On June 25, I visited the Demilitarized Zone, or DMZ, between North and South Korea. The day of my visit ... peering through the telescope. I saw buildings, vehicles, and roads littering the ...
a village in the South Korean DMZ, once put up a flag. In retaliation, North Korea built one higher on their side. What ensued was a rather childish game of building taller and taller flagpoles ...
South Korea's military has observed North Korean soldiers carrying out construction ... Pictures also show that land has been cleared within the DMZ. Future high-resolution satellite images ...
North Korea has criticized the United States and Asian neighbors for pursuing the “absurd” goal of denuclearizing the North ...
Seoul’s Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs, said it had confirmed that North Korea was demolishing the building, named the Reunion Center for the Separated Families ...
area between the northernmost edge of the DMZ and the military demarcation line, which divides the peninsula, Yonhap said, citing an unidentified military source. North Korea’s motive remains ...
The visit on Thursday comes on the heels of North Korea’s latest missile launches and amid fears that it may conduct a nuclear test. Visiting the DMZ has become something of a ritual for ...
POCHEON, South Korea ... with nuclear-armed North Korea. Explosions reverberated throughout the Rodriguez Live Fire Complex, located less than 20 miles south of the DMZ, as U.S. Apache attack ...
Thinking about that incident still hurts my heart a lot.” Kumyoung fled North Korea at the age of 15, crossing the frozen Duman River and enduring four years of immense hardship in China ...