
North Korea to take counteraction against US-South Korea military drills: Report
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
South Korean president to meet Japan PM in Tokyo ahead of US talks
SEOUL: South Korean President Lee Jae Myung will meet Japan's prime minister in Tokyo next week on his way to a planned sitdown with US President Donald Trump, both governments said Wednesday. Lee had previously announced an August 25 meeting in Washington where he and Trump are to hammer out details of their recent trade deal. His August 23-24 summit with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba will 'solidify the foundation for future-oriented cooperation' between the two leaders, presidential spokeswoman Kang Yu-jung told a press briefing. The two 'will have a frank exchange of views not only on ways to strengthen trilateral cooperation among South Korea, Japan and the United States, but also on regional peace and stability', she added. Tokyo confirmed the visit, describing South Korea as an 'important neighbour Japan should cooperate with as a partner'. 'Under the current strategic environment, the importance of Japan-South Korea relationships and the cooperation among Japan, the United States and South Korea is only growing,' the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. In return for avoiding threatened tariffs of 25% to 15%, both countries agreed last month to trade deals with Washington involving announcements of huge investments into the United States. The neighbours enjoyed a warm relationship during the presidency of Lee's predecessor, Yoon Suk Yeol, whose five-year term was cut short by impeachment over his declaration of martial law. Yoon sought to bring the bilateral relationship closer by setting aside historical grievances to better counter North Korea's nuclear threats. But his impeachment and removal from office in April prompted a snap election won by Lee in June. Lee last month told a press conference that Seoul and Tokyo were 'part of the liberal democratic camp, share many common interests in the military sphere, and have significant potential for economic cooperation', adding the two were 'inseparably linked'. – AFP

Bangkok Post
3 minutes ago
- Bangkok Post
Paetongtarn court ruling set for Aug 29
The Constitutional Court will rule on Aug 29 in the case seeking the removal of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra for her handling of a phone call with former Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen. The court said on Wednesday that it would hear testimony from Ms Paetongtarn and the National Security Council on Aug 21, and closing arguments on Aug 27. The judges will convene at 9.30am on Friday, Aug 29 to discuss and vote on the case, and will announce their ruling at 3pm. Ms Paetongtarn has been suspended from prime ministerial duties since the court accepted the ethics complaint brought by a group of senators on July 1. In an audio clip of the call leaked by Hun Sen, Ms Paetongtarn is heard calling the Cambodian strongman 'uncle' and making disparaging remarks about a senior army commander. She subsequently apologised but maintained that she was using a negotiating tactic in hopes of finding a peaceful resolution to the border dispute. Public anger over the leaked call has led to anti-government rallies calling on Ms Paetongtarn to resign, but her supporters have said she has no intention to do so. The ruling in the prime minister's case will come a week after a Criminal Court ruling on Aug 22 in a lese-majeste case against her father, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The case stems from remarks he made in an interview with a South Korean newspaper in 2015. And on Sept 9, Thaksin will be in court again, this time to hear the Supreme Court's decision on his controversial six-month stay at Police General Hospital from August 2023 to February 2024. Thaksin, 76, was sentenced to eight years in prison — later reduced to one year by a royal pardon — after returning to Thailand in August 2023. He never spent a single night in jail, and became eligible for parole after six months. If the court decides that Thaksin's prison sentence was not properly carried out, it could order him sent back to jail.


Saudi Gazette
5 minutes ago
- Saudi Gazette
Kim Jong-un and Putin discuss alliance and war efforts against Ukraine
SEOUL — North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone call to discuss their deepening ties and war efforts against Ukraine, both countries' state media said Wednesday. The phone call comes as Putin gets set to meet with US President Donald Trump in the US state of Alaska this Friday to discuss a ceasefire proposal on Moscow's all-out war in Ukraine. According to North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency, Putin praised the 'bravery, heroism and self-sacrificing spirit' displayed by North Korean troops as they fought together with Russian forces against a Ukrainian incursion into Russia's Kursk border region, during the call. Putin also shared with Kim information about his upcoming talks with Trump, scheduled to take place Friday in Alaska, according to Russia's state-run Tass news agency, citing the Kremlin. The North Korean reports did not mention the Trump meeting. Kim told Putin that Pyongyang will fully support 'all measures to be taken by the Russian leadership in the future, too,' as they discussed advancing ties in 'all fields' under a strategic partnership agreement they signed during a summit last year, KCNA said. In recent years, Russia and North Korea have developed stronger ties, with Pyongyang providing Russia with personnel and munitions. A mutual defence deal was struck between the two nations during Putin's visit to the isolated dictatorship last year. And since Russia invaded Ukraine, Kim has made Moscow the priority of his foreign policy as he aims to break out of diplomatic isolation and expand relations with countries confronting Washington. His government has dismissed Washington and Seoul's stated desires to restart diplomacy aimed at defusing the North's nuclear program, which derailed in 2019 following a collapsed summit with Trump during his first term. In April this year, Pyongyang acknowledged for the first time that it sent a group of its soldiers to fight side by side with Russian troops. According to South Korean assessments, North Korea has sent around 15,000 troops to Russia since October last year and also supplied large quantities of military equipment, including artillery and ballistic missiles, in support of Moscow's war. Kim has also agreed to send thousands of military construction workers and deminers to Russia's Kursk region, a deployment South Korean intelligence believes could happen soon. — Euronews