South Korea: Police Raid Presidential Office, Ex-Minister Attempts Suicide

Above: Soldiers try to enter the National Assembly building in Seoul on Dec. 4 2024, after South Korea Pres. Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law. Image copyright: UNG YEON-JE/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

The Facts

  • South Korean police on Wednesday raided Pres. Yoon Suk Yeol's office as part of an investigation into his Dec. 3 martial law declaration. However, investigators were blocked from entering the main building.

  • According to The Korea Times, investigators carried a search warrant to seize evidence — including minutes of Cabinet meetings held before and after Yoon's declaration — and identified Yoon as "the leader" of an alleged insurrection.


The Spin

Narrative A

Yoon's poorly timed decree was an illegal power grab and attempted coup that warrants criminal prosecution. With a long history of military-authoritarian rule, the country can't afford leadership mired in uncertainty. The depths of his political miscalculation have tested the resilience of South Korea's democracy and underscored the need for Yoon to relinquish his post and face the law for the greater good of the country.

Narrative B

The martial law declaration was necessary to protect South Korea from North Korean threats and maintain domestic stability. However, Yoon didn't wrest absolute authority by whatever means necessary; instead, he quickly rescinded the decree when it became clear it lacked public support. The country would be plunged into greater uncertainty if a patriot — who can defend himself before the Constitutional Court and is committed to the unification of the Korean peninsula — is impeached.


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