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South Korea's voters cast their ballots in a snap presidential election sparked by the impeachment of Yoon Suk Yeol.
In the left’s upside-down worldview, Beijing is no longer seen as a threat — but as a model of post-Western order.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol ... "I declare martial law to protect the free Republic of Korea from the threat of North Korean communist forces, to eradicate the despicable pro-North ...
S ix months of turmoil in South Korea are over. Lee Jae-myung of the liberal Democratic Party won a commanding victory, with ...
On a cold January afternoon, a young pharmacy student, Shin Jeong-min, waited restlessly outside South Korea's Constitutional Court, as the country's suspended president arrived to fight his ...
North Korea and communism. It is even possible that leftists could merge the South Korean state into the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the Kim regime of North Korea. Yoon was impeached ...
the Communist North and the non-Communist South. But today, South Korea can take credit for some remarkable gains in the difficult task of nation-building. The picture is not all bright ...
"To safeguard a liberal South Korea from the threats posed by North Korea's communist forces and to eliminate anti-state elements... I hereby declare emergency martial law," Yoon said in a live ...
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol's government ... country's parliament and who he accuses of sympathizing with communist North Korea. Yoon said during a televised speech that martial law ...
CAMP HUMPHREYS, South Korea — South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff denied allegations that the military scattered anti-communist propaganda leaflets in North Korea to prompt a reaction from ...
This split South Koreans into two opposing political camps — an anti-Communist one led by an authoritarian elite that favors a hard line against North Korea, and a leftist, pro-democracy camp ...
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