N. Korean leadership will attend May 9 celebrations in Moscow - Lavrov


great patriotic war Russia

© RIA Novosti/Alexander Vilf

Parade marking the 69th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War, on Moscow's Red Square.



The North Korean leadership will come to Moscow in May for the celebration of victory in World War II, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has announced. If Kim Jong-un pays a visit in person, this would be his first foreign trip as head of state.

Lavrov, however, didn't specify if it was Kim Jong-un who had accepted the invitation.


Earlier, South Korea's Unification Ministry explained to the Yonhap news agency that the word "leader" could also mean Kim Yong-nam, the nominal head of state.


The Kremlin invited 68 world leaders to participate in Moscow's celebrations of the 70th anniversary of victory over the Nazi Germany in World War II, Lavrov said on Tuesday. Twenty-six have already confirmed their visits. The heads of UNESCO and the Council of Europe have also said they will come to Moscow.



"Among those who have confirmed they will attend the coming events are Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the presidents of South Africa, Mongolia and Vietnam, and the leaders of Cuba and North Korea," Lavrov said. "As for the participation of European leaders, this is being influenced by current US actions and aggressive forces inside the EU."



But a number of European leaders have chosen to participate - among them Greece, Cyprus, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, Macedonia, Montenegro and Norway.

"The decision by German Chancellor Angela Merkel to come to Moscow will particularly help to undermine the anti-Russian campaign," Lavrov said. "In which particular way she will participate [in celebrations] is still to be determined," he said.

Russia has also invited 16 foreign military units to take part in the May 9 Victory Parade in Moscow, Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu said. Nine of them have confirmed they will be taking part.

15,000 soldiers will march across the Red Square in 2015, Shoigu said, adding it was 50 percent increase from the previous anniversary in 2010.


All over Russia more than 78,500 people will take part in the Victory Day parades and almost 2,000 items of military equipment will be put on display.





Comment: Inviting North Korea to the Moscow May celebrations is typical of the Russian approach to diplomacy. You can only reach compromises with adversaries (perhaps even turn them into friends) by actually talking to them. Dmitry Orlov said it well:

There's a difference to how the Russians approach the world and how the Americans approach the world. So, for instance, Americans like to threaten. If you don't do this, then we will do X, Y and Z. That's a typical American behavior.


That's not something that the Russians would ever do because they don't threaten, they just act because if you threaten, then you take away the element of surprise which is very important. The other thing is Americans refuse to talk to their enemies, they won't negotiate with terrorists, they won't do X, Y and Z and can't be reasoned with at all. You can just listen to them and do what they say or they'll bomb you whereas the Russians always talk to their enemies. Russia keeps the channels of communication open.



The channels of communication with China in particular, have been very busy. These two countries complement each other very well in terms of geographic proximity, skills and resources. Together they create a formidable partnership. Each country also has its own set of economic relationships with many other countries around the world. Welding them together is going to leave the psychopathic western elites out in the economic cold.

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