THE haunting final diary entry written by a North Korean soldier sent to die for Vladimir Putin has been uncovered.
The 27-year-old fighter was killed by Ukrainian Special Forces in an operation inside the Kursk region of Russia.
The first diary of a North Korean soldier fighting for Russia has been found, with an entry wishing his friend a happy birthdayEast2West
First diary of North Korean soldier killed in Russia’s Kursk region while fighting for Putin revealed by Ukrainian special forcesEast2West
East2WestA fake ID provided to a different North Korean soldier by Russia that appears to have been shot through and bloodied[/caption]
The author – Jeong Kyung-hong – penned his congratulations to his comrade Song Ji Myung [or Yong] on his birthday.
It was the soldier’s heart-breaking attempt to cling onto a remnant of normality amidst the warfare hell he had been thrust into.
The entry was one of the last things he wrote before he died.
It reads: “I, having left my homeland, on unfamiliar Russian land, send birthday congratulations to my friend Song Ji-myung (Yong).
“I wish you health.
“December 9, 2024 – Jeong Kyung-hong.”
Images of the diary entry and the dead soldier were released by Ukrainian forces.
This is the first entry to be translated from the captured notebook, according to the special forces.
The dead soldier had a fake ID suggesting that he was from Kyzyl in Tuva – a republic on the southern Russian border with Mongolia – and was a welder by profession.
Russia has provided similar bogus backstories for many of the North Koreans fighting against Ukraine.
It is evident they want to hide the scale of the recruitment of Pyongyang fighters, which are thought to number 12,000.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said this week that “the number of killed and wounded North Korean soldiers in the Kursk region already exceeds 3,000 people”.
He said: “Russia is simply disposing of them in assaults.
“Why the Koreans should fight for Putin is a question that no normal person on Earth can answer.”
POV footage showing kamikaze Ukrainian drones swooping down onto North Korean soldiers was also recently released by the Ukrainian army.
It shows the soldiers scrambling and running for their lives as the drones methodically pick them off.
There are concerns that as quickly as the North Koreans are mowed down on the battlefield, Kim is intending to replace them.
South Korean intelligence last week revealed Kim’s plans to send even more troops over to Russia, and to personally inspect their training.
The Korean dictator is also thought to be mainlining huge weapons into Russia’s frontline forces.
Footage emerged recently of a train of heavy duty artillery rumbling across Russia in an early Christmas gift from Kim to Putin.
Pukguksong-2 ballistic missiles are also believed to have been on a weapons train to the battlefield, suggesting North Korea and Russia have struck a deal to expand the kinds of weapons being supplied.
NK NewsThe Pukguksong-2 ballistic missile system, thought to be part of a weapons train sent from North Korea to Russia[/caption]
A still from footage believed to show a train of heavy artillery sent from North Korea to the Russian front lineEast2West
The Pukguksong-2 missile, like many North Korean weapons, was developed in extreme secrecy, meaning we don’t know exactly what it is capable of.
Some sources have claimed it is likely to have a range of up to 2,000km.
These missiles are relatively new so, if Kim is sending them over to Russia, it could be because he sees as an opportunity to test the weapons in a real combat scenario.
Kim’s continued interventions come as a defector revealed to The Sun that anyone caught celebrating Christmas in North Korea this season could be executed on the spot.
The dictator’s thugs have been known to prosecute people for practicing religion – and Christians in particular have been persecuted.
Timothy Cho, who escaped North Korea twice and was imprisoned four times, warned Christians risk celebrating Christmas at their own peril.
East2WestA still from footage showing Ukrainian drones taking out North Korean troops in the Kursk region[/caption]
AFPKim Jong-un and Putin made a pact earlier this year to support each other in the face of what they call Western “aggression”[/caption] Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]