MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Delivering a speech at a plenary session of the Russian Energy Week forum on Wednesday, Putin said that Moscow is more concerned about the DPRK nuclear problem than the United States because Russia and North Korea have a shared border.
“The nuclear test range is located on the Korean territory, 200 kilometers away from the Russian border … This concerns us no less than you [the United States], even more,” Putin said.
The president went on by stating that belligerent rhetoric around the North Korean nuclear and missile issue is unacceptable as it is unknown whether a disarming strike would hit the target, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Wednesday.
"This belligerent rhetoric, it is dangerous. Let's be frank. Is it possible to deliver a global disarming strike? Yes. Will it reach the target? It is unknown. Because no one knows for sure where and what they have there (North Korea)… This is a closed country," Putin said, noting that those who try to talk to Pyongyang from a position of strength only consolidate the North Korean regime.
Putin also said Russia has almost no trade and economic relations with North Korea, there are no oil supply routes, he added. According to the Russian president, the country supplies some 40,000 tonnes of oil per quarter.
"As far as our trade and economic relations go, I said this recently very publicly – they are almost non-existent," Putin said at the Russian Energy Week. "This is nothing. There is no route there."
The situation on the Korean Peninsula has become aggravated due to Pyongyang's missile launches and nuclear tests. The most recent one was conducted on September 15, when North Korea launched a ballistic missile, which flew over Japan before falling into the northern Pacific some 20 minutes after the launch.
The UN Security Council has adopted a number of resolutions condemning Pyongyang's development of nuclear weapons. On September 11, the UN Security Council unanimously adopted its toughest resolution yet against North Korea over its latest nuclear test and repeated missile launches.