Kim Jong Un Suspends Military Action Against South Korea Following Weeks of Threats

North Korea has ratcheted up tensions by taking retaliatory steps against South Korea over the leafleting issue.

North Korea has suspended "military action plans" against South Korea during a Central Military Commission meeting presided over by leader Kim Jong-un, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said on Wednesday.

The decision came as a surprise because the North had widely been expected to convene a meeting of the Central Military Commission of the ruling Workers' Party to endorse military action threatening to take on the South in retaliation over its anti-Pyongyang leaflets, Yonhap news agency reported citing the Norths' KCNA report.

Leader Kim Jong-un presided over a preliminary meeting of the Central Military Commission via videoconferencing on Tuesday and decided to hold off for now any military action plans against Seoul, KCNA said.

Kim Jong Un
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un Twitter

What Happened at The Meeting?

"At the preliminary meeting, the WPK Central Military Commission took stock of the prevailing situation and suspended the military action plans against the South brought for the fifth meeting of the Seventh Central Military Commission by the General Staff of the Korean People's Army," KCNA added.

"The meeting examined agenda items of major military policy to be laid before the fifth meeting of the Seventh WPK Central Military Commission and made a study of a report and decisions, which will be submitted to the fifth meeting, and some documents carrying the state measures for further bolstering the war deterrent of the country," the KCNA said.

The KCNA, however, did not mention when a Central Military Commission meeting will be held.

Punishment

North Korea has ratcheted up tensions by taking retaliatory steps against South Korea over the leafleting issue. It has called South Korea an "enemy" and cut off all cross-communication lines, threatening more "punishment" is coming.

Pyongyand parade, North Korea
A motorcade accompanies an open car carrying North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in in a car parade through Pyongyang on their way to Paekhwawon State Guesthouse on Sept. 18, 2018, in this image from live TV coverage shown at the press center in Seoul. Moon arrived in the North on the day for his third summit with Kim Yonhap/IANS

Last week, it blew up an inter-Korean liaison office that was created in its border town of Kaesong as a result of a 2018 summit between the two Koreas.

Pyongyang has said it will redeploy troops to border areas of Kaesong and Mount Kumgang, which were disarmed under inter-Korean agreements for joint business projects, and threatened to resume "all kinds of regular military exercises" near the border.

North Korea recently reinstalled military propaganda loudspeakers along the inter-Korean border after they were removed under the 2018 summit agreement.

North Korea's state media outlets earlier said that Pyongyang is preparing to send around 12 million anti-South Korea propaganda leaflets via some 3,000 balloons and other means in a tit-for-tat move against leaflets dispatched from the South.

In response to Seoul's call against it, the North said it has no intention to cancel its leafleting-sending plan cross the border, calling an inter-Korean agreement that bans such activity "a dead document."

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