried over the border by balloon last week. Photo: Reuters

A woman in Seoul looks at a North Korean propaganda leaflet denouncing South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, apparently carried over the border by balloon last week. Photo: Reuters

Lee Min-bok, another key figure in the initiative, has taken his plea directly to the Ukrainian government. He has posted an open letter to Ukraine’s embassy in Seoul, appealing to President Volodymyr Zelensky for permission to assist in rescuing North Korean soldiers, whom he described as “cannon fodder”.

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