N Korea: Kim Jong Un calls President Putin ‘closest comrade’

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has sent a birthday message to Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling him his “closest comrade”.

Kim, congratulating Putin on his 72nd birthday, added that relations between both countries would be raised to a new level.

Relations between Pyongyang and Moscow have deepened since the start of the Ukraine war – in a move that has worried the West.Separately on Tuesday, Kim said Pyongyang would speed up steps to make his country a military super power with nuclear weapons.

According to Yonhap News quoting North Korean state media KCNA, Kim praised relations between both countries, saying they had become “invincible and eternal”, since Putin’s visit to Pyongyang in June.”Meetings and comradely ties between us… will make a positive contribution to further consolidating the eternal foundation of the DPRK-Russia friendship,” he added, referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The relationship between North Korea and Russia goes back decades – to Stalin and Kim Il-sung, the current Kim’s grandfather.

The Soviet Union supported North Korea in its early days with weapons and technology, and Pyongyang has never wanted to completely rely on China – which it does not fully trust.

Earlier this year, Putin and Kim signed an agreement pledging that they would help each other in the event of “aggression” against either country – though it was unclear what would constitute aggression.

Kim has been accused of helping Russia in the war against Ukraine by supplying it with weapons in exchange for economic and technological assistance.