Pressure on North Korea Korea finds no way to break the situation 5:39 on June 18

Following the bombing of the joint liaison office with South Korea, North Korea has increased its pressure by warning that it will deploy military troops in tourist areas that were engaged in economic cooperation projects with South Korea. The Korean government has proposed to send a special envoy to the president, but the North has refused to find a way to resolve the situation.

North Korea has bombed a north-south joint liaison office in southwestern Quezon (Kaesong) on ​​the 16th. On the 17th, a video shot from the sky on the Korean side, about 16 kilometers from Quezon, shows the building of the liaison office where only a part of the skeleton such as the skeleton remained due to the explosion.

Following the bombings, North Korea will deploy military units in tourist areas in the southeastern part of North Korea, which had been engaged in economic cooperation projects with South Korea, and will resume various military training programs near the North-South military boundaries. It is clear that the pressure is increasing.

The Korean government proposed to send a special envoy of the president to the North, aiming for a solution through dialogue, but Kim Jung-eun (Kim Jong-un)'s sister, Kim Yo-jeong (Kim Yo-sung), refused this. And I'm not finding a way to break things.

Against this backdrop, the unification minister Kim Yong-chul (Gold Wrought Iron), who is in charge of relations with North Korea, said on Monday that he would step down taking responsibility for the deterioration of the North-South relations, and told reporters that "there may be an opportunity to change the atmosphere. I think it is a duty that has been given."

Some Korean media have pointed out that new human resources are needed, and the Moon Jae-in administration seeking to solve the problem through dialogue seeks new ways to break the situation under a new unification aspect. There is also a view that it may be.