Kim Jong Un (left) and Vladimir Putin (right).
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
  • A retired US general said resorting to asking Kim Jong Un for weapons showed Putin's desperation.
  • "It's showing that Mr. Putin is scrambling for help," retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling told CNN.
  • Russia has incurred big losses in personnel and resources since it invaded Ukraine last year.

Plans for arms negotiations between Russia and North Korea show just how desperate for help Russian President Vladimir Putin is, retired US Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling said. 

The New York Times reported on Monday that Kim was planning to travel to Russia later this month to discuss supplying weapons to Russia. The Times report, which cited several unnamed officials from the US and its allies, added that Kim was seeking food supplies for North Korea.  

Hertling was speaking with CNN's Jim Acosta on Monday and said the Kim-Putin meeting was a union between "two desperate leaders of the world's most noted pariah states."

"This will generate a lot of attention. It's showing that Mr. Putin is scrambling for help," Hertling, who previously served as the commanding general of US Army Europe, said.

Russia has incurred significant losses in military personnel and resources since it invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

US officials estimated last month that Russia's military casualties were approaching 300,000, of which as many as 120,000 were deaths and up to 180,000 were injuries.

In May, the open-source intelligence website Oryx said the Russian military had lost at least two-thirds of its tanks since the war began

Retired Maj. Gen. James "Spider" Marks, who was speaking with CNN alongside Hertling, said North Korea's weapons were unlikely to turn the tide of the war for Russia.

"Additional weapons from North Korea to Russia? Not surprising at all. They share the same type of caliber weapon systems. So it's an immediate plus-up," Marks told CNN. "But again, this is not going to strategically alter the outcome of the fight in Ukraine." 

A representative for Russia's Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours.

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