This picture exhibits a basic view of a North Korean big loudspeaker (C), close to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the 2 Koreas, in Paju on June 12, 2025.
Anthony Wallace/AFP by way of Getty Pictures
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Anthony Wallace/AFP by way of Getty Pictures
GANGHWA, South Korea — Kim Okay-soon used to take bike rides alongside a waterfront highway close to her house along with her grandchildren after dinner.
The highway in her farming village of Dangsan-ri in Ganghwa Island seems to be over rice paddies to 1 aspect that entice long-legged birds and mirror the moon at night time.
The opposite aspect, towards the Han River estuary, is lined with fences and occasional navy guard posts. Simply over a mile past is North Korea.
One night final July, Kim says a combination of noises she describes as “ghostly sounds, raven sounds, wolf sounds” began blaring towards the village, from a loudspeaker atop a hill throughout the river.
“It was so scary we couldn’t go outside,” Kim says. “Our everyday life was shattered.”
A few month earlier, South Korea had began blasting propaganda broadcasts from its loudspeakers alongside the inter-Korean border. And North Korea was now reciprocating.
The loudspeaker battle continued for a yr. Villagers of Dangsan-ri and different border cities needed to dwell with unnerving noises day and night time.
Then, final week, the brand new South Korean president, Lee Jae Myung, ordered a cease to South Korea’s broadcasts. North Korea returned the favor inside hours, stopping its personal blasting of sounds throughout the border.
Lee has pledged to pursue peace with the North via dialogue and cooperation. The choice to show off loudspeakers was his first transfer. Presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung mentioned the choice was made to alleviate navy stress and restore belief between the 2 Koreas.
Lee’s North Korea coverage is a marked shift from his predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol, who emphasised “peace through strength.”
As North Korea lower off inter-Korean communication and made navy developments, Yoon responded with tit-for-tat measures. Throughout his time in workplace, each Koreas revoked the 2019 navy pact that banned tension-raising actions within the border area, together with loudspeaker broadcasts.
The 2 Koreas have engaged in psychological warfare because the Sixties, with weapons like large billboard screens, loudspeakers put in alongside the border, and airdropping propaganda leaflets.
However the confrontation notably escalated beneath the Yoon administration.
After South Korea’s Constitutional Courtroom dominated in 2023 that the regulation criminalizing leafleting excessively limits freedom of expression, the federal government gave defector teams a free hand to ship balloons and plastic bottles throughout the border carrying leaflets and thumb drives with South Korean TV dramas.
The North Korean regime, which is more and more closing off its society from exterior data, retaliated by sending its personal balloons towards the South, carrying principally trash, starting in Might final yr.
Seoul then resumed its loudspeaker campaigns, and Pyongyang quickly adopted.
However in contrast to the earlier North Korean broadcasts that slandered South Korean leaders and glorified its personal leaders, this time North Korea was simply blasting noise, and it got here at random instances.
“Sometimes they keep it on for 24 hours. And sometimes they are quiet for two straight days. That makes it more nerve-racking,” says Dangsan-ri’s village chief, Ahn Hyo-cheol.
NPR visited the village whereas the loudspeaker broadcasts had been nonetheless underway.
Ahn has lived within the city all his life and was acquainted with North Korean propaganda. However he says the noises confused him out a lot that his eyesight was affected.
In a pattern survey by the native public well being clinic, he says, 100% of the surveyed residents mentioned they’re sleep disadvantaged. In keeping with Ahn, the noise was at instances as loud as 95 decibels, which has similarities to the noise of a subway prepare approaching a station .
“We are all just farmers. They shouldn’t be blasting the sound toward this village,” Ahn says.
However some argue that the broadcasts South Koreans had been blasting in the direction of North Korea had been truly appreciated on the opposite aspect of the border.
Ahn Chan-il defected to the South within the Nineteen Seventies whereas serving at a border unit of the North Korean navy. He heard South Korea boasting in its broadcast concerning the variety of vehicles it makes and the variety of fridges and televisions its folks have. And he might see from the guard put up he was manning the helicopters and automobiles transferring on the opposite aspect.
North Korea, as soon as forward of its southern rival, was starting to lag behind. Ahn’s unit was getting much less meat and fish of their meals.
“Because I could confirm with my own eyes, I was more assured that North Korea wouldn’t be a match,” says Ahn, who’s now a scholar and activist main the Seoul-based assume tank World Institute for North Korea Research.
He says North Korea blared noises as an alternative of propaganda as a result of the nation is aware of its messages are ineffective in persuading South Koreans. And that North Korea promptly responded to the South’s conciliatory gesture, he says, to save lots of scarce electrical energy.
“But it would be careless to think that Kim Jong Un would be open to holding an inter-Korean summit or reopening the joint industrial complex just because the broadcast stopped,” says Ahn.
Previously few years, the North Korean chief has ignored requires dialogue from South Korea and the US. He has as an alternative targeted on beginning and cementing a brand new alliance with Russia.
And to proceed this technique, Ahn says, Kim would need inter-Korean tensions to stay excessive, whatever the loudspeakers.