South Korean Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back at press conference dismissing North Korea's drone claims and proposing joint probe, with DMZ map and drone comparisons on screen.
South Korean Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back at press conference dismissing North Korea's drone claims and proposing joint probe, with DMZ map and drone comparisons on screen.
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South Korean Minister Rejects North's Drone Claims, Suggests Joint Probe

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South Korea's Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back on Saturday dismissed North Korea's accusations of drone incursions into its territory, stating the alleged drones do not match South Korean military models and proposing a joint investigation. This follows Pyongyang's warnings of retaliation over the claimed violations on January 4 and September 27, 2025.

In a statement responding to North Korea's claims reported earlier this week, Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back told Yonhap News Agency the accusations are 'absolutely not true.' He noted that photos of the drones released by Pyongyang do not resemble models operated by the South Korean military, and confirmed no flight operations were conducted by the Army's ground operations command, Marine Corps, or drone units on the dates in question. 'How could that be possible when the nightmare of martial law still feels like it was just yesterday?' Ahn added, alluding to recent political turmoil.

North Korea's General Staff had claimed on January 4 an air target from South Korea's Ganghwa County was downed near Kaesong using electronic warfare, and a September 27 drone from Paju was intercepted after entering North Hwanghae Province airspace. Pyongyang released debris photos and warned of a 'high price' for the alleged sovereignty breaches.

President Lee Jae-myung has ordered a thorough investigation, with the Defense Ministry affirming no South Korean drones were involved. Ahn suggested a joint South-North probe to verify facts. The dispute heightens Korean Peninsula tensions amid Kim Jong-un's stance on inter-Korean 'hostile states' relations.

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X discussions feature neutral reports from journalists and outlets on South Korea's Defense Minister denying North Korea's drone claims, stating the drones do not match military models and proposing a joint probe. Some users express skepticism toward Pyongyang's accusations, speculating false flags or civilian drones, while others criticize the disclosure as risky.

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South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed North Korea launched an unidentified projectile from the Pyongyang area on Tuesday. The projectile, believed fired in the morning, apparently failed shortly after. The launch came a day after President Lee Jae-myung expressed regret over drone flights by South Korean individuals into the North.

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The former chief of South Korea's Drone Operations Command was removed from office on Thursday for his role in the botched martial law imposition of late 2024. The defense ministry took this severe disciplinary action against Maj. Gen. Kim Yong-dae, who is accused of dispatching drones to North Korea in October 2024 on orders from former President Yoon Suk Yeol and former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun.

South Korean Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back lodged a complaint immediately with the US Forces Korea commander after receiving a report of the standoff last week. The incident involved around 10 US F-16 fighters taking off from Osan Air Base and flying west over the Yellow Sea toward China's air defence identification zone, prompting Beijing to scramble its own jets in a brief face-off. South Korean media highlight this as underscoring Seoul's growing difficulty in balancing ties with security ally the US and top trading partner China.

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South Korea's unification ministry on Monday dismissed a report claiming it proposed a constitutional revision to President Lee Jae-myung to recognize North Korea as a separate nation. The claim emerged from a local newspaper alleging the suggestion was made during a closed-door policy briefing last Friday as part of efforts to resume engagement with Pyongyang. Ministry spokesperson Yoon Min-ho rejected the report as "groundless and false."

 

 

 

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