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IN TODAYβS EDITION
1οΈβ£ What just happened in South Korea |
2οΈβ£ The Intrigue jobs board |
3οΈβ£ Word of the day |
Hi Intriguer. During my posting in Beijing, I took a weekend trip to hike Changbaishan, a large volcano that straddles the Chinese-North Korean border. North Korean state mythology claims Kim Il-sung launched his communist revolution from its crater lake (the mountain is known as Paektu in Korean).
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Since Kim Il-sungβs revolution, the two Koreas have run a rather stark natural experiment: the North has receded into an impoverished, militarised, family dictatorship while the South has become an increasingly wealthy, free and modern democratic state.
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Even more importantly, Seoul has become one of my favourite cities with incredible food and drink, amazing locals, and just enough cultural sights to keep you busy without getting swamped by tourists in the warm months.
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Thatβs why it was such a shock when South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law during an unscheduled televised address yesterday. It was the kind of thing weβve come to expect from his counterpart in the north, and even though heβs since withdrawn his decree, the ramifications of his remarkable gambit are likely to ripple out for weeks to come. Thatβs our main story today.

THE HEADLINES
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Intel starts hunt for new CEO.
Interestingly, Reuters is reporting that the boardβs short-list includes Lip-Bu Tan, the industry veteran who stepped down from the board in August just two years after he was first brought in to help with the turnaround. He had become increasingly critical of the last CEOβs manufacturing strategy, and wanted steeper staff cuts. You can check out our take on the Intel turmoil here. And speaking of chips, Beijing has responded to Washingtonβs latest chip industry export controls by further restricting its own gallium, germanium, and antimony exports to the US. China dominates the global supply of the critical minerals, which have widespread military applications.
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Mixed economic data out of China.
The latest Caixin/S&P Global services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) has fallen to 51.5 from 52.0, suggesting Chinaβs services sector is cooling (though anything above the 50-mark indicates thereβs no contraction). Official PMI data painted a similar picture over the weekend, as Donald Trump’s tariff threats add an extra dash of uncertainty for the world’s second-biggest economy.
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Zelensky calls for reinforcement of his eastern flank.
Ukraineβs president has used his nightly video address to call for major reinforcements in parts of eastern Ukraine, where Russian forces have been advancing (at staggering cost) at the fastest rate since the early days of Putinβs full-scale invasion.
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Namibia elects new president.
Bucking the anti-incumbent trend, electoral authorities have declared current vice president Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, the winner of last weekβs presidential election. Her ruling Swapo party has held power since Namibiaβs independence from apartheid South Africa in 1990. Meanwhile next door in Angola, US President Joe Biden has delivered a landmark address, acknowledging the history of slavery, highlighting US investment in a major rail project, and urging continued US partnership across the continent.
Oil prices edge up on geopolitical wobbles.
The shaky Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire, South Korea political turmoil, a rebel breakthrough in Syria, and US sanctions targeting Iranian oil transport, have all sent Brent crude up by 2.5%, curbed slightly by weaker demand from China.
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TOP STORY
What just happened in South Korea

Pictured: South Korean President Yoon with the National Assembly vote in the background
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Thousands of South Koreans hit the hay last night (Tuesday), blissfully unaware that by sunrise, the country would have flirted with martial law then quickly hit ctrl-z.
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South Koreaβs president, Yoon Suk Yeol, kicked things off with an unexpected late-night national address declaring martial law, citing βthreats posed by North Korea’s communist forcesβ and a need to βeliminate anti-state elements.βΒ Hereβs a quick timeline:
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β°Β 10:23pm β President Yoon announces emergency martial law
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β°Β 11:00pm β Martial law kicks in
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β°Β 11pm–midnight β Lawmakers scramble to the legislature, jumping over perimeters and wrestling through police barricades
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β°Β Midnight-3:00am β Anti-president protestors rally outside
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β°Β 12:48am β Enough lawmakers make it inside to meet the minimum 150 threshold, while fending off military attempts to break in and block any vote
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β°Β 1:04am β Legislature unanimously (190-0) declares the martial law invalid
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β°Β 4:26am β President Yoon accepts the rebuke and withdraws his decree
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Never mind, then? President Yoonβs move was, ahem, bold considering his 19% approval rating and his partyβs minority in the legislature. But it was also a major shift from South Koreaβs modern political norms: martial law was common for much of the 1960s and 70s, leaving a bitter legacy (which Nobel Prize winner Han Kang has chronicled) β so to suddenly have martial law again for the first time since Koreaβs 1980s democratisation will have been a tough pill for many to swallow this morning.
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So whyβd he do it?
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There was no sudden threat from Pyongyang. Thatβs right, no en masse trash balloons, no military manoeuvres, and no missile tests. Instead, Yoon seemed to be linking the persistent threat from the hermit North (theyβre still technically at war) with his own political woes back home in the South (fervent opposition at every turn).Β
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And sure, Seoulβs opposition-led legislature has been absolutely firing lately, pushing legislation thatβs
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Moved to impeach top prosecutors
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Rejected a government budget proposal, and
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Thrice voted to investigate first lady Kim Keon-hee.
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In response, President Yoon has skipped budgetary sessions (a first in over a decade) and launched character attacks against Koreaβs opposition leader for alleged money laundering into North Korea.
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Itβs all become pretty unworkable.
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Yoon barely won power in 2022 with Koreaβs slimmest-ever margin. He ran on a platform of tackling the belligerent North head-on, firming up ties with the US plus Japan (in a historic conciliation that not everyone welcomed) in order to end βthe regimeβ. That was a big shift from his predecessor (Moon), who signed pacts with the North and even visited.
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So when you take that big shift, tight margin, and frame it all against a backdrop of rolling doctor strikes, inflation, clashes with the media, an abrasive style, and deteriorating ties with the North, you end up with a resurgent opposition absolutely crushing Aprilβs parliamentary elections with the highest turnout in 32 years.
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So, after months of gridlock, President Yoon figured heβd try his luck by lighting a match β arguing he needed a state of emergency to break the impasse, which was benefiting the North. But it seems his manoeuvre backfired pretty spectacularly, with many describing it as an attempted βself-coupβ.
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So whatβs next for Yoon?
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Lighting that match was a gamble, and heβs now burnt: protesters last night were chanting βlift martial law, protect democracy, impeach President Yoonβ, and thereβs a solid chance those calls will echo in Seoulβs historic Gwanghwamun Square for weeks to come. Yoonβs single five-year term technically doesnβt end until 2027, but if 200 of the National Assemblyβs 300 lawmakers vote to impeach him, the 63-year-old leader is done.
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And remember how many lawmakers voted against his martial law decree? All 190 of the folks who managed to get inside.
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A coalition of opposition parties is already drafting up the articles of impeachment for treason.
INTRIGUEβS TAKE
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Staying put in Korea for a moment, you could argue this was a stress test for a relatively young democracy, and it passed. But there are warning lights on the dash: while lawmakers were quick to reject Yoonβs decree, Koreaβs security establishment was quick to obey it β his defence minister (a former classmate) quickly tapped the army chief to lead arrangements, and in a society thatβs technically still at war, with mandatory two-year conscription, that set our spidey senses tingling.Β
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Then zooming out a little, Intriguers will know several of the worldβs leading free powers are now stuck in varying degrees of political turmoil back home: Germany, France, the UK, Korea, Japan, and more.
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And thatβs not a coincidence, by the way β after decades of relative peace and prosperity, our new multipolar world is placing new kinds of pressure on a relatively untested political class. And as they all scramble to respond at home, they end up leaving more space for problems to metastasise abroad.
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Also worth noting:
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The President’s chief of staff and senior aides have resigned. If Yoon resigns or is removed, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo will fill in as leader until a new election is held within 60 days.
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The top Korean conglomerates (βchaebolsβ) have all held emergency meetings this morning (Wednesday), weighing up foreign exchange and other risks stemming from the political turmoil (the won has stabilised after an initial fall).
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The autocratic North hasnβt yet commented, but itβll welcome a distracted and divided South, and might use the chaotic scenes to highlight to its own people the alleged failings of any democratic alternatives.
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Swedenβs prime minister has postponed his scheduled visit to Seoul, while the US (Koreaβs key ally) has postponed various military talks and exercises. Itβs unclear whatβll happen to next weekβs defence minister talks in Seoul with the US and Japan.
MEANWHILE, ELSEWHEREβ¦

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π³π΅Β Nepal: The landlocked countryβs new PM (KP Sharma Oli) has signed a nine-point agreement with Chinaβs leader Xi Jinping to deepen their economic, industrial, and infrastructure ties. Oli bucked a long-term trend by visiting Beijing instead of New Delhi on his first foreign trip since taking office in July.Β
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π·π΄Β Romania: TikTok officials testifying before the EU Parliament have confirmed the social media platform recently took down several networks seeking to influence the Romanian elections. Scrutiny of the platform has intensified after hard-right dark-horse candidate and TikTok aficionado CΔlin Georgescu made a surprise appearance in first place (runoffs are this weekend).Β Β
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π΅πΒ Philippines: Manila has deployed its navy and air-force to shadow a Russian submarine passing through its exclusive economic zone (EEZ). The sub said it was heading home after last weekβs joint exercises with Malaysia, though it then popped up again in Malaysiaβs EEZ, claiming it was awaiting better weather to continue its journey.
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πΊπΈΒ USA: US-based tech giant Meta (Instagram, WhatsApp, Facebook) is planning a massive $10B underwater cable circling the globe, in hopes that sole ownership will help it manage geopolitical risks. Meta hasnβt released details, though thereβs speculation the cable may terminate in India to take advantage of the countryβs lower-cost data centres.
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π³π¬Β Nigeria: Africaβs most-populous nation (Nigeria) has officially requested South Africa’s endorsement to join the G20 club of systemically important economies, days after South Africa took over the G20βs rotating presidency for 2025. Nigeria has also expressed interest in joining BRICS.Β
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EXTRA INTRIGUE
Weβve rounded up some jobs we thought you might like:
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Risk analyst @ S&P Global in LondonΒ
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Admin intern @ Political Intelligence in BrusselsΒ
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Fintech Analytics Tech Lead @ Vodafone in Giza, EgyptΒ
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Deputy Press and Communications AttachΓ© @ French Embassy in Wellington, NZ
WORD OF THE DAY

Credits: Oxford University Press.
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Itβs official. We now have a new Oxford Dictionary word of the year, and itβs got something to do with our founding mission.
βBrain rotβ is defined as being the βSupposed deterioration of a personβs mental or intellectual state, especially viewed as a result of overconsumption of material (now particularly online content) considered to be trivial or unchallengingβ.
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To clarify, we at Intrigue want to help prevent brain rot. Anyway, hopefully we can do that *without* resorting to the 2024 word of the year over at Macquarie Dictionary:
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Theyβve defined βenshittificationβ as βthe gradual deterioration of a service or product brought about by a reduction in the quality of service provided, especially of an online platform, and as a consequence of profit-seeking.β
DAILY POLL
How would you characterise Yoon’s martial law gambit? |
Yesterdayβs poll: Do you think the semiconductor industry should ever be subsidised?
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π©π©π©π©π©π©Β πͺ Yes, if it’s critical to national security (66%)
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π¨π¨β¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈ βοΈ No, let the market decide (27%)
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β¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈβ¬οΈ βοΈ Other (write in!) (8%)Β
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Your two cents:
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πͺΒ Β D.D: βUsually, I’d say let the markets decide, but having all the most advanced chip manufacturing concentrated on an island off mainland China that isn’t even recognized by the US as a sovereign country is very risky.β
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βοΈ A: βSubsidies generally do not strengthen companies. Much like protectionist strategies, they tend to become a crutch.β
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βοΈ C.D: βFor now, this is something the market should normally drive, but don’t be surprised that the US government subsidises the industry if a) Great Power conflict is imminent, or b) the US industry teeters and needs a shot of capital to avoid collapse.β
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