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- North Korea's Trash Balloons Fall Near South's Presidential Office Compound
North Korea's Trash Balloons Fall Near South's Presidential Office Compound
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Since May, over 3,000 North Korean balloons have fallen in South Korea, with some of them landing on the presidential compound in downtown Seoul. According to security officials, this is the first time the South Korean leader's office has been directly hit by one of these balloons. The balloons are believed to be carrying trash and have caused no damage, according to reports from Yonhap and other media outlets. The launches come amid a tit-for-tat Cold War-style campaign between North Korea and South Korea, with Seoul boosting its broadcasts of K-pop songs and propaganda messages across the border in response to Pyongyang's actions.
North Korea has no technology to precisely drop balloons at certain targets.
Some of [the hundreds of balloons] launched by North Korea landed on the presidential compound by coincidence.
It is a security problem since there are different defence facilities for the presidential complex.
Since the balloons fly with the wind, they fall very randomly. It's difficult to say North Korea intended to do this.
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sources
- 1.The Guardian
- 2.The Times of India
- 3.France 24
- 4.Al Jazeera
- 5.CNN
- 6.The Times
- 7.ABC News (Australia)
- 8.CTV News
- 9.Daily Sabah
- 10.Agence France-Presse
- 11.Associated Press
- 12.Korean Central News Agency
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
- 1.Ewha University
- 2.Korea Defense Network
- 3.Korea Defense Study Forum
- 4.Presidential Security Service
- 5.South Korean Defense Ministry
- 6.South Korean Presidential Security Service
- 7.US Department of Defense
- 8.US Marine Corp