Alaksandr Lukashenko’s visit to Pyongyang ended with the signing of a treaty on friendship and cooperation with North Korea. It was the Belarusian leader’s first such trip to the DPRK and a clear signal that two states closely aligned with Russia want to coordinate their political and economic actions even more closely.
The meeting with Kim Jong Un was marked by considerable ceremony. According to media reports, Lukashenko was welcomed with military honors, and the talks were accompanied by a message that Belarusian–North Korean relations were entering a “new stage.” Lukashenko himself stressed that both countries should deepen cooperation in a world in which, as he claimed, the great powers are increasingly violating the principles of international law.
The significance of the visit goes far beyond bilateral relations between Minsk and Pyongyang. Both Belarus and North Korea are now among the Kremlin’s closest partners. Minsk allowed Russia to use its territory during the invasion of Ukraine and agreed to the deployment of Russian tactical nuclear weapons, while Pyongyang has been supplying Moscow with arms and, according to agency reports, also soldiers supporting Russian military operations.
In this context, the treaty can be seen as another step in the construction of an informal bloc of states challenging Western dominance. Reuters noted that the symbolic dimension of the visit was especially strong: Lukashenko visited the Kumsusan mausoleum and laid flowers there on behalf of Vladimir Putin as well. The gesture showed that Minsk’s relations with Pyongyang are now tightly intertwined with Russia’s political strategy.
The economic dimension is also important. Belarusian authorities announced talks on expanding trade cooperation, and South Korean and Western analyses suggest that Pyongyang may be interested not only in political support, but also in new channels for trade and technology exchange. For North Korea, any opportunity to reduce its dependence on China while deepening ties with Russia’s camp is now of major strategic importance.
Today’s agreement fits into a broader process of tightening ties among Moscow’s authoritarian partners. After the Russia–North Korea strategic partnership agreement of 2024 and subsequent political contacts in 2025, the step now taken by Minsk shows that Belarus and North Korea want to play a more visible role in the anti-Western architecture being built around the Kremlin. This is not just a propaganda gesture, but also a sign that the war in Ukraine continues to reshape the system of international alliances.

