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North Korea’s Anti-South Campaign Targets Youth Amid Growing Military Tensions

North KoreaNorth Korea’s Anti-South Campaign Targets Youth Amid Growing Military Tensions
Rodong Sinmun
Rodong Sinmun

Recent reports suggest that North Korean media is deliberately fostering anti-South sentiment among the younger generation. This appears to be a strategic move to redirect attention from the unsettling atmosphere surrounding potential defections of North Korean troops captured in Russia, ongoing U.S.-Russia peace talks, and additional troop deployments.

On Thursday, North Korea’s state newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, reported that over 300 high school seniors from Pyongyang had volunteered for duty at frontline border posts along the inter-Korean border. These students pledged to consider defending the homeland their highest patriotic duty and most sacred obligation. They vowed to stand as the first line of defense against enemy invasions, safeguarding the nation’s peace and security.

While reports of youth enlisting in the military or veterans seeking re-enlistment are not unusual, the specific emphasis on border duty is noteworthy. This suggests a deliberate attempt to cultivate anti-South hostility rather than mere patriotism.

Further evidence of this trend was observed during North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s recent inspections of the Kim Il Sung Political University and Kang Kon Military Academy, where scenes encouraging anti-South sentiment among young cadets were prominently featured.

At the Kim Il Sung Political University, which trains political officers, students were shown studying maps of Sacheon City in South Korea. This area houses key strategic assets, including an Air Force base, the Aerospace Agency, and Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI), which indicates potential offensive planning against South Korean military targets.

At the Kang Kon Military Academy, where junior officers are trained, a large banner win an indoor shooting range read, “Let’s eradicate every last one of those despicable puppet South Korean scum” was prominently displayed in the indoor shooting range. The newspaper noted that most other materials within these institutions were heavily censored, indicating the deliberate nature of this exposure.

Rodong Sinmun
Rodong Sinmun

Since Kim declared “hostile North-South relations” early last year, North Korea has intensified its use of propaganda to instill anti-South sentiment. This public display of hostility is a typical North Korean tactic during periods of heightened inter-Korean tensions.

Last October, amid rising tensions following a drone incursion into Seoul and the destruction of inter-Korean roads, North Korea claimed that over 1.4 million youth league members and students had enthusiastically volunteered for military service or re-enlistment.

The current propaganda campaign appears to aim to manage growing discontent among North Korean youth over troop deployments to Russia and reinforce ideological unity. While Pyongyang has not officially acknowledged these deployments, it’s estimated that over 10,000 soldiers have already been sent abroad, and rumors of a second wave are circulating internally.

With U.S.-South Korea joint exercises scheduled for March, North Korea is expected to intensify its ideological indoctrination of youth further while attempting to divert attention from its controversial Russian deployments.

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