South Korean officials are telling the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS) that B-2 stealth bombers are currently dropping leaflets over the city of Pyongyang warning its citizens of an impending attack. At the time of this posting, the U.S. government or its military has not made a statement regarding this late breaking story.
I don't think it's likely the USG is dropping those leaflets.
The language level is not consistent with diplomatic parlance.
The Korean is written in the friendly form - with the suffix of "da" in the verbs. That would also be unusual - a diplomatic message would be in the polite form ("yo" suffix in the verbs). I took Korean in College --- don't remember much - but that would be among the few things I remember --- it's what makes Korean very hard to study.
The translation has grammar mistakes ("It's" instead of "its" ---- and "Every one" instead of "everyone").
34-year-old Paul Horner who is in Donggang, China on business told CNN that it is possible to see the leaflets being dropped over Pyongyang.
Paul Horner is full of cow turd --- look up Donggang China on a map. It's more than 100 miles away from North Korea (over water)
A South Korean viewing the leaflet drop on North Korea by American B-52 stealth bombers warning of an impending attack.
Article can't seem to make up its mind ---- is it the unambiguously non-stealth B-52 --- or the B-2 (the stealth bomber)?