In May, North Korea responded by sending its own giant balloons back south – containing trash, soil, pieces of paper and ...
This is the second time one of North Korea's trash balloons fell inside the South Korean Presidential Office Compound. MORE: South Korea threatens military response to North Korean 'trash balloons ...
Any resumption of trash balloon launches by North Korea would likely prompt South Korea to respond, possibly with anti-North Korean loudspeaker broadcasts or live-fire exercises along their ...
THE North is launching more balloons believed to be carrying trash southward, South Korea’s military said, the latest in a series of border barrages that have ignited a tit-for-tat propaganda war.
South Korea's military said Thursday it has never considered staging artillery strikes against North Korea to respond to its launches of trash-carrying balloons. The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS ...
The bags attached to those balloons contained "mostly paper waste", the military said ... adding the response "all depends on North Korea's actions". South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said ...
A North Korean "trash balloon" landed inside the South Korean presidential compound in the capital Seoul on Thursday amid rising tensions between the two neighbors. Around 3,000 North Korea ...
a day after the South Korean military resumed loudspeaker broadcasts on the inter-Korean border for the first time in six years in response to North Korea’s trash balloon offensive.
The Defense Ministry claimed that the military had not considered using artillery strikes on the launch sites of North Korea’s trash-carrying balloons floated into South Korea last year and ...