World

South Korean ‘preppers’ fine-tune their nuclear-doomsday plan

As he headed for a private bunker beneath a mountain in suburban Seoul, Woo Seung-yep ran through his mental checklist: canned food, chlorine bleach, radio, gas mask.

Since quitting his job as an information technology manager five years ago, Mr. Woo has been preparing for war.

Most of South Korea’s 51 million people tend to shrug off the North’s missile launches and nuclear tests—they have lived with the threat for years on the divided peninsula. Some 58% believe there is no possibility that North Korea would cause a war, according to a Gallup Korea survey released this month, up from 53% in 2014.

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As he headed for a private bunker beneath a mountain in suburban Seoul, Woo Seung-yep ran through his mental checklist: canned food, chlorine bleach, radio, gas mask.

Since quitting his job as an information technology manager five years ago, Mr. Woo has been preparing for war.

Most of South Korea’s 51 million people tend to shrug off the North’s missile launches and nuclear tests—they have lived with the threat for years on the divided peninsula. Some 58% believe there is no possibility that North Korea would cause a war, according to a Gallup Korea survey released this month, up from 53% in 2014.

Others aren’t taking any chances.

Known as “preppers,” these urban-disaster specialists keep survival bags laden with essentials that they can grab at a moment’s notice as they flee to one of the country’s many shelters. As Pyongyang ramps up its weapons tests and threatens attacks on the U.S., preppers such as Mr. Woo say more are joining their ranks.

 

Read the whole story from The Wall Street Journal.

Featured image courtesy of AP

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The SOFREP News Team is a collective of professional military journalists. Brandon Tyler Webb is the SOFREP News Team's Editor-in-Chief. Guy D. McCardle is the SOFREP News Team's Managing Editor. Brandon and Guy both manage the SOFREP News Team.

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