Six DPRK officers killed near occupied Donetsk – Media.


More than 20 servicemen, including six DPRK officers, were killed as a result of a missile strike on the temporarily Russian-occupied territory near Donetsk, military intelligence sources reported.
An informant reported that three more North Korean servicemen were injured. A group of officers from the DPRK arrived there to meet with Russian colleagues.
According to reports from Russian social networks, officers from the DPRK arrived at the front as part of an experience exchange. Russian Telegram channels wrote that Russians were training military personnel preparing for assault operations, and a missile strike was carried out on the training ground.
Earlier, the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine (GUR) reported the arrival of a limited contingent of military personnel from North Korea, including engineering units, to the temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine, indicating active cooperation between Russia and North Korea. The National Resistance Center also reported that Russia plans to bring DPRK citizens to the temporarily occupied territories of Donetsk and Luhansk regions for construction work.
Russian occupiers use the territory of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZAES) as a base for training FPV drone pilots. The head of the Center for Countering Disinformation (CCD) at the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine (NSDC), Andriy Kovalenko, reported that Russian pilots, training on the territory of ZAES, actively terrorize Nikopol in the Dnipropetrovsk region, using the city with civilians as a training ground.
Read also
- Drones attacked Lygov in the Kursk region
- Russia attacks Ukraine with drones: explosions heard in which cities
- Frontline Situation as of June 20, 2025. General Staff Summary
- Russia struck an apartment building in Sumy with a drone: one injured
- In one of the directions of the front, the Russian Federation is preparing for assaults: details from the Armed Forces of Ukraine
- The GUR refuted the enemy's fakes about prisoner exchanges