Korean Demilitarized Zone loudspeakers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

North Korea and South Korea—engaged in a low-level military conflict with each other since the Korean War ended in an armistice in 1953—are separated at their border by the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), along which both countries have broadcast various sounds on loudspeakers aimed at the other side. A form of psychological warfare, this has been dubbed the “Korean Loudspeaker War”.
There have been three periods in which the broadcasts have occurred, each time initiated by South Korea; their aim has been to encourage North Koreans to gain a liking for South Korea, as well as to respond to North Korean aggression without physically escalating the conflict. South Korea's speakers play propaganda and music, while North Korea's play general noises such as sirens and drums.
The United States, allied with South Korea during the Korean War, used loudspeaker broadcasts as psychological warfare on North Korean soldiers from 1950 to 1953. In 1963, South Korea began using speakers at the DMZ, and North Korea did the same later on. They both agreed to stop their broadcasts in 2004. In 2015, after an incident in which two South Korean soldiers on the DMZ were injured by a North Korean land mine, both broadcasts resumed. They were paused after a 2018 agreement. In 2024, after North Korea sent balloons filled with trash and manure over the DMZ, the broadcasts again resumed, and South Korea halted theirs in 2025.
In 1945, at the end of World War II, Korea—then a Japanese colony—was occupied by the Allies, who divided the country into North Korea, controlled initially by the Soviet Union; and South Korea, controlled initially by the United States. The North and South fought during the Korean War from 1950 to 1953, over whether the region should have a capitalist or communist economic system. North Korea was on the side of communism, and the South, capitalism.[1]

During the war, the United States, allied with South Korea, used loudspeakers to broadcast propaganda to the North Koreans as a form of psychological warfare. In September 1950, the U.S.' Tactical Information Detachment (stationed at Fort Riley in Kansas) deployed to Korea as the 1st Loudspeaker and Leaflet Company, supporting to American units across the frontline. They operated until 1953.[2][3]
The war ended in an armistice in 1953, without a peace treaty. The two countries ultimately bordered each other horizontally along the middle of the Korean peninsula. Since then, they have been a low-level military conflict. The border between them became the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), a series of fortifications under continuous defense by both countries, and occupied by both soldiers at the Joint Security Area.[1]
Broadcasts

North and South Korea's modern usage of loudspeakers at the DMZ has been nicknamed the "Korean Loudspeaker War".[4][5][6] North Korean loudspeakers broadcast sirens, drum noises, and sounds described as "high-pitched and resembling scraping metal".[7] Their broadcasts are quieter than South Korea's, possibly due to poor speakers.[8] South Korea broadcasts government messages, world news and weather reports, and k-pop music, the latter of which is banned in North Korea under their law on "reactionary ideology and culture rejection".[8][9][10] The South Korean government's messages include a program titled The Voice of Freedom, which list criticisms of the North Korean government and the positives of capitalism.[8][10] It also contains threats towards the North Korean soldiers stationed on the DMZ.[11][nb 1] K-pop that has played includes songs by Apink, BigBang, and IU.[8]
Kim Sung-min, a South Korean man who broadcasts radio signals into North Korea, has said of the South's broadcasts: "These broadcasts play a role in instilling a yearning for the outside world, or in making them realize that the textbooks they have been taught from are incorrect".[9] South Korean politician Tae Yong-Ho has said: "History has proven that loudspeaker broadcasting to North Korea is the quickest and most effective way to peacefully manage the situation along the border and deter war".[11]