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https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
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Ehhhh.
On one hand, yes. North Korea plays Russia against China, and during this war, North Korea can provide things that Russia really wants, so China probably has less direct pull in North Korea than normal.
But...the flip side of that is that China's influence over Russia is also probably at an all-time high, in part as a result of this conflict.
And my guess is that the China-Russia effect is much-more-likely to be a long-lived effect than the Russia-North-Korea effect, due to things like economic and technical ties being established. Just the other day, I read an article talking about how it was expected that North Korea's relationship with Russia would probably do quite a bit to head back in the direction of normal after the war.
My expectation is that China can probably afford to play the long game.
It's a bit of an exaggeration right now, but I see this as two Chinese client states co-operating.
With how dependent Russia is on China it won't be much of an exaggeration for long