[WHY] Why are both Koreas fixated on cross-border propaganda? Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff announced on June 9 that the South Korean military would hold an exercise to recommence loudspeaker operations along the inter-Korean border. In this undated photo provided by the military, South Korean Army soldiers inspect mobile loudspeakers as part of a similar drill held in the past. [JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF] Late in the evening on May 28, mobile phones across South Korea blared warnings that the country’s military had detected unidentified airborne objects from the North crossing the inter-Korean border.
While the alert recalled the North’s first failed attempt to launch a military spy satellite last year, the objects that flew across the border this time turned out to be balloons — specifically, balloons carrying packages filled with excrement, cigarette butts, waste paper and other general rubbish. Before the week was done, the North had flown almost a thousand trash-laden balloons into the South as part of what Pyongyang’s state-controlled media described as a “tit-for-tat” action against anti-regime leaflets flown into its territory by defector groups living in the South. In a statement released by state media on May 29, Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of regime leader Kim Jong-un, called the balloons “sincere presents” for the “goblins of liberal democracy who cry out for guarantees of freedom of expression” in apparent reference to the South Korean govern.
