March 23, 2015

Why North Korea Is So Freaked out by US-ROK Drills

By David Eunpyoung Jee

Spring is a season for cherry blossoms. However, for many of the 28,500 of American military personnel forward deploying in the Republic of Korea (ROK), this is the season for living in desolate bunkers. Every year, as winter gives way to spring, U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) and the ROK Joint Chiefs of Staff conduct annual combined military exercises Key Resolve and Foal Eagle. The command and field exercises elicit a steady barrage of North Korean vitriol, making this also a season for censure. Pyongyang propagandists produce variations on an old theme: that ‘U.S. imperialists and South Korean reactionaries’ are bringing the peninsula to the brink of nuclear war. North Korean missile launches are but the punctuation points of this disinformation campaign.Why does North Korea overreact to what the ROK-U.S. alliance sees as routine, annual defensive exercises?

Read the full op-ed in The Diplomat.

  • Reports
    • January 6, 2019
    The Financing of WMD Proliferation (JCE TEST)

    The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is a critical threat facing the international community. Numerous United Nations Security Council Resolutions (UNSCRs) place b...

    By Jonathan Brewer

  • Video
    • November 13, 2018
    Amb. Nuland on N. Korea: The U.S. 'needs to get back into real diplomacy'

    Amb. Victoria Nuland, CEO of the Center for a New American Security and former Assistant Secretary of State, joins Ali Velshi to discuss reports that North Korea is moving ahe...

    By Victoria Nuland

  • Commentary
    • The Atlantic
    • October 10, 2018
    How to Tell When North Korea Starts to Denuclearize

    On Monday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo returned from what he described as “productive” conversations with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un. Although details are still emer...

    By Eric Brewer & Jung H. Pak

  • Commentary
    • Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
    • September 26, 2018
    Pyongyang Declaration: Bringing peace to the Koreas beyond symbolism

    Symbolism and atmospherics are often just as important as literal deliverables in Korean culture. This symbolic approach is not necessarily understandable to Western minds acc...

    By Duyeon Kim

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia