@Danelaw They also set up loud speakers on their side of the DMZ and play pop music so the North Koreans can hear. It's ridiculous, but actually a point of contention. The South Koreans see this as an entirely appropriate way to poke at Pyongyang (and potentially as a form of cultural warfare, because the North troops might develop a taste for the stuff), and start playing music every time N.Korea pulls some military stunt or makes too many loud political noises. The North, however, sees the music as a serious threat (I wonder why, eh?), and some of their negotiations have begun and ended with demands that the music stop.
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@Danelaw They also set up loud speakers on their side of the DMZ and play pop music so the North Koreans can hear. It's ridiculous, but actually a point of contention. The South Koreans see this as an entirely appropriate way to poke at Pyongyang (and potentially as a form of cultural warfare, because the North troops might develop a taste for the stuff), and start playing music every time N.Korea pulls some military stunt or makes too many loud political noises. The North, however, sees the music as a serious threat (I wonder why, eh?), and some of their negotiations have begun and ended with demands that the music stop.