Putin sends troops to Russia's border with North Korea after China also sends soldiers to its boundary over fears Trump will attack Kim Jong-un, sparking a tidal wave of refugees
- The Russian President has sent troops and equipment to his North Korea border
- Footage shows trains carrying tanks to 11-mile frontier in Russia's south east
- Comes after China sent 150,000 troops to its own frontier with North Korea
- There are fears of a mass exodus of North Korean refugees if war breaks out
- Reinforcements: Vladimir Putin is sending troops and equipment to Russia's border with North Korea over fears the US is preparing to attack Kim Jong-un. Footage shows a train carrying Russian tanks to the border in the country's far south east
Vladimir
Putin is sending troops and equipment to Russia's border with North
Korea over fears the US is preparing to attack Kim Jong-un.
The
Russian President fears there will be a huge exodus of North Korean
refugees if his American counterpart, Donald Trump, launches military
action against Pyongyang.
It
comes days after it emerged that China is also sending 150,000
soldiers to its southern frontier to cope with the tidal wave of
North Koreans Beijing fears would flee across the border if war
breaks out.
This
morning, footage emerged appearing to show how Putin is reinforcing
his 11-mile border with North Korea by relocating troops and Бequipment.
Russia
is sending troops to its tiny border with North Korea while China is
also understood to have sent 150,000 soldiers to its southern
frontier amid fears of a refugee crisis in the event of war
A video purports to show one of three trains loaded with military equipment moving towards the 11 mile-long land frontier between Russia and the repressive state.
Another
evidently highlights military helicopter movements towards the North
Korean border and manoeuvres across rough terrain by army combat
vehicles.
Other
reports suggest there have been military moves by road as well.
There
have been concerns that if a conflict breaks out Russia could face a
humanitarian exodus from North Korea.
But
Putin has been warned, too, that in the event of a US strike on Kim
Jong-un's nuclear facilities, contamination could swiftly reach
Russia.
'Railway
trains loaded with military equipment moving towards Primorsky region
via Khabarovsk have been noticed by locals,' reported primemedia.ru
in the Russian far East - linking the development to the North Korean
crisis.
'The
movement of military equipment by different means of transport to
southern areas is being observed across Primorsky region over the
past week,' said military veteran Stanislva Sinitsyn.
Putin
(pictured) has reportedly been warned that in the event of a US
strike on Kim Jong-un's nuclear facilities, contamination could
swiftly reach Russia
Putin
(pictured) has reportedly been warned that in the event of a US
strike on Kim Jong-un's nuclear facilities, contamination could
swiftly reach Russia
'Many
relate this to the situation in the Korean peninsula.
'The
video shows artillery systems that either support troops in assault
or meet the aggressor.'
He
said: 'The movement of military equipment means that authorities of
our country are keeping up with the situation - and take appropriate
measures.'
The
movements were 'a preventive but necessary' measure.
'If
the situation worsens, especially related to military events, the
armed forces of all the neighbouring countries obviously monitor it
more closely, and we are no exception.
'It
is not the first time that North Korea has broken the peace in the
region, that's why this situation deserves attention.'
Russian
military spokesman Alexander Gordeyev declined to give the exact
reasons for the troop and equipment movements but said exercises had
recently ended in the TransBaikal region of Siberia.
However,
a number of local sources appear to believe the movements are linked
to the Korean crisis.
The
naval port of Vladivostok - where Russia has huge military forces -
is less than 100 miles from North Korea.
Expert
on the repressive state, Konstantin Asmolov, said: 'Should the US
strike with missiles at North Korea's nuclear facilities, a
radioactive cloud will reach Vladivostok within two hours.'
Asmolov,
from the Russian Far Eastern Institute, warned that in the event of
full-scale war 'hungry asylum seekers will flood into Russia.'
Russia
on Wednesday blocked UN Security Council condemnation of Pyongyang's
latest missile test - even though China, which has a major frontier
with North Korea had backed the strongly-worded statement put forward
by the United States.
The
proposed statement would have demanded that North Korea 'conduct no
further nuclear tests' and halt missile launches .
Pyongyang
carried out a failed test on Sunday.
Russia
wanted to include language contained in a previous statement
stressing the need to achieve a solution through dialogue, according
to council diplomats.
Moscow's
deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said: 'Unfortunately, we have
to admit that the risk of a serious conflict in this region has
substantially increased.'
He
called for a 'demonstration of responsibility' from all sides to
avoid escalation.
UNCONFIRMEDREPORT: North Korea has Allegedly Notified China of Imminent NuclearTest-Detonation
China
and Russia are massing troops on North Korea's border and the United
States "scrambled" a Boeing WC-135 called "Constant
Phoenix" today, from a base in Japan. The highly specialized
aircraft is designed to take air samples and analyse them for traces
of radioactivity.
Commonly
called a "Nuke Sniffer" these aircraft can monitor whether
or not Nuclear Test-Ban Treaties are being obeyed. In the case of
North Korea, they can determine with 100% certainty, if a nuclear
device has been test-detonated, even if underground.
The
Nuke Sniffer arrived at Kadena Air Base in Okinawa, Japan, early this
month amid indications that the North Koreans are preparing for
another nuclear test.
Thursday's
flight appears meant to check whether the secretive communist nation
has detonated a nuclear bomb.
North KoreaThreatens America With ‘Super-Mighty Preemptive Strike’
After
countless seemingly empty threats to destroy the US and a failed
missile test on Sunday, North Korea has upped the ante with the
warning of a ‘super-mighty preemptive strike’.
That’s
right, Kim Jong-un is taking no prisoners and has warned Americans
‘Don’t mess with us’ on North Korean state media.
President
Donald Trump has taken the dictator’s nuclear threats seriously and
insists that the patience with the reclusive nation has worn thin.
Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson said:
We’re
reviewing all the status of North Korea, both in terms of state
sponsorship of terrorism as well as the other ways in which we can
bring pressure on the regime in Pyongyang to re-engage with us, but
re-engage with us on a different footing than past talks have been
held.
While
on a tour of Asian allies, US Vice President Mike Pence repeatedly
made the point that the ‘era of strategic patience’ with North
Korea is over.
US
House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said:
Allowing
this dictator to have that kind of power is not something that
civilized nations can allow to happen.
In
recent months North Korea has refused to buckle to international
pressure and continued to develop both its nuclear and test missiles.
So
where can North Korea currently hit with their missiles? Well
according to the George C Marshall Institute here’s the maximum
hypothetical range of the four intercontinental missiles used by the
North
Trump
has sent an ‘armada’ to northern Australia to position themselves
strongly against North Korea and act as a warning.
Hopefully
Kim’s threats continue to be empty. Experts believe that North
Korea is some time away from mastering the technology for such an
attack, including miniaturizing a nuclear warhead.
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