• North Korea's border with South Korea is a disputed border as both countries claim the entirety of the Korean Peninsula. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, Kim Il Sung, North Korea's first leader, later purged both pro-Soviet and pro-Chinese elements from the ruling Workers' Party of Korea and promoting his personal philosophy of Juche as the state ideology. (wikipedia.org)
  • North Korea's successful launch of a three-stage rocket on Wednesday was a milestone for a pariah nation looking to flex its military might on the global stage, but experts are divided on how the new technological capability will serve Pyongyang in the near-term. (globalsecurity.org)
  • While Pyongyang maintains that its rocket launches are part of a "peaceful" space program, many countries seeking to end North Korea's buildup of arms labeled the launch a test of a technology they believe could one day be capable of delivering a warhead as far as the continental U.S. (globalsecurity.org)
  • Experts said that the successful launch had effectively sent a message to the rest of the world that North Korea's military capabilities were not to be taken lightly. (globalsecurity.org)
  • Bechtol said that proceeds from such a sale of technology would likely go towards funding North Korea's illicit nuclear weapons program and working to miniaturize a warhead small enough to be mounted atop the Unha-3, despite frequent food shortages and outdated infrastructure in the country. (globalsecurity.org)
  • South Korea's president has held a nationwide address to announce stern measures against North Korea, including a halt in trade between the two countries. (voanews.com)
  • President Lee Myung-bak on Monday said North Korean must pay for sinking one of South Korea's navy ships. (voanews.com)
  • Host Bob Edwards talks to NPR's Eric Weiner about North Korea's announcement that it's withdrawing from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. (npr.org)
  • Refugees from North Korea's hermit kingdom overcome huge odds to escape to a new life in South Korea. (abc.net.au)
  • People watch a television display at a train station in Seoul on September 3, 2017 showing a news broadcast about North Korea's latest possible nuclear test. (cnbc.com)
  • North Korea's supreme dear leader signed the order to test hydrogen bomb to be fitted to the ICBM and accordingly North Korea has tested a hydrogen bomb at noon on Sept. 3rd (North Korea time) and succeeded totally,' a female newscaster said on the KCNA televised announcement, according to an NBC News translation. (cnbc.com)
  • The test, which the North said was a 'perfect success,' produced a greater yield than previous tests, with no adverse impact on the environment, North Korea's news agency KCNA said in a statement. (cnbc.com)
  • On Sunday, President Donald Trump condemned North Korea's latest weapons test, saying the nation's actions were very 'hostile and dangerous' to the United States, and an embarrassment to China. (cnbc.com)
  • North Korea's announcement followed reports of as many as two tremors in the rogue state at around noon local time, which officials in South Korea and Japan had said appeared to be the country's sixth nuclear test. (cnbc.com)
  • A comparison of the seismic readings of each of North Korea's nuclear tests from Norway-based geoscience research foundation Norsar, which works to verify compliance wtih the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. (cnbc.com)
  • The trip got off to surreal start: North Korea's customs form asks arriving travelers to declare any "killing device," GPS technology, or "publishings of all kinds" they might be carrying. (cnn.com)
  • The travelers had access to North Korea's mobile network, which allows international calls but has no data service. (cnn.com)
  • They also got a look at North Korea's national intranet, which Schmidt described as "a walled garden of scrubbed content taken from the real Internet. (cnn.com)
  • North Korea's regime, which sees those exercises as a rehearsal for invasion, confirmed it recently launched an ICBM and missiles from a submarine as a direct response. (politico.com)
  • And ANTHONY RUGGIERO , who worked on North Korea in Trump's NSC, suggested the U.S. target incoming revenue from thousands of North Korea's overseas workers and stop China from buying Pyongyang's coal. (politico.com)
  • Pompeo says North Korea's reward for denuclearizing would be an infusion of investment from private American companies - which, to the staunchly anti-Western, Stalinist regime in Pyongyang, sounds more like an invasion. (nymag.com)
  • Excellent New Yorker article on North Korea's offensive cyber capabilities. (schneier.com)
  • The reports came a day after South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said it detected the apparent launch of two short-range ballistic missiles, in what was North Korea's sixth missile test in recent weeks. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • While the White House emphasized the private nature of Clinton's trip, his landmark visit to Pyongyang to free the Americans was a coup that came at a time of heightened tensions over North Korea's nuclear program. (jpost.com)
  • Pardoning Ling and Lee and having Clinton serving as their emissary served both North Korea's need to continue maintaining that the two women had committed a crime and the Obama administration's desire not to expend diplomatic capital winning their freedom, Sneider said. (jpost.com)
  • I think we should be engaged in these talks with an earnest, sincere manner to give a New Year's first gift-precious results [of the talks] to the Korean nation," North Korea's top delegate, Ri Son Gwon, said at the meeting. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The collapse of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the subsequent dissolution of the U.S.S.R. in the early 1990s left China as North Korea's sole major ally. (britannica.com)
  • Two days later the North Korean navy forcibly seized a U.S. intelligence ship, the USS Pueblo , and its crew off North Korea's east coast and held the crew hostage for nearly a year. (britannica.com)
  • North Korea's armed provocations continued into the early 1970s, marking the period of highest military tension on the peninsula since the end of the Korean War . (britannica.com)
  • The two Koreas subsequently decided to engage in a dialogue amid the new U.S policy of détente, or relaxation of tensions, toward the Soviet Union and China, North Korea's two major allies. (britannica.com)
  • In North Korean terms, that's a huge leap forward for North Korea's connectability and relations to the outside world," Traavik said. (voanews.com)
  • To what shall North Korea's latest pronouncement to give up its nuclear weapons in exchange for certain "security" guarantees be compared? (sunjournal.com)
  • The Arms Control Association (ACA), "a national nonpartisan membership organization dedicated to promoting public understanding of and support for effective arms control policies," has compiled a list of North Korea's broken promises and behavior that includes selling missile and nuclear technology to Iran and other enemies of the United States. (sunjournal.com)
  • Here's just one of the items posted to ACA's website: "In 1994, faced with North Korea's announced intent to withdraw from the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), which requires non-nuclear weapon states to forswear the development and acquisition of nuclear weapons, the United States and North Korea signed the Agreed Framework. (sunjournal.com)
  • An image recently released by North Korea's state-run news agency showing Kim Jong-un and regime officials standing at a construction site is attracting ridicule for its horrendous doctoring . (slate.com)
  • The United Nations Security Council is preparing a new resolution condemning North Korea's recent steps. (csmonitor.com)
  • North Korea's objectives have changed. (csmonitor.com)
  • North Korea's state-run television has broadcast previously-unseen photos of Kim Jong Un as a child. (nbcnews.com)
  • The site, which houses a small reactor that produced North Korea's stockpile of weapons-grade plutonium, had been closed under an agreement struck in 2007 during the " six-party talks " involving both Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the US. (newscientist.com)
  • Also, North Korea's nuclear scientists have done a good job keeping foreign observers in the dark about what types of weapons it has tested. (newscientist.com)
  • North Korea's first attempt failed in May, posing a setback to leader Kim Jong Un's push to establish a space-based surveillance system to better monitor the U.S. and South Korea. (globalnews.ca)
  • The projectile, launched from around Taechon in North Korea's northwest, traveled around 600km (373 miles) before landing in the Sea of Japan, the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said. (rt.com)
  • Former CIA analyst Jung Pak talked about the character and motivations of North Korea's Kim Jong Un. (c-span.org)
  • The attack on Sony Pictures has put North Korea's cyberwarfare program in the spotlight. (networkworld.com)
  • North Korea's governing structure is split between the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) and the National Defense Commission (NDC). (networkworld.com)
  • North Korea's main cyberoperations run under the Reconnaissance General Bureau (RGB), which itself falls under the Ministry of People's Armed Forces that is in turn part of the NDC. (networkworld.com)
  • Office 91 is thought to be the headquarters of North Korea's hacking operation although the bulk of the hackers and hacking and infiltration into networks is done from Unit 121, which operates out of North Korea and has satellite offices overseas, particularly in Chinese cities that are near the North Korean border. (networkworld.com)
  • There are also several cyberunits under North Korea's other arm of government, the Workers' Party of Korea. (networkworld.com)
  • Over the past few years, it's estimated the schools have turned out several thousand students (estimates range from around 2,000 to around 6,000), who now make up North Korea's cyberforces. (networkworld.com)
  • April 2011 - South Korea's Nonghyup bank is targeted in a DDOS attack that was later traced to North Korea and linked with previous attacks. (networkworld.com)
  • North Korea's anti-virus headquarters reported a single death in the 24 hours to 6 p.m. Wednesday to bring its death toll to 63, which experts have said is abnormally small compared to the suspected number of infections. (latimes.com)
  • North Korea's Supreme Leader, Kim Jong Un, may be seriously ill. (outsidethebeltway.com)
  • North Koreans had a day off on Monday, the tenth of October is the official date of the founding of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party. (africanews.com)
  • Seoul Pyongyang News reported Tuesday that shipping channels between the Chinese port of Dalian and North Korea's Nampo port were active, citing a source in the Chinese border city of Dandong. (upi.com)
  • North Korea's burden in 2040 was similarly estimated by adjusting the model parameters. (bvsalud.org)
  • South Korea and the United States say Pyongyang is responsible for sinking a South Korean navy ship. (voanews.com)
  • A multinational team concluded a North Korean submarine fired a torpedo at it, a finding Pyongyang calls a 'fabrication. (voanews.com)
  • In this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, left, watches what it says is a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile, with a young woman who appears to look like his daughter, in Pyongyang, North Korea on March 16, 2023. (politico.com)
  • During the weekend, foreign diplomats, accredited in Pyongyang, claimed that large spontaneous rallies protesting the currency devaluation and replacement have been breaking out in the North Korean capital and other major cities. (foreignpolicy.com)
  • His mission accomplished, former President Bill Clinton left Pyongyang early Wednesday accompanied by American journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling after North Korean leader Kim Jong Il pardoned the women from their 12-year prison sentences. (jpost.com)
  • The Pyongyang rally was held in North Korea on March 7, to protest joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises which followed the nuclear test. (voanews.com)
  • By 2009, after what by then had become familiar disagreements over inspections leading to verification that North Korea was living up to its promises, Pyongyang violated the 2005 agreement by launching missiles and vowing never to return to talks, a pledge it repeated until this latest reported promise to hold new talks about abandoning its nuclear weapons. (sunjournal.com)
  • Washington's close military ties with South Korea are bringing the region closer to a nuclear war, Pyongyang claimed on Tuesday. (rt.com)
  • We're used to bellicose threats from Pyongyang against South Korea and the US. (newscientist.com)
  • The latest escalation comes after comments made by an anonymous source at South Korea s JoongAng ilbo, one month ago, that suggest the embassy warning could be a final step before a terrorist attack orchestrated by Pyongyang. (godlikeproductions.com)
  • The North would also inform foreign diplomatic missions in Pyongyang to pull out their citizens. (godlikeproductions.com)
  • In this photo provided by the North Korean government, a doctor visits a family during an activity to raise public awareness of COVID-19 prevention measures in Pyongyang on Tuesday. (latimes.com)
  • After maintaining a dubious claim that it had kept the virus out of the country for 2½ years, North Korea acknowledged its first coronavirus infections last week, saying that tests from an unspecified number of people in capital Pyongyang showed they were infected with the Omicron variant. (latimes.com)
  • There are two reasons [the North Koreans launched the rocket],' he told RFA in an interview. (globalsecurity.org)
  • The North Koreans now have it. (globalsecurity.org)
  • And of course it's tied to the nuclear program, because now that you have a missile that can reach the United States … the next thing will be the North Koreans-for a lot of money-hiring [it] out to the Iranians or being able to put that missile on a transporter or an erector launcher, or being able to put a nuclear payload on it," he said. (globalsecurity.org)
  • The Iranians will obviously need the North Koreans' help with all that. (globalsecurity.org)
  • So in the long run this will mean billions of dollars for the North Koreans. (globalsecurity.org)
  • We had zero interactions with non-state-approved North Koreans. (cnn.com)
  • Sophie's response: "No, silly North Koreans, you're under international bank sanctions. (cnn.com)
  • Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan said today it was 'obvious' that the North Koreans sank the Cheonan warship as it sailed near the disputed water between the two Koreas. (go.com)
  • It's tempting to think that his combination of insults, threats and economic pressure has caused the North Koreans to see the error of their ways. (chicagotribune.com)
  • Getting him to surrender something the North Koreans value so highly and have invested so much to achieve would require comparable concessions on our part. (chicagotribune.com)
  • The North Koreans say they won't demand that we withdraw all our troops from the South, but they could insist on such deep cuts that we might as well be gone. (chicagotribune.com)
  • North Koreans attend a rally to support a statement by a spokesman for the Supreme Command of the Korean People's Army vowing to cancel the 1953 cease-fire that ended the Korean War as well as boasting of the North's ownership of "lighter and smaller nukes" and its ability to execute "surgical strikes. (voanews.com)
  • Given the speed with which it had been installed, Hecker concluded that it probably wasn't the first that the North Koreans had built . (newscientist.com)
  • Ostensibly in response to a U.S.-South Korea air force drill, the North on Tuesday canceled another much-hyped round of talks with the South that had been scheduled for Wednesday. (nymag.com)
  • In any case, Trump will have to confront an unpleasant prospect in the talks with North Korea. (chicagotribune.com)
  • Responding to that speech, North Korea dismissed the idea of talks with Washington , saying Biden's speech was "intolerable" and "a big blunder. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • North Korea has said it will send its athletes and a high-level delegation to the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang next month after the two rival Koreas held their first official talks in more than two years, Bloomberg reports. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The North called off its armed provocations, and talks between the North and South began at P'anmunjŏm in the demilitarized zone in September 1971. (britannica.com)
  • The pattern repeated again in 2003, the ACA found, during the Six-Party Talks involving the U.S., North Korea, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan. (sunjournal.com)
  • Assuming North Korea is now serious about talks following Kim Jong-un's promise to never abandon his nukes (that promise is more credible), what is likely to come of it? (sunjournal.com)
  • One scenario would place a priority on restarting the intermittent six-party talks, although critics say that process resulted in North Korea exploding two nuclear weapons, honing its missile technology, and joining the nuclear club. (csmonitor.com)
  • Officials in South Korea and Japan confirmed that all three stages of the rocket appeared to have separated as scheduled on Wednesday, suggesting that the operation had gone as planned. (globalsecurity.org)
  • The Biden administration admits its North Korea policy isn't working but believes there are no better policy avenues to pursue, two senior administration officials tell NatSec Daily. (politico.com)
  • We are deeply frustrated" with North Korea as it proceeds to advance its weapons programs, one of the officials said on the condition of anonymity imposed by President JOE BIDEN 's team. (politico.com)
  • South Korean officials say a North Korean torpedo hit ship, killed 46 sailors. (go.com)
  • A North Korean torpedo was responsible for the March 26 sinking of a South Korean navy ship and the deaths of 46 sailors aboard, South Korean officials said. (go.com)
  • Officials in Seoul and Washington told ABC News that the South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak is preparing a statement for early next week that will officially blame the North and inevitably ratchet up tensions in the region. (go.com)
  • During a sit-down between the two sides in the truce village of Panmunjom on Tuesday, North Korean officials said they'd like to improve ties with the South through further dialogue. (thedailybeast.com)
  • South Korean officials said they'd like to first tackle cooperation with North Korea in the upcoming Olympics before later getting to the more sensitive political and military issues. (thedailybeast.com)
  • The apparent breakthrough between the two sides comes as tensions continue between the U.S. and North Korea, with a recent report suggesting U.S. officials are considering the possibility of carrying out limited strikes on North Korea. (thedailybeast.com)
  • At the same time, officials, proliferation experts, and Asia analysts are increasingly calling for a new international approach to North Korea. (csmonitor.com)
  • Jayu Bukhan Bangsong ) is a radio broadcaster based in Seoul , South Korea . (wikipedia.org)
  • Free North Korea Radio started broadcasting from Seoul in 2004. (wikipedia.org)
  • One of its most brazen acts occurred on January 21, 1968, when a group of 21 North Korean commandos managed to reach within a few hundred yards of the South Korean presidential palace in Seoul in an attempt to kill Pres. (britannica.com)
  • North Korea has test-fired a short-range ballistic missile ahead of US Vice President Kamala Harris' trip to the region, Seoul says. (rt.com)
  • This descriptive study compared the influenza surveillance data from the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with that from other countries and areas in the northern hemisphere, namely China, including Hong Kong Special Administrative Region SAR, Japan and the United States of America, to identify seasonal influenza patterns from 2012 to 2017. (who.int)
  • In July 2020, the Washington Times reported on a cyber attack targeting individuals involved with Free North Korea Radio, including its co-founder Suzanne Scholte . (wikipedia.org)
  • As of 2020, Free North Korea Radio's English language website stated that it no longer received funding of any kind from the U.S. government . (wikipedia.org)
  • Following the unification of the Three Kingdoms of Korea under Unified Silla in AD 668, Korea was subsequently ruled by the Goryeo dynasty (918-1392) and the Joseon dynasty (1392-1897). (wikipedia.org)
  • North Korea subsequently decided not to allow foreigners to keep their smart phones while visiting the country. (voanews.com)
  • 2019-12-13T20:36:31-05:00 https://ximage.c-spanvideo.org/eyJidWNrZXQiOiJwaWN0dXJlcy5jLXNwYW52aWRlby5vcmciLCJrZXkiOiJGaWxlc1wvZGUyXC8yMDE5MTIxMzIxMjIyMDAwMV9oZC5qcGciLCJlZGl0cyI6eyJyZXNpemUiOnsiZml0IjoiY292ZXIiLCJoZWlnaHQiOjUwNn19fQ== The Foundation for Defense of Democracies held a discussion regarding the release a new report on U.S. policy toward North Korea. (c-span.org)
  • It constitutes the northern half of the Korean Peninsula and borders China and Russia to the north at the Yalu (Amnok) and Tumen rivers, and South Korea to the south at the Korean Demilitarized Zone. (wikipedia.org)
  • China and Russia , traditionally less eager to punish North Korea, are employing harsher rhetoric and reaffirming the need to walk the North back from nuclear status. (csmonitor.com)
  • The White House said Russia is looking for additional munitions and other materials and that the letters built upon recent Russian outreach to North Korea. (globalnews.ca)
  • Some of the initial attacks to help build this network of infected computers are thought to be launched from North Korean outpost offices in places like China, Russia and India. (networkworld.com)
  • Is Trump Getting Played by North Korea? (nymag.com)
  • A week ago, President Donald Trump was gearing up to write a fantastically humble acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize " everyone " thought he should win for denuclearizing North Korea: an accomplishment he has yet to achieve, though some sycophants in the House of Representatives had already nominated him for the prize. (nymag.com)
  • That Trump and his toadies were celebrating too soon is beyond doubt, as North Korea has not actually committed to anything concrete yet. (nymag.com)
  • In fairness to Trump, things had been looking pretty good on the North Korean front until very recently. (nymag.com)
  • Pyongyang's newfound hesitancy to do a deal with the U.S. is a direct response to Bolton's repeated statements that the Trump administration was looking to follow the "Libya model" of nuclear disarmament with North Korea - a model that, in the long run, ended very badly for Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi. (nymag.com)
  • On Twitter, Trump assured everyone, "Denuclearization will be a great thing for World, but also for North Korea! (chicagotribune.com)
  • Former US President Donald Trump tried to reach an agreement with North Korea while in office. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • Last November, President Trump properly returned North Korea to the list of state sponsors of terrorism. (sunjournal.com)
  • Choe Son Hui, the first vice foreign minister, issued the warning via state media days after Mr Trump spoke of possible military action toward the North and revived his "rocket man" nickname for North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un. (yahoo.com)
  • In recent months, North Korea has hinted at lifting its moratorium on nuclear and long-range missile tests if the Trump administration fails to make substantial concessions in nuclear diplomacy before the end of the year. (yahoo.com)
  • She said North Korea will respond with its own harsh language if Mr Trump again uses similar phrases and shows that he is intentionally provoking North Korea. (yahoo.com)
  • In 2017, Mr Trump and Mr Kim traded threats of destruction as North Korea carried out a series of high-profile weapons tests aimed at acquiring an ability to launch nuclear strikes on the US mainland. (yahoo.com)
  • Mr Trump said he would rain "fire and fury" on North Korea and derided Kim as "little rocket man," while Mr Kim questioned Mr Trump's sanity and said he would "tame the mentally deranged US dotard with fire. (yahoo.com)
  • On Wednesday, the regime said it would no longer abide by the five-decade-old truce between the Koreas, after South Korea announced it was joining a US -led security initiative that searches ships for nuclear weapons. (csmonitor.com)
  • Donald Trump's dangerous tweet towards North Korea is part of a massive cultural catastrophe that has afflicted America. (edrants.com)
  • North Korea is under U.N. sanctions which ban the nation from trading missiles or nuclear technology. (globalsecurity.org)
  • President Lee and U.S. President Barack Obama agreed during a 25-minute telephone conversation Tuesday that both countries will work to impose stronger sanctions against North Korea immediately after the official announcement is made. (go.com)
  • It's always difficult to separate North Korean bluster from the leadership's true intentions, but the latest escalation, following the introduction of fresh UN sanctions in response to the country's February nuclear test , is unusual. (newscientist.com)
  • But their nuclear diplomacy has remained largely deadlocked since their second meeting in Vietnam in February ended without any deal due to disputes over US-led sanctions on North Korea. (yahoo.com)
  • From 1994 to 1998, North Korea suffered a famine that resulted in the deaths of between 240,000 and 420,000 people, and the population continues to suffer from malnutrition. (wikipedia.org)
  • Can North Korea boost its plutonium production in other ways? (newscientist.com)
  • Does the return to plutonium production mean that North Korea has hit problems making bombs with uranium? (newscientist.com)
  • Article 1 defines North Korea as an independent socialist state representing the interests of all the Korean people. (countrystudies.us)
  • At a time of escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula, one of Pyongyang's old friends was back in North Korea last month trying to spread his own brand of cultural diplomacy between East and West. (voanews.com)
  • Mounting tensions and escalating rhetoric between North Korea and the United Nations following Pyongyang's third nuclear test caused other international delegations to cancel their visits. (voanews.com)
  • In the 1970s and '80s the North Korean government maintained its balanced diplomatic position between the country's only two significant allies, China and the Soviet Union , while sustaining a hostile attitude toward the United States . (britannica.com)
  • Even China, however, could no longer be relied upon fully, as it cultivated friendly relations with South Korea that culminated when the two established full diplomatic ties in August 1992. (britannica.com)
  • Visiting these attractions in person would mean getting into North Korea from China, which you won't be able to do by crossing this bridge , that's for sure. (googlesightseeing.com)
  • June 29 (UPI) -- Shipping routes between China and North Korea are reopening after months of little to no activity, according to a South Korean press report. (upi.com)
  • The presence of the Delta variant of the coronavirus in China could force the North to rethink plans, according to the report. (upi.com)
  • ILIs in North China and cases reported from Japan's sentinel surveillance showed high correlations with the Republic of Korea. (who.int)
  • We found that there are similarities in the influenza patterns of the Republic of Korea, Japan and North China. (who.int)
  • North Korea regularly launches ballistic missiles and had a series of such tests in late 2021, the most recent of which was in October when it test-fired a new ballistic missile from a submarine . (israelnationalnews.com)
  • A hydrogen bomb is much more powerful than the simpler types of atomic weapons tested by North Korea five times previously, or the bombs dropped on Japan during World War II. (cnbc.com)
  • At least, the official said, an effort to improve ties between the U.S., South Korea and Japan has worked. (politico.com)
  • Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada told his South Korean counterpart on Monday that Japan is also on board to pressure North Korea. (go.com)
  • Henry Sokolski, executive director of the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, told an RFE/RL-Radio Free Asia briefing on January 9 that the West is hamstrung in dealing with Iran and North Korea because of the way it has interpreted the international nonproliferation regime to benefit friendly countries like India and Japan. (rferl.org)
  • North Korea traditionally considers US exercises with South Korea and Japan a threat. (rt.com)
  • The news comes ahead of Harris' visit to South Korea and Japan, and the planned US-South Korean joint naval exercise. (rt.com)
  • The number of confirmed influenza cases in Japan showed a high correlation with the laboratory-confirmed influenza cases in the Republic of Korea. (who.int)
  • The test followed North Korea saying on Sunday that it had developed a more advanced thermonuclear weapon of 'great destructive power,' which it would load onto an intercontinental ballistic missile, Reuters reported. (cnbc.com)
  • North Korea confirmed that it conducted tests of an upgraded long-range cruise missile and a warhead of a tactical guided missile this week, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing state media KCNA . (israelnationalnews.com)
  • Free North Korea Radio staff have been assaulted repeatedly by South Korean extremist groups who support the North Korean regime or fear the destabilizing effect of their broadcasts. (wikipedia.org)
  • In addition, North Korean vessels will no longer be allowed to sail through South Korean waters. (voanews.com)
  • The South Korean press has been reporting for the past few weeks that the traces of explosives have an identical chemical make-up to the substances found in a stray North Korean torpedo which the South seized in 2003. (go.com)
  • When it became clear that North Korea could not count on its traditional allies to block South Korean membership in the United Nations (UN), it retreated from its long-standing position of insisting on a single, joint Korean seat. (britannica.com)
  • March 2011 - In an attack dubbed "10 Days of Rain," major South Korean government websites and sites operated by the U.S. military in South Korea are targeted in DDOS attacks. (networkworld.com)
  • August 2011 - South Korean police accuse a North Korean hacking ring of stealing around $6 million in prize money from online games. (networkworld.com)
  • March 2013 - A major cyberattack, later blamed on North Korea, paralyzes the networks of several major South Korean TV broadcasters. (networkworld.com)
  • The Chinese port of Dalian is receiving ships from North Korea, according to a South Korean press report Tuesday. (upi.com)
  • Bruce Bechtol, a political science professor at Angelo State University in Texas, said North Korean leader Kim Jong Un had proceeded with the launch, despite global condemnation, in an effort to build the country's market for arms proliferation. (globalsecurity.org)
  • Bechtol stressed that while North Korea is believed to be years away from fitting a nuclear warhead to the Unha-which is thought to be derived from the country's Taepodong 2 ballistic missile-the new long-range rocket could be married with other forms of weaponry, making it an attractive technology. (globalsecurity.org)
  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has expressed interest in beefing up the country's technological and industrial standing in the world, but the regime's plans remain largely undefined. (cnn.com)
  • The North Korean news agency said he lauded the factory for achieving progress in 'producing major weapons' and holding a 'very important position and duty' in modernizing the country's armed forces and realizing its national defense development strategy. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • Norwegian director Morten Traavik, accompanied by a crew from his country's TV2 television channel, was in North Korea in March to record students at Pyongyang's Kum Song Music School. (voanews.com)
  • Kee Park, a global health specialist at Harvard Medical School who has worked on healthcare projects in North Korea, said the country's number of new cases should start to slow because of the strengthened preventive measures. (latimes.com)
  • But it will be challenging for North Kore to provide treatment for the already large number of people with COVID-19 and deaths may possibly approach a scale of tens of thousands, considering the size of the country's caseload, Park said. (latimes.com)
  • Following the collapse of this agreement in 2002, North Korea claimed that it had withdrawn from the NPT in January 2003 and once again began operating its nuclear facilities. (sunjournal.com)
  • In 2002, the North Korean regime issued a decree that eased certain economic restrictions in the country. (lu.se)
  • Ms Choe said Mr Trump's remarks "prompted the waves of hatred of our people against the US" because they showed "no courtesy when referring to the supreme leadership of dignity" of North Korea. (yahoo.com)
  • Mr Trump's national security adviser Robert O'Brien said on Thursday night in Washington the US remains hopeful that a deal can be reached with North Korea. (yahoo.com)
  • North Korea may have gone too far with this week's nuclear blast and missile launch, potentially provoking the kind of harsh international action that it has more often than not avoided in the past. (csmonitor.com)
  • North Korea said on state television on Sunday afternoon that it successfully carried out a test of a hydrogen bomb intended to be carried by an intercontinental ballistic missile. (cnbc.com)
  • Diplomatic breakthroughs between North and South created more cordial feelings between the two countries, but these quickly dissipated when suspicion grew that North Korea planned to build nuclear weapons. (britannica.com)
  • The modern spelling of Korea first appeared in the late 17th century in the travel writings of the Dutch East India Company's Hendrick Hamel. (wikipedia.org)
  • The fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 then brought about a sharp decline to the North Korean economy. (wikipedia.org)
  • In addition to being a member of the United Nations since 1991, North Korea is also a member of the Non-Aligned Movement, G77, and the ASEAN Regional Forum. (wikipedia.org)
  • Both North Korea and South Korea were admitted to the UN on September 17, 1991, as "separate and equal" members. (britannica.com)
  • They arrived the day after North Korea scrapped the 1953 Korean Armistice that ended the Korean War. (voanews.com)
  • The journalists' release followed weeks of quiet negotiations between the State Department and the North Korean mission to the United Nations, said Daniel Sneider, associate director of research at Stanford University's Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center. (jpost.com)
  • He noted that Iran, which had successfully placed a satellite into orbit in 2009, is believed to have done so using a two-stage rocket and was likely to seek the newer three-stage technology from North Korea. (globalsecurity.org)
  • ABSTRACT Shirvan district in north-eastern Islamic Republic of Iran is a new focus of visceral leishmaniasis. (who.int)
  • Extraction was carried out on the re- of diseases, ranging from self-limiting The study was conducted in Shirvan dis- maining body of the individual sand localized cutaneous lesions to visceral trict, North Khorassan province, north- fly and stored at 4 °C. Double distilled leishmaniasis (VL) with fatal sponta- eastern Islamic Republic of Iran. (who.int)
  • Anyone who knows better than to trust North Korea (like Republicans did until it began dangling the prospect of a historic, legacy-saving victory in front of their problematic president) should have been alert to the chance that Kim's recent peace overtures were insincere all along. (nymag.com)
  • North Korean state media also said that Kim's trophy construction projects, including the building of 10,000 new houses in the town of Hwasong, are being "propelled as scheduled. (latimes.com)
  • A panel of experts assessed the threat that North Korea poses, U.S. policy toward North Korea, and the best path forward in achieving denuclearization. (c-span.org)
  • The Biden administration reached out to North Korea shortly after taking office, but the country did not respond to those overtures. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • According to Article 3 of the constitution, Kimilsungism-Kimjongilism is the official ideology of North Korea. (wikipedia.org)
  • North Korea remained one of the most isolated and inaccessible countries in the international community , with severe restrictions on travel into or out of the country, a totally controlled press, and an ideology of self-reliance. (britannica.com)
  • Between science and ideology: the rise and fall of Bong-han theory in 1960's North Korea]. (who.int)
  • The Workers' Party of Korea is the ruling party of North Korea and leads the Democratic Front for the Reunification of Korea, the sole legal political movement in the country. (wikipedia.org)
  • The meeting also appeared aimed at dispelling persistent questions about the health of the authoritarian North Korean leader, who was said to be suffering from chronic diabetes and heart disease before the reported stroke. (jpost.com)
  • The country is also trying to prevent its fragile economy from deteriorating, but the outbreak could be worse than officially reported because of scarce resources for virus testing and the possibility that North Korea could be deliberately underreporting deaths to soften the political impact on authoritarian leader Kim Jong Un. (latimes.com)
  • In response to news of the cyber attack, Col. David Maxwell, an analyst on North Korea, commented: "It's not surprising that [Scholte] would have been targeted. (wikipedia.org)
  • Unit 204 takes part in online espionage and psychological warfare and Office 225 trains agents for missions in South Korea that can sometimes have a cyber component. (networkworld.com)
  • Last week, North Korea warned it would bolster its defenses against the United States and consider restarting 'all temporally-suspended activities,' an apparent reference to a self-imposed moratorium on testing its nuclear bombs and long-range missiles. (israelnationalnews.com)
  • [1] The station is run primarily by North Korean refugees and defectors and frequently broadcasts shortwave transmissions of news and information to the general population inside North Korea . (wikipedia.org)
  • Google's Eric Schmidt, along with his daughter Sophie and former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, wrapped up a controversial trip to North Korea earlier this month, during which he urged the isolated state to embrace the Internet or face further economic decline. (cnn.com)
  • Indeed, judging from some of his tweets in the past month, the president seems to believe that peace in Korea is practically a done deal already, when in fact a very uncertain process is still in its infancy and can easily be derailed. (nymag.com)
  • Their departure was a jubilant conclusion to a more than four-month ordeal for the women arrested near the North Korean-Chinese border in March and sentenced in June to 12 years of hard labor for illegal entry and engaging in "hostile acts. (jpost.com)
  • US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged North Korea last month to grant them amnesty, saying they were remorseful and their families were anguished by their detention. (jpost.com)
  • The Japanese Coast Guard said on Tuesday that North Korea had notified it about the plan to launch a satellite into space later this month. (rt.com)
  • The US and South Korea resumed large-scale joint drills last month after several years of hiatus. (rt.com)
  • Report of resumed shipping between the two close partners comes more than a month after data from the Port State Control Committee of the Asia-Pacific showed North Korean ships entering different Chinese ports. (upi.com)
  • Kim has indicated that the price of giving up his nuclear weapons, or at least part of that price, is a credible assurance from the U.S. that it will not invade North Korea. (nymag.com)
  • The Defectors meets some of the North Korean women who are trying to make new lives for themselves in South Korea and asks them: Has their escape been worth it? (abc.net.au)
  • In 1945, after the Japanese surrender at the end of World War II, Korea was divided into two zones along the 38th parallel, with the north occupied by the Soviet Union and the south occupied by the United States. (wikipedia.org)
  • Since the fall of the Soviet Union, North Korea hasn't had access to artificial fertiliser, and therefore any increase in production has to happen by creating more farmland. (lu.se)
  • Jim Clancy reports on North and South Korea and China's part to play in negotiations. (cnn.com)
  • The two leaders have avoided such words and developed better relations after North Korea entered nuclear negotiations with the US last year. (yahoo.com)
  • And face-to-face meetings between an American president and a North Korean leader didn't lead to progress. (politico.com)
  • With all this hype, it would be hugely embarrassing for the administration if its efforts to achieve peace and nuclear disarmament in North Korea were to come to naught - a fact not likely lost on North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. (nymag.com)
  • We're hoping that [North Korean leader Kim Jong-il] continues to make the right choice for his country,' Bush said. (rferl.org)
  • Clinton and the two Californians were heading back to the US, his spokesman Matt McKenna said, less than 24 hours after the former US leader landed in the North Korean capital on a private, humanitarian trip to secure their release. (jpost.com)
  • North Korea is notoriously bad at photoshopping photos of its supreme leader. (slate.com)
  • North Korea released images of leader Kim Jong Un signing an order to make rockets ready to attack the United States. (neatorama.com)
  • In a report about an assassination attempt on Kim Jong Un, the JoongAng Ilbo source warned that the North Korean leader had secretly ordered that a three-stage scenario be drawn up to really heighten fear of nuclear war. (godlikeproductions.com)
  • North Korea on Thursday reported 262,270 more cases of people with suspected symptoms of COVID-19 as its coronavirus caseload neared 2 million - a week after the country acknowledged the outbreak and scrambled to slow the rate of infections despite a lack of healthcare resources. (latimes.com)
  • The Focus Asia symposium in May 2012 focused on three countries - Burma/Myanmar, Laos and North Korea. (lu.se)
  • North Korea follows Songun, a "military first" policy which prioritizes the Korean People's Army in state affairs and the allocation of resources. (wikipedia.org)
  • The radio was established by Kim Seong-min , a former North Korean military monitor for foreign broadcasts, who was influenced by the foreign broadcasts that he monitored and defected from North Korea in 1996. (wikipedia.org)
  • President Lee says the military will defend South Korea if the North encroaches on its territory. (voanews.com)
  • As the Vietnam War wound down and U.S. policies and public opinion became more focused on domestic issues, North Korea probed in vain for a chance to, in its view, "liberate" the South by means of a quick military strike. (britannica.com)
  • The project reveals thousands of landmarks across North Korea - everything from military bases to amusement parks, restaurants to statues, agriculture to gulags . (googlesightseeing.com)
  • On Wednesday, the North's military chief, Pak Jong Chon, also warned that the use of force against the North would cause a "horrible" consequence for the US. (yahoo.com)
  • He said North Korea would take unspecified "prompt corresponding actions at any level" if the US takes any military action. (yahoo.com)
  • In May 2008, North Korea stated that it held 38.5 kilograms of plutonium , extracted from spent nuclear fuel rods. (newscientist.com)
  • The Foundation for Defense of Democracies held a discussion regarding the release a new report on U.S. policy toward North Korea . (c-span.org)
  • In concrete terms, however, the most important move is the 2 April announcement that the nation is " readjusting and restarting all the nuclear facilities " at Yongbyon, some 90 kilometres north of the capital. (newscientist.com)
  • Dating back to the 1980s, the heart of the North Korean nuclear program is Yongbyon , a large complex whose 5-megawatt reactor is periodically activated whenever the government feels like it (it has been operating continuously since 2009 after the last round of UN inspectors were ejected). (googlesightseeing.com)
  • The whole thing is like James Bond,' said one U.S. official who confirmed to ABC News that the U.S. has a picture of the pieces from the North Korean torpedo recovered from the bottom of the ocean. (go.com)
  • PCB production and new use were banned in most countries by the 1980s, but production has been reported recently in North Korea. (cdc.gov)
  • The organization relies on a network of anonymous sources inside North Korea for this information, which it also publishes on its Korean-language website. (wikipedia.org)
  • The north- Organization, were used as negative and More than 90% of VL cases in the ern part of Shirvan is mountainous with positive controls. (who.int)
  • A week earlier, North Korea had threatened the newspaper over its coverage of the country. (networkworld.com)
  • North Korean ships Minhaeho, Long Reach 5, and Jasong 2 were seen earlier this year either entering or about to enter the Chinese ports of Longkou, Dalian and Shidao, according to maritime intelligence provider MarineTraffic in April. (upi.com)