North Korea says 1.4 million apply to join army amid tensions with South
Item 1 of 4 Young people, including students and youth league officials, sign petitions to join or return to the army this week, according to North Korean state media, at an undisclosed location in North Korea, in this undated photo released by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency October 16, 2024.
SEOUL, Oct 16 (Reuters) – North Korean state media said on Wednesday around 1.4 million young people had applied to join or return to the army this week, blaming Seoul for a provocative drone incursion that had brought the “tense situation to the brink of war”.
The young people, including students and youth league officials who had signed petitions to join the army, were determined to fight in a “sacred war of destroying the enemy with the arms of the revolution,” the official KCNA news agency said.
Photographs published by KCNA showed what it said were young people signing petitions at an undisclosed location.
“If a war breaks out, the ROK will be wiped off the map. As it wants a war, we are willing to put an end to its existence,” the KCNA report said, using the initials of the South’s official name, the Republic of Korea.
North Korea has previously made similar claims about young people scrambling to enlist at a time of heightened tensions, though such statements from the isolated state are difficult to verify.
According to data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), North Korea has 1.28 million active soldiers and about 600,000 reservists, with 5.7 million Worker/Peasant Red Guard reservists among many unarmed units.
Seoul’s defence ministry did not comment on the latest KCNA report, but has warned that if North Korea inflicts harm on the safety of South Koreans, that day will be “the end of its regime.”
FLARE-UP IN TENSION
Amid rising tension, vice foreign ministers of South Korea, the United States and Japan are scheduled to hold talks in Seoul on Wednesday.
An official at Seoul’s unification ministry handling inter-Korean affairs said Pyongyang might be seeking to consolidate people’s unity and build logic for a provocation by kindling and exaggerating tension against the South.
There also seemed to be public pressure on North Korean leader Kim Jong Un over economic challenges, the official said.
“If you look at the interviews that keep appearing in state media, there are very harsh words toward the South, and that’s their typical public mobilisation propaganda,” he said.
The two Koreas are still technically at war after their 1950-53 war ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.
“Overall, there seems to be a sense of legacy building here, of Kim Jong Un looking to fundamentally change the status quo on the Korean Peninsula to preserve permanent two Korean states,” said Jenny Town of the U.S.-based Stimson Center.
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Reporting by Hyunsu Yim; Additional reporting and writing by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Ed Davies and Raju Gopalakrishnan
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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