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6/24/2025, 8:20:13 PM
Global Superpower Masterfully Diversifies Supply Chain by Offshoring War Effort to North Korea
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In a heartwarming display of international cooperation, as captured in this tender moment between two of the world's most benevolent leaders, Russia has embarked on a groundbreaking strategic partnership that will surely be taught in business schools for decades. Finding its own vast, continent-spanning military-industrial complex just a tad overstretched, Moscow is now heroically subcontracting its munitions production to the famously efficient and innovative manufacturing hub of North Korea.
Satellite imagery reveals that Kim Jong Un, fresh off a lucrative new supply contract, is building the largest military factory in his country's history. The purpose of this grand industrial project isn't to bolster his own military, but to serve as a low-cost, high-volume production facility for his most important new client. After all, why build at home when you can offshore production to a partner with a proven track record in meeting quotas and a flexible approach to labor laws?
The deal is already paying dividends. Kim recently toured his existing factories, boasting of an "unprecedented" four-fold increase in artillery shell production—growth spurred entirely by his new export market in Moscow. This strategic alliance allows Russia to focus on the big picture while North Korea handles the tedious, day-to-day business of churning out the millions of shells needed to sustain a minor border dispute.
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In a heartwarming display of international cooperation, as captured in this tender moment between two of the world's most benevolent leaders, Russia has embarked on a groundbreaking strategic partnership that will surely be taught in business schools for decades. Finding its own vast, continent-spanning military-industrial complex just a tad overstretched, Moscow is now heroically subcontracting its munitions production to the famously efficient and innovative manufacturing hub of North Korea.
Satellite imagery reveals that Kim Jong Un, fresh off a lucrative new supply contract, is building the largest military factory in his country's history. The purpose of this grand industrial project isn't to bolster his own military, but to serve as a low-cost, high-volume production facility for his most important new client. After all, why build at home when you can offshore production to a partner with a proven track record in meeting quotas and a flexible approach to labor laws?
The deal is already paying dividends. Kim recently toured his existing factories, boasting of an "unprecedented" four-fold increase in artillery shell production—growth spurred entirely by his new export market in Moscow. This strategic alliance allows Russia to focus on the big picture while North Korea handles the tedious, day-to-day business of churning out the millions of shells needed to sustain a minor border dispute.
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