South Korea’s Constitutional Court could soon rule whether to dismiss or reinstate impeached conservative President Yoon Suk ...
Ukraine will soon face the question of how and when to lift its martial law restrictions. The process requires a delicate balancing act. If lifted right away, it could mean an outflow of money and ...
As Yoon Suk-yeol embraces the rhetoric of far-right extremists, South Korea has become deeply polarized and political ...
That doesn't mean the political crisis caused by Yoon’s short-lived imposition of martial law is over. South Korea's already-severe political divide between conservatives and liberals will ...
But it does mean that he will be free while standing ... upheaval and uncertainty that was unleashed when he declared martial law on Dec. 3, calling the opposition-controlled National Assembly ...
For nearly three years, all of Ukraine has been living under martial law. The introduction of martial law temporarily suspended some civilian rights and freedoms and gave the government additional ...
Yoon has argued that he did not mean to impose full military rule. He said he had the right to impose martial law but only meant to sound an alarm over the opposition's abuse of a parliamentary ...
South Korea, one of the most vibrant democracies in Asia and a key U.S. ally, has been in political turmoil since Dec. 3 when Yoon, citing “anti-state forces,” declared martial law before ...
Prosecution questions if that meant inducing North Korean attack to justify martial law A note written by Lt ... enemy" ― which in this case would mean North Korea ― to act first in a combat ...
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, who lawmakers voted to impeach and was indicted on criminal charges for declaring martial law last December ... had “set the definition straight, declaring ...