The move came days after Seoul halted government-run propaganda broadcasts aimed at the North, with a senior South Korean official describing Pyongyang’s response as unexpected but telling.
“We hadn’t anticipated that North Korea would stop its jamming signals, but it appears to be a reciprocal move in response to our suspension of broadcasts towards the North,” the official told reporters on Thursday.
Since the division of the Korean peninsula at the end of World War II in 1945, the communist North and the capitalist South have traditionally viewed each other as targets for reunification on their own terms.
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