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this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2024
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Where did they find them? Did they just call north Korea and offer a better deal?
It's from outside the EU, and the specifics weren't announced. Probably someone that operates NATO-caliber artillery, which doesn't narrow it down much.
I'd guess that it might be from Turkey. Apparently Turkey was willing to sell some rounds, but Greece was opposed because they didn't want money going to Turkish military contractors. Could be that Greece was willing to drop objections.
This is from a week ago:
https://greekcitytimes.com/2024/02/23/greek-veto-blocks-european-financing-for-turkish-drones-and-artillery-for-ukraine/
EDIT:
Turkey, South Korea, and South Africa were mentioned in this article as possibilities a month ago:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/czech-republic-ready-to-supply-ukraine-with-artillery-ammunition-pending-partner-funding/ar-BB1irsFX
I don't know if Czechia actually mentioned them, or if that's just the author guessing as to viable sources.
If it's South Korea, it's going to have to be a ring trade -- like, EU member sends some of their emergency reserves, South Korea backfills the hole. That is, as I understand it, what the US did -- South Korea has constitutional restrictions that would prevent providing aid to Ukraine, but has been okay with doing a ring trade, which has a similar effect.
"I know a guy, who met a guy, that may or may not have 800,000 artillery shells laying around."
Hey, I'm surprised you know about that! It seemed like a domestic issue over here
I mean, you can make a case that it was an armed attack on a NATO member's soil.
My impression that it is believed that it was supposed to actually blow up in Bulgaria or something, and there was some sort of mix-up that caused the shipment to be detonated when it did, but that doesn't change the objection.
155mm is a NATO standard, NK uses Soviet 152mm. But it's quite possibly from South Korea, at least a part of it.