When presented with reality that disproves your preconceived worldview, you change the subject. You said there are no DPRK soldiers in Ukraine. I'll present more proof here. Acknowledging or denying this reality is your choice.
As far as NATO troops in Ukraine go: https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2023/feb/06/tweets/nato-and-us-troops-and-trainers-have-not-died-ukra/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/01/19/ukraine-kursk-north-korean-soldiers/
Shows images of captured documents in Korean that Ukrainian soldiers showed WAPO's reporters.
"Ukrainian soldiers Vitalii and Volodymyr, 35, eventually identified one soldier they believed they could capture. They shot and wounded him, then Vitalii dragged him to the Ukrainian position, where a medic stabilized him. For four hours, they kept him alive, hoping he would be their first North Korean prisoner of war.
But as the Ukrainians retreated later that day, the North Koreans attacked again. In the course of a chaotic withdrawal under drones, artillery shells and gunfire, their prisoner and one of the Ukrainian soldiers were killed. Post reporters viewed images of the body, which the troops examined and passed on to Ukrainian authorities."
"Ukrainian troops are taking risks to capture North Koreans on the battlefield to prove their involvement, but Russian and North Korean troops are doing everything possible to hide and eliminate wounded North Korean soldiers, South Korean officials say.
“Our combatants, who saw other comrades fall, ruthlessly killed those attempting to surrender,” say documents retrieved from an unnamed North Korean army officer by Ukrainian forces after he had been killed in combat. The documents were published by the Human Rights Foundation’s Korea desk, which has been assisting Ukraine’s special forces in analyzing documents recovered from North Korean soldiers.
North Korean troops have also chosen death over capture, Ukrainian soldiers say, carrying a grenade with which to blow themselves up or, in rare cases, a shiv with which to cut their arteries. One North Korean detained by Ukrainians was taken alive before but, heavily wounded, he died during transportation, according to Ukrainian officials.
“Their motivation is at a high level,” said Green. “Their physical training is at a high level, and their readiness to die is the same.”
In January, Green’s group devised the operation to capture a North Korean prisoner.
For several days, they studied the movements of around eight North Koreans stationed in a forest in Kursk. After carefully planning the mission and selecting routes in and out, the Ukrainian team dressed in camouflage to blend in with late-winter foliage and set out at midday on Jan. 9.
The Ukrainians picked their way across a minefield—the shortest route—and ambushed the North Koreans, who quickly retreated. “They understood they couldn’t fight us,” Green said.
That is just how the Ukrainians had planned it. Now, they could sweep the area for any wounded soldiers. At first, they didn’t notice the man lying quietly on the cold ground among the trees.
Once they spotted him, Green approached. The North Korean held up a grenade, the Ukrainian officer recalled, as if to threaten to blow himself up.
Green tried out the hastily learned Korean phrases, then switched to Russian: “Everything is all right. I’m helping.”....
"Russian howitzers began raining an unusually intense bombardment of shells at the Ukrainians and their captive as they moved through the woods.
Green and his men carried their prisoner across planks of wood laid atop Russian barbed wire. They ran with him through the minefield, then scattered to buildings and basements to await evacuation as artillery shells exploded behind them.
The Russians “used all the resources they had at that moment, simply to get rid of both the Korean and us,” Green said.
The Ukrainians put their prisoner in a basement where bodies of deceased North Koreans lay uncollected. The man, who had short black hair and a thin mustache, appeared in shock from the pain.
Apparently fearing torture, he wouldn’t allow himself to be injected with Nalbuphine, a strong painkiller, until a man from the special forces showed him in gestures that they were just trying to move aside his clothes to administer the dose. Seeing his dead comrades, the North Korean asked for a cigarette.
The artillery continued at a rate that surprised even Green, who knows the area and Russian tactics well.
As soon as there was a five-minute break in the bombardment, the evacuation vehicle sped toward the pickup point. Green and his men loaded the North Korean aboard, and the vehicle raced away. The special forces had completed their task.
Later, a questioner asked the North Korean man, lying on a bunk bed with a bandaged hand, “Do you know where you are?” He shook his head. “Do you know that you’re fighting against Ukraine?” The prisoner again shook his head.
The interrogation was shown on a video posted by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Jan. 12 announcing that two North Korean prisoners had been captured. The second one, captured separately by paratroopers of the 95th Air Assault Brigade, was also shown in the video, with his head bandaged and jaw badly swollen. He didn’t speak, apparently unable.
The North Korean taken by Green’s team, a rifleman who turns 20 years old this year, claimed he believed he was on a training exercise. Later, in the same video, he described watching compatriots die in an attack in early January."