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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 12:59 UTC
  • UTC12:59
  • EDT08:59
  • GMT13:59
  • CET14:59
  • JST21:59
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← The MonexusCulture

Russia's Duma Chief Commemorates Soviet Soldiers Who Fought for Korea's 1945 Liberation

Vyacheslav Volodin laid a commemorative wreath honouring Soviet troops who fought in Korea during the final weeks of the Second World War — a ceremony that arrives as Russia and North Korea deepen a military partnership forged on the battlefields of Ukraine.

Vyacheslav Volodin laid a commemorative wreath honouring Soviet troops who fought in Korea during the final weeks of the Second World War — a ceremony that arrives as Russia and North Korea deepen a military partnership forged on the battle The Guardian / Photography

On 26 April 2026, Vyacheslav Volodin, Chairman of the Russian State Duma, placed a commemorative wreath at a memorial honouring Soviet soldiers who fought to liberate the Korean peninsula during the final weeks of the Second World War. The ceremony took place on a date that carries no obvious significance in the Russian official calendar — neither a Victory Day nor an anniversary of the August 1945 campaign itself. The choice of timing is not accidental.

The Soviet Union entered the war against Japan on 8 August 1945, and Soviet forces advanced rapidly through Manchuria and into northern Korea in the days before Japan's surrender on 2 September. That campaign left the peninsula divided at the 38th parallel, a boundary that hardened into one of the Cold War's most durable fault lines. The Soviet soldiers Volodin honoured were participants in a campaign whose consequences — the division of Korea, the Korean War, and the decades of confrontation that followed — outlasted the Soviet state itself.

The ceremony arrives at a moment when the historical resonance carries unmistakable contemporary weight. North Korea has become one of Russia's most consequential strategic partners since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. North Korean munitions have flowed into Russian hands; North Korean military personnel have been deployed alongside Russian forces on Ukrainian territory. For Moscow, a partnership built partly on reciprocal vulnerability to Western sanctions — and to what the Kremlin frames as Western encirclement — finds a useful parallel in the shared experience of the 1945 struggle against a common adversary.

The wreath-laying is part of a pattern. Russian official commemoration has steadily expanded its geographic scope in recent years, incorporating sites and episodes — Soviet involvement in Korea, Soviet operations in Manchuria, Soviet casualties in the final push against Japan — that received limited attention during the Yeltsin and early Putin years when the dominant narrative centred on the European theatre and the siege of Leningrad. The expanded geographic scope reflects a strategic choice: a broader地图 of sacrifice appeals to a wider coalition of post-Soviet states and aligned governments, including North Korea, which retains a direct institutional link to the 1945 campaign through the Kim dynasty's founding mythology.

North Korean state media, for its part, has enthusiastically reciprocated. Pyongyang's official outlets have characterised the current partnership with Russia as a natural continuation of the anti-fascist struggle of the 1940s, a framing that dovetails with North Korea's own founding narrative built around resistance to Japanese colonialism. The shared invocation of 1945 serves both sides: it legitimises the present alignment in historical terms, and it positions the bilateral relationship as something older and deeper than the transactional alliance of convenience it largely is.

There is a counter-read. Critics of expanded Soviet-memory diplomacy argue that the Kremlin's turn to anti-Japanese and anti-fascist rhetoric is largely instrumental — a means of countering Western narratives about the 2022 invasion of Ukraine without altering the fundamental logic of Russian military action. The ceremonies are real; the question is whether they signify a durable strategic convergence or merely a convenient overlap of interests that may narrow as the conflict in Ukraine evolves. The sources available do not contain sufficient material to determine whether the ceremony reflects a deeper institutionalisation of the Russia–North Korea partnership or a more opportunistic exercise in historical framing.

The stakes of the latter interpretation are significant. If Moscow is investing in historical narratives as a structural pillar of the relationship — rather than a temporary rhetorical device — the Russia–North Korea partnership becomes more durable and more difficult for Western diplomacy to unwind. Pyongyang's continued provision of manpower and materiel to Russian operations in Ukraine depends on calculations of mutual benefit; the ceremonial layer adds a dimension of ideological and historical solidarity that complicates any effort to peel either side away through conventional incentives or sanctions pressure. The wreath placed by the Duma Chairman is a modest gesture on its own terms. In context, it is also a statement of intent.

This publication noted that wire coverage of the ceremony was brief; the framing here reflects the geopolitical architecture surrounding Russia–North Korea relations rather than the domestic political dimension, which the available sources do not address.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/zvezdanews
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire