The majority of North Korean electronic attacks happened across five days in the months of May and June.
North Korea's use of electronic attacks against civil aviation in the South has surged by 15 times this year, data shows, with Kim Jong Un's regime doubling down on tactics that have raised concerns at the United Nations.
They have not resulted in any major aviation accidents to date, but GPS interference can endanger commercial airliners flying in poor visibility and is a violation of international conventions on navigational safety.The majority of incidents were reported across five consecutive days between May 29 and June 2, when hundreds of civilian aircraft and ships reported suspected GPS jamming around the de facto inter-Korean sea border in the west, known as the Northern Limit Line.
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