North Korea Fires Ballistic Missile
Digest more
The 1,000-person bunker, being built under a new public housing complex in South Korea’s capital city, is intended as a pilot project.
North Korea will never give up its nuclear program, the country's Vice Foreign Minister Kim Son Gyong told the United Nations General Assembly on Monday, describing it as "
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un says he has “fond memories” of US President Donald Trump and is open to future talks with the United States — if he can keep his nuclear arsenal.
Photos of North Korea's military provide a glimpse into what it's like to serve in one of the world's largest and most mysterious armies.
North Korea is on the verge of developing an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of striking the United States. The surviving, struggling communist totalitarian state has been steadily, relentlessly developing missiles with expanding ranges, but ...
Satellite imagery of new construction work at an underground facility in North Korea has renewed questions over a rumored nuclear site, though analysts caution against jumping to conclusions. Newsweek has contacted the Pentagon and North Korean Embassy in ...
A group of soldiers in Yeosu, a port city 455 kilometers south of Seoul, rebels against the South Korean government, which had just been established. The soldiers, who supported the reunification of the two Koreas,
North Korea announced today that Kim Jong-il's body will be put on permanent display in Kumsusan Memorial Palace, lying beside the body of his father, for all to see. After his death in 1994, North Korean founder Kim Il-sung's body was embalmed by the same ...
The Chosun Ilbo on MSN
North Korea Orders Chuseok Condolence Visits for Soldier Families
North Korean authorities instructed party committee officials in each province, city, and county to personally visit the families of soldiers killed in Russia during last Chuseok holiday, according to a report by North Korea-focused media outlet Daily NK on the 14th of last month,
For the first time since the survey began more than a decade ago, most South Koreans don't see the need to unify the peninsula.