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Massacre in Kursk: North Korean Troops Enter a Deadly Training Ground
Things are heating up in the conflict, and things just got incredibly serious. We're talking about a brutal, utterly pointless Russian attack near Russkaya Konopelka that should serve as a grim reminder of how brutal this whole thing has gotten. A Russian battalion (the 382nd Separate Battalion, part of the 810th Naval Infantry Brigade) sent 16 lightly armed scouts to check out Ukrainian positions—specifically, a dug-in machine-gun nest. The scouts did their job; they located the enemy, but what happened next? Pure insanity.
Their commanders ordered a direct assault on those entrenched Ukrainian forces. This was a frontal assault using only lightly armed personnel to charge directly into those very, very well-defended positions; those unforgiving Ukrainian fortifications had clearly superior weaponry. It was a total massacre. The superior Ukrainian firepower destroyed multiple units involved in this reckless charge into an easily defended position; resulting in the horrific statistic of only eight scouts making it out alive. One of these survivors spoke about it. Their story’s a shocking reminder of the costs of War and some seriously bone-headed decision making. These officers did not properly think this situation through.
Enter the North Koreans. According to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, around 8,000 North Korean troops are heading to Kursk Oblast. These will help bolster Russia's attack, potentially provide the North Korean army with badly-needed combat experience (they haven’t seen major action in 70 years). Yet there's also another reality to consider: these guys might be going straight to their deaths. And just like those hapless Russian marines, the North Koreans might be walking into the same meatgrinder; unless major and swift adjustments are immediately performed.
The Kremlin's deployment to Kursk makes some amount of strategic sense, considering Russia's recent counterattack efforts that show relatively marginal improvements against Ukrainian forces, although these counterattacks appear to only be somewhat marginally successful. Russia might only gain something very insignificant, that may become undone later: a little ground gained on the salient's west. But those brutal fights along the eastern edge? Those Ukrainians are obliterating those Russian units, like the 810th Naval Infantry Brigade, resulting in devastating losses! What would this then possibly imply for these North Korean soldiers joining this desperate, nearly futile attempt at gaining back control? The sheer loss ratio already is incredibly grim; especially during this particular operation! What will happen later, especially once these forces are committed fully into battle? The question becomes unavoidable and should be heavily considered for future planning!
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) adds yet more grim news: there is just one interpreter for every 30 North Korean soldiers! This means limited command capabilities for officers in these scenarios. There will be problems with the inability to generate and understand messages correctly in such crucial battles. Russian commanders might just be giving very simple, broad orders and basically hoping for the best – a terrifying thought. Those Russian commanders who ordered that initial assault were not interested in maintaining their forces and made incredibly terrible leadership and strategic mistakes! This lack of coherent leadership, these severe management flaws that are repeated, caused these soldiers to die pointlessly. Those same problems are about to face these newly arrived Troops, unless immediate change comes to command capabilities; without major intervention, these are the realities faced by many in the trenches of war!
North Korea supposedly really wants battle experience; thus, the conflict provides this potentially lethal opportunity for the soldiers involved! Yet those risks are undeniable: the North Koreans may just end up learning a horrific truth and learning it through immense sacrifice – learning this specific lesson could possibly require far fewer losses!
That Russian attack is an utter tragedy! Only 8 soldiers made it out of those 16, who were sent in without significant and crucial protections for soldiers in battle! That recklessness perfectly highlights that same kind of bad leadership facing those North Korean Troops.
The question regarding this Deployment isn't simply Military capability; and goes beyond simply evaluating equipment and the amount of equipment readily available and accessible. These factors affect outcomes to be sure, but what's more essential is whether they learn about that disastrous Russian command failures – which is absolutely terrible – yet there’s no reason to believe these officers would immediately start showing competent tactical improvements and far better leadership, showing a fundamental lack of understanding of troop care and leadership capabilities. We know they might need battlefield experience. But they might not get to keep that much-needed knowledge or the equipment to actually fully take advantage of such acquired expertise in warfare; which raises far deeper implications; not just regarding how ineffective certain military operations become when poorly organized; but the ethical problems inherent in using personnel recklessly and under extremely adverse circumstances!