Ahead of the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s meeting with President Vladimir Putin on April 26 in Russia’s far east, Putin’s assistant Yury Ushakov, credited Pyongyang with the current “somewhat stabilized” situation on Korean peninsula. Speaking at a press briefing in Moscow, Ushakov said the stabilization “became possible” thanks to DPRK’s “initiative to renounce nuclear missile testing and closing a nuclear test site.”
Polygraph: Is North Korea responsible for stability, as Kremlin claims?
People walk on a bridge across the Moskva river with the Kremlin in the background on Feb. 17, 2019 in Moscow.