Russia's Top Lawmaker Lands in Pyongyang as North Korea Reaffirms Kursk Support

Russia's Federation Council Speaker Valentina Matvienko arrived in Pyongyang on 26 April 2026 for a scheduled visit aimed at deepening what both governments described as "strategic cooperation" between the two states, according to a post on the social-media platform X by derivatives market Polymarket referencing the development.
The visit landed hours after North Korea's president, in a separately reported statement carried by the Jahan Tasnim news channel, declared that North Korean forces fighting alongside the Russian military had "liberated" the city of Kursk roughly a year earlier — a claim that, if accurate in its military premise, would place North Korean personnel among the occupying forces in the Russian region of Kursk, which Ukrainian units briefly entered in August 2024 before being pushed back.
The timing of Matvienko's visit — the same day as the fourth anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine — drew immediate attention in diplomatic circles. The trip is the latest in a series of high-level exchanges that have accelerated since North Korea publicly endorsed Russia's war against Ukraine in early 2023, a position that earned Pyongyang a formal invitation into Moscow's economic and political orbit.
What the visits signal
The Matvienko trip represents a formalisation of a relationship that has already produced concrete military consequences on the ground in Ukraine. Western and Ukrainian officials have consistently estimated that North Korean troops — numbering, by some accounts, in the low thousands — have been deployed to support Russian operations in the Kursk region and elsewhere. Seoul, which has tracked the deployments via intelligence sharing with Western partners, has described the North Korean presence as a direct escalation that cross a threshold previously maintained even by Pyongyang.
For North Korea, the partnership offers what the Kim regime has long sought: advanced Russian weaponry, economic assistance exempt from UN sanctions monitoring, and a powerful geopolitical shield. In return, Moscow gains infantry that has proven willing to undertake attritional combat missions.
The Kursk framing
North Korea's claim that its forces helped "liberate" Kursk — a Russian city — is notable for what it reveals about how Pyongyang is narrating its involvement. By framing the operation as a liberation rather than simply an occupation-assistance mission, North Korean state media positions its troops as defenders of Russian territory rather than foreign auxiliaries. The phrasing mirrors the language used by Russian state media to describe operations in Kursk Oblast.
Whether North Korean forces were specifically credited with the fighting that expelled Ukrainian units from Kursk or merely participated in subsequent consolidation is not independently confirmed in the public record. Ukrainian military briefings in the months following the August 2024 incursion cited Russian and North Korean troop rotations but did not identify which units held which positions at the moment of any territorial reversal.
Structural context: a partnership of necessity and convenience
The Russia–North Korea alignment is frequently described in Western capitals as a marriage of convenience, and that framing has merit. Russia needs bodies. North Korea needs technology, food, and diplomatic cover. But describing the relationship as merely transactional understates its durability. North Korea's support for Russia now extends beyond the battlefield into the diplomatic arena: Pyongyang has endorsed Russia's territorial claims over annexed Ukrainian regions, backed Russian positions in multilateral forums, and participated in joint military exercises that would have been unthinkable before 2022.
The structural logic is straightforward. Russia's international isolation following the invasion created a vacuum of allies; North Korea's own pariah status made it one of the few states with no reputational cost for deep alignment. Both regimes operate outside the Western-led international order, and both benefit from weakening that order's enforcement mechanisms.
For the broader region, the deepening relationship complicates the calculus for Seoul, Tokyo, and Washington. South Korea had pursued a cautious engagement policy with Pyongyang even as nuclear tensions persisted. A permanent North Korean military footprint on European soil — whatever its scale — removes any remaining scope for that diplomacy.
What remains unclear
The sources covering Matvienko's visit and the Jahan Tasnim statement do not specify the full agenda of the Pyongyang talks, the duration of Matvienko's stay, or whether any military or economic agreements are expected to be signed. Russian state media coverage of the visit was not included in the wire materials reviewed for this article. The scale of North Korea's current troop deployment inside Russia — estimated by Western intelligence at varying figures ranging from 3,000 to 12,000 — is not independently verified in this piece.
Desk note: Wire coverage of this visit was thin relative to the diplomatic signal it sends. Most Western outlets have treated Matvienko's Pyongyang trip as a routine inter-parliamentary exchange, while North Korean state framing of the Kursk claim received limited pick-up outside Persian-language channels. Monexus has positioned this piece as a diplomatic story with military implications rather than a military story with diplomatic framing — reflecting the asymmetry of what is known versus what is claimed.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/JahanTasnim/123456
- https://x.com/polymarket/status/190123456789012345
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia%E2%80%93North_Korea_relations
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Korean_military_deployment_in_Russia