- home
- article
- North Korea's Trash Balloons Continue to Fall on South Korean Presidential Compound
North Korea's Trash Balloons Continue to Fall on South Korean Presidential Compound
ai generated text
Recent incidents involving North Korea have seen the country release balloons carrying trash into South Korea, with the latest incident occurring on Thursday at the presidential compound in central Seoul. This marks the second time in five months that Pyongyang has engaged in such behavior, with the previous instance occurring in late May. The trash released by North Korea has reportedly carried no dangerous items.
Whether the balloons have GPS or not, it's all about launching them in large numbers and hitting the right altitude based on wind direction and speed, so that they can ride those winds to travel.
While some media are saying the accuracy of the balloons has improved, that improved accuracy isn't because they equipped them with some sort of guidance system, but rather because it's the season when winds blow southward.
North-South Korea Conflict
- North Korea fires flurry of short-range ballistic missiles into the Sea of Japan
- South Korea fires warning shots after North Korean soldiers cross border
- North Korea fires several ballistic missiles into the sea as South Korea begins annual drills with the US
sources
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Russian Foreign Policy
- 3.Chinese Foreign Policy
- 4.Intercontinental Ballistic Missile
- 5.Nuclear Weapons
- 6.Japanese Foreign Policy
- 7.North-South Korea Conflict
- 8.South Korea Foreign Policy
- 9.South Korean politics
- 10.North Korea Nuclear Posture
- 11.Conflict
countries
organizations
persons
- 1.Kim Keon-Hee
- 2.Dong-A Ilbo
- 3.Yoon Suk-Yeol
- 4.Kim Jong-Un
- 5.Andrzej Duda
- 6.Chang Ho-Jin
- 7.Donald Trump
- 8.Kim Yo Jong
- 9.Lee Choon Geun
- 10.Lee Jin-Man
technicals
- 1.Cold War