Summary

North Korean troops sent to Russia to support its war in Ukraine remain sidelined due to poor training and logistical issues, according to Western officials.

These soldiers are expected to relieve Russian troops in secondary positions to free up forces for frontline battles in regions like Kursk, though they are unlikely to see combat in eastern Ukraine.

The war continues to take a massive toll, with over 700,000 Russian soldiers killed or wounded since February 2022, while both sides face challenges replacing losses.

Russia’s reliance on poorly trained recruits and prison conscripts highlights its growing manpower issues.

  • pornpornporn@lemmynsfw.com
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    12 days ago

    there’s probably a good amount of them that have played FPS games. That experience can be used as a launching board into proper training.

    1- rush into the enemies

    2- get shot in the face

    3- call your squadmates a racial slur

    Yeah I don’t think online FPS strategies would work very well in a real war

    • hesusingthespiritbomb@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Well it’s more like

      1. Use a device that is similar to a PlayStation controller to command a drone to rush into enemies
      2. Keep that drone alive long enough for it to crash into enemy armor and explode
      3. Call your enemies a racial slur
      4. Post the entire thing to a sketchy streaming service set to techno music.

      So yeah there’s actually a non-zero amount of commonality there.

    • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Lol your 12&3 is a pretty good summary of Russian military history. The thing about Russians is there’s always more Russians.

    • tacosplease@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      You joke, but Call of Duty improved my laser tag abilities considerably. Not to say laser tag equals war, but some strategies and concepts carry over.

      I bet the North Koreans are struggling with things like “left click the mouse see to select what you want. Right click the mouse to bring up an options menu.” “No. Don’t point the mouse at the screen. Just move it around on top of this little pad. See the arrow moving when you do that?”