North Korean GPS manipulation disrupted dozens of
planes and vessels, South Korea says
By
KIM TONG-HYUNG
Associated Press • November
9, 2024
North
Korean soldiers work at a military guard post on Oct. 10, 2024, seen from Paju,
South Korea, near the border. (Ahn Young-joon/AP)
SEOUL, South Korea
— South Korea’s military said North Korea disrupted GPS signals from border
areas for the second-straight day on Saturday, affecting an unspecified number
of flights and vessel operations.
Tensions between
the rival Koreas have escalated as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un flaunts his
advancing nuclear and missile program and engages in electronic and
psychological warfare, such as flying thousands of balloons to drop trash and
anti-South Korean propaganda leaflets in the South.
South Korea’s
Joint Chiefs of Staff said North Korean operations to manipulate GPS signals
were detected from around the western border city of Kaesong and the nearby
city of Haeju on Friday and Saturday, and said the activities disrupted dozens
of civilian aircraft and several vessels.
While warning
aircraft and vessels near western border areas, South Korea’s military did not
specify how North Korea was interfering with GPS signals or detail the extent
of disruptions.
“We urge North
Korea to stop GPS interference provocations immediately and strongly warn that
it will be held fully accountable for any resulting consequences,” the South’s
joint chiefs said in a statement.
North Korea’s GPS
signal disruptions and balloon campaigns highlight the vulnerability of South
Korea’s Incheon International Airport, its main transportation gateway, analyst
Sukjoon Yoon recently wrote on the North Korea-focused 38 North website.
The airport, which
carries 56 million people and 3.6 million tons of cargo annually, is less than
62 miles from North Korea.
“No major aviation
incidents have resulted to date, but GPS interference can endanger commercial
airlines flying in poor visibility, and it is a violation of international
conventions on navigational safety,” Yoon wrote. He said that in 2024, North
Korean trash balloons halted the airport’s runway operations 12 different times
for a total of 265 minutes.
Kim has shown more
hostility this year toward Seoul’s conservative government — which maintains a
hard line on Pyongyang — with the North abandoning its long-standing goals of
reconciliation with its war-divided rival and rewriting its constitution to
cement South Korea as a permanent adversary.
North Korea also
blew up sections of its unused road and rail routes linked with the South in
October in a symbolic display of anger toward Seoul, and opened November with a
flight-test of a new intercontinental ballistic missile to dial up pressure on
Washington.
South Korean
officials say North Korean activities to disrupt GPS signals from western
border regions increased as the country began launching trash-carrying balloons
toward the South in late May, which the North described as a retaliation
against South Korean civilian activists flying anti-North Korean propaganda
leaflets across the border.
Aside from North
Korea’s weapons demonstrations and non-conventional provocations, there’s
growing concern over its reported provision of military equipment and troops to
Russia to support President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine. South Korean
officials say the deepening military alignment between Moscow and Pyongyang
could possibly result in Russian technology transfers that increases the threat
posed by Kim’s military nuclear program.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.