Home Asia North Korea Sends Trash Filled Balloons To South Korea

North Korea Sends Trash Filled Balloons To South Korea

Trash balloon

North Korea has intensified its unconventional campaign by sending hundreds of trash-filled balloons across the border into South Korea. Over 900 such balloons have been launched in the past three days, Seoul’s military said. This marks the latest round of provocations between the two countries.

Balloons Carry Waste, No Immediate Danger

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed that around 190 balloons were sent late Friday. Most landed in Seoul and northern Gyeonggi province. The attached bags contained paper and plastic waste, which posed no immediate threat to public safety.

North Korea has sent nearly 5,000 such balloons since May. They launch it as retaliation for similar actions by South Korean activists. The activists have been launching propaganda balloons northwards, prompting the North’s response.

Seoul Takes Action

In response, Seoul suspended a military agreement aimed at reducing tensions with Pyongyang. The South also restarted propaganda broadcasts from loudspeakers along the border. This move comes as tensions between the two Koreas reach a critical point.

Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul, described the balloon tactic as an ineffective propaganda ploy by the North. “Kim Yo-jong may believe that these trash balloons will deepen political divisions in South Korea,” Easley noted. “But they are more likely to harm North Korea’s international reputation.”

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Increased Frustration Among Residents

Residents in South Korea, however, are increasingly frustrated by the clean-up operations required after each balloon barrage. They also worry about the potential for escalation.

Easley suggested that the best path forward would be for Pyongyang to resume diplomacy with Seoul. This could depend on South Korean civic groups voluntarily ceasing their own balloon launches.

Diplomatic Talks Amid Heightened Tensions

The latest launches coincided with a visit to Seoul by Japan’s outgoing Prime Minister, Fumio Kishida. During his meeting with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, both leaders emphasized the need for cooperation. They agreed that collaboration between South Korea, Japan, and the United States is crucial to address North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.

Relations between the two Koreas have deteriorated to one of their lowest points in recent years. North Korea recently announced that it had deployed 250 ballistic missile launchers along its southern border, further heightening tensions.

With diplomatic talks on hold and military posturing on the rise, the situation on the Korean Peninsula remains fragile. The trash balloon campaign may seem trivial on the surface, but it underscores the deepening divide between North and South Korea, raising the stakes for both countries and the wider region.