Japan's leading daily newspaper spoke critically of the Korean government's announcement to the Japanese government of the end of the military information protection agreement, Jisomi.

The Asahi Shimbun decided that the Korean government did not fit the national interests, but decided to terminate Jisomia. He said that the end would hurt national interests, and that President Moon Jae-in should ponder once more and reverse the decision.

The newspaper said that the most important factor in confronting the North Korean threat is South Korea-US solidarity, and that Sosmia is one such asset, and that the defense authorities have recognized it as a benefit to both sides.

The Yomiuri Shimbun has criticized the end of Jisomia as an unreasonable step to shake security cooperation between the three countries.

The newspaper says the end of the deal will make it difficult for South Korea to obtain Japanese data directly, and North Korea's short-range missiles pose a major threat to South Korea, a step that lowers South Korean military deterrence.

Japan's largest economy, the Nihon Geizai Shimbun, commented in the editorial that it was a lack of coolness and said it could not be disappointed.