SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed Tuesday to boost the country’s nuclear ...
South Korea’s military has warned that it may respond with force if North Korea’s ongoing use of “trash balloons” causes any casualties.
Mounds of wastepaper and filth will soon be scattered over the border areas and the interior of the ROK [South Korea] and it ...
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said that over 5,500 trash balloons had been floated into the South since May ...
On Friday, an inflatable balloon carrying trash landed in the parking lot of the Seoul government complex, a situation ...
To react with a strength-against-strength approach not only plays into Pyongyang’s hands, but could set us on an irreversible course toward the worst-case-scenario ...
What Happened: Incheon International Airport, one of Asia’s busiest, faced temporary shutdowns after a balloon was spotted ...
The U.S. side reaffirmed its commitment to defend South Korea, reiterating that any North Korean nuclear attack against the ...
With public safety at stake, the South’s response could include targeted actions against the balloons themselves, observers ...
The following is the first summary of major stories moved by Yonhap News Agency on Tuesday. SEOUL -- President Yoon Suk Yeol ...
The country said it would take “decisive military action” if anyone is killed by the wave of trash-carrying balloons being ...
Over the weekend, North Korea launched a further batch of balloons carrying waste across the border, causing chaos in the ...