South Korea's Propaganda War: 23 Leaflet Drops Amid Martial Law Plot

A South Korean lawmaker has revealed the military sent propaganda leaflets to the North 23 times last year. This operation was approved by the National Security Council after a court overturned a ban. The revelations come amid a separate investigation into former President Yoon's preparations for martial law. North Korea has long condemned such leaflets, even responding with its own balloon campaigns.

Key Points: South Korea Sent 23 Propaganda Leaflets to North Korea Under Yoon

  • Leaflet operations resumed after a 2023 Constitutional Court ruling deemed a ban unconstitutional
  • Propaganda unit targeted Pyongyang and military bases across 35 areas from February to November
  • NSC approved resumption with then-Defense Minister Shin Won-sik conveying orders to the military
  • North Korea responded by sending trash-filled balloons, blaming Seoul for initiating campaigns
2 min read

South Korea: Military sent propaganda leaflets to North Korea 23 times last year

Lawmaker reveals military sent leaflets 23 times in 2024, approved by NSC after court ruling, amid probe into Yoon's martial law preparations.

"Key details... remain unknown as the meeting’s results have been classified. - Lawmaker Choo Mi-ae's office"

Seoul, Dec 17

The military sent propaganda leaflets to North Korea at least 23 times last year under the former South Korea President Yoon Suk Yeol administration, following an order issued the previous year to resume leaflet operations, a lawmaker said on Wednesday.

The office of ruling party Rep. Choo Mi-ae disclosed the information, citing the result of a defense ministry probe, as Yoon faces charges of sending drones to North Korea last year to provoke a retaliation and use it as a pretext for his declaration of martial law last December.

The National Security Council approved a decision to resume leaflet operations in October 2023 before carrying them out between February and November last year ahead of Yoon's failed martial law bid on December 3, according to the probe results submitted to Choo's office.

The decision by the security council to resume such operations came shortly after the Constitutional Court ruled a law banning such campaigns unconstitutional in September 2023, citing freedom of expression. Leaflet operations had been suspended since July 2017.

Then Defence Minister Shin Won-sik, then Unification Minister Kim Yung-ho and other security officials participated in the security council meeting to decide on the resumption, the lawmaker's office said. Key details, including the grounds on which the resumption was approved, however, remain unknown as the meeting's results have been classified.

Following the decision, which Shin conveyed to the military in late 2023, the military's propaganda warfare unit distributed leaflets across 35 target areas, including major North Korean cities, such as Pyongyang and Wonsan, as well as military bases, between February 18 and November 15.

North Korea has long bristled against the military's loudspeaker broadcasts and leaflets sent by activists over fears of outside information that could pose a threat to its ruling regime.

In May last year, the North resumed its own leaflet operations, sending thousands of trash-filled balloons across the border into South Korea, claiming that Seoul first initiated leaflet campaigns against its regime, Yonhap news agency reported.

The latest revelation comes after a special counsel team concluded earlier this week that Yoon began preparations for his short-lived imposition of martial law in or before October 2023, more than a year before the declaration on December 3, 2024.

Following the conclusion, the defense ministry launched a special investigative unit to further look into allegations involving the military in the martial law bid.

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- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The article says the court cited "freedom of expression" to allow the leaflets. That's an interesting point. Should a government restrict information flow to another country? It's a complex issue of sovereignty vs. free speech. The classified details are worrying though—what were they hiding?
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Rohit P
Frankly, this former president Yoon seems to have been looking for any excuse to declare martial law. Sending drones, then leaflets... all to create a crisis? Shameful. Leaders should work for stability, not manufacture chaos to grab power. Hope the investigation brings out the full truth.
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Ananya R
Reading this from India, it feels so familiar. Not the leaflets, but the pattern—a leader allegedly creating external tensions for internal political gains. We've seen that playbook before. The people always suffer in the end. Wishing peace for the citizens on both sides of the Korean border.
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Karthik V
While I understand the desire to send information to people in closed societies, 23 times is a lot! And right before a failed martial law bid? The timing is highly suspicious. This wasn't about helping North Koreans; it was a political tool. The special investigative unit has its work cut out.
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Michael C
The North Korean regime's fear of outside information says everything. People deserve to know the truth. However, the method matters. If the South's goal was genuinely informational, fine. But if it was just provocation for a domestic power grab, as the article suggests, that's utterly condemnable.

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