Monday, June 30, 2008

Korean Government Memorializes Sixth Anniversary of the West Sea Naval Battle
» by GI Korea

The new presidential administration of Lee Myung-bak had announced back in April that they would do something the prior government failed to do and properly memorialize the six South Korean sailors murdered six years ago by North Korean gun boats. The new government was good on its word:

Prime Minister Han Seung-soo offered an apology Sunday to the families of six South Korean soldiers killed in a 2002 naval clash with North Korea in the West Sea, saying the government has not properly honored their sacrifice.

South Korea’s previous liberal governments had officially labeled the tragic incident an “accidental exchange of gunfire,” not a naval battle, although the skirmish was a clear reminder of the grim reality that the two Korea's remain at war.

The families of the fallen soldiers have argued that the previous governments played down the significance of the incident in a bid to keep the fragile mood of inter-Korean reconciliation in tact. They also claimed that the military authorities did not want to talk publicly about the skirmish that had left six soldiers dead and 18 others injured. The North’s losses in the incident remain unconfirmed.

Delivering a message at a ceremony to mark the sixth anniversary of the incident, the prime minister described it as a “victory” for the South against the North’s provocative attack.

“We have not appraised the Second Yeonpyeong Naval Battle correctly and have not honored the lofty sacrifice properly,” Han said in the ceremony held at the Command of the Second Fleet in Pyeongtaek, 70km south of Seoul. A previous inter-Korean naval skirmish near Yeonpyeong Island occurred in 1999. [Yonhap]

For the benefit of those that don’t know the West Sea Naval Battle occurred in 2002 when North Korean gunboats ambushed a South Korean naval vessel patrolling the maritime border known as the North Limit Line (NLL) killing six South Korean sailors and wounding many more. It is suspected that North Korea conducted the ambush in order to draw attention away from South Korea’s incredible success during the 2002 World Cup.


Wounded survivor from the attack.

What is particularly disturbing about this incident is how the Korean government did everything possible to minimize what happened to the Korean public by claiming it was an accidental firing. They would also not hold government memorial ceremonies and left it to the ROK Navy to hold the memorial services on their base in order to prevent the Korean public from turning out. In fact families of the deceased were distraught that USFK appreciated the sacrifices of their loved ones more then their own government:

The father said, “My son is buried in the National Cemetery. But I’m going to take my son’s remains to my family burial site in my hometown.” Having watched the situation develop, he thought his son who was killed by North Korean soldiers was considered nothing more than a criminal.

Some parents said that they are more scared of people who consider the U.S. a bigger enemy than North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, who killed their son. We lose courage to defend the country, when we hear that a wife whose husband fell in the battle is preparing to leave this country. Reading a condolence letter from the USFK commander to mark the second anniversary, the wife said, “The Americans remember my husband and his brothers-in-arms better than Koreans… Frankly, I hate Korea.” [Chosun Ilbo]

The wife in question was so distraught she left Korea because of the way the government treated her. A perfect example of this is when the former Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung implied the soldiers died for nothing.

Last year claims were made that US veterans better remembered the sacrifices of these sailors when a memorial in the US was constructed in their honor. The wife that went to America has since returned to Korea with the election of Lee Myung-bak, who promised properly memorialize the soldiers as well as providing proper medical care for the wounded survivors which has been another major failing of the government.

What was particularly troubling from American perspective was how this incident where six South Korean sailors were deliberately murdered was minimized yet Korean politicians and society decided to begin an anti-US orgy of hate that has been unmatched in Korea over a tragic traffic accident involving a USFK vehicle that happened two weeks before this deliberate murder.

I’m glad finally these murdered sailors are being memorialized, but I do have one problem with this, where was President Lee? Maybe there is a good reason I don’t know about, but it seems like if you are going to make a big deal about how this government is going to properly remember the sailors killed serving their country, the actual President would be the one to appear at the memorial service?

One of my continued criticism of the prior President Roh Moo-hyun was how he would never attend any memorial service for the deceased sailors and now Lee Myung-bak is continuing this tradition.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

LIARS' ROUND-UP

ON SECURITY, FACTS MATTER

BY Ralph Peters NY Times

THE facts about your security are being torn to shreds by activist liars. And they think that you're too stupid to know the difference.

Let's lay out the worst current examples of media make-believe and election-year truth-trashing:

Whopper No. 1: America is less safe today than it was on Sept. 10, 2001. Oh, really? Where's the evidence? The Clinton years saw New York City attacked and Americans slaughtered by terrorists around the globe. Nothing was done to protect us.

And the true end of the Clinton era came on 9/11.

A record to be proud of.

Countless aspects of the Bush-Cheney administration deserve merciless criticism. But fair is fair: Since 9/11, we haven't suffered a single successful terrorist attack on our homeland. Not one.

Explain to me, please, how this shows we're less safe. What factual measurement applies, other than the absence of attacks?

God knows, the terrorists desperately wanted to strike our homeland. And they couldn't. Are we supposed to believe that was an accident?

Whopper No. 2: Al Qaeda is stronger than ever. Al Qaeda just suffered a strategic defeat in Iraq that may prove decisive. It can't launch attacks beyond its regional lairs. The cowardly Osama bin Laden can't show his face (remember his Clinton-era pep rallies?).

Yes, terrorists can still murder innocents on their home court. I personally prefer that to them killing Americans in Manhattan and Washington. Even in Iraq, al Qaeda's been beaten down to violent-fugitive status.

By what objective measurement is al Qaeda stronger today than it was when it had an entire country for its base and its tentacles reached all the way to Florida and the Midwest?

Whopper No. 3: Success in Iraq is an illusion - the surge failed. Folks, this is something only a New York Times columnist could believe.

Every single significant indicator, from Iraqi government progress through the performance of Iraqi security forces to the plummeting level of violence, has changed for the better - remarkably so.

If current trend-lines continue, it may not be long before Baghdad is safer for Iraqi citizens than the Washington-Baltimore metroplex is for US citizens. Iraq's government is working, its economy is booming - and its military has driven the concentrations of terrorists and militia from every one of Iraq's major cities.

And our troops are coming home. Where's the failure?

Whopper No. 4: Iran is stronger than ever. Tell that to the Iraqis, who've rejected Iranian meddling in their affairs, who've smashed the Iran-backed Shia militias and who didn't take long to figure out that Tehran's foreign policy was imperialist and anti-Arab.

The people of Iraq don't intend to trade Saddam for Ahmadinejad. Iran has lost in Iraq. At this point, all the Iranians can do is to kill a handful of innocent Iraqis now and then. Think that wins them friends and influence?

Whopper No. 5: The US-European relationship is a disaster. In fact, Washington and the major European capitals have built new, sturdier bridges to replace old ones that badly needed burning.

The Europeans grudgingly figured out that they need us - as we need them. The big break in 2003 cleared a lot of bad air (there was no break with Europe's young democracies). Relations today are sounder than they were in the fiddle-while-Rome-burns Clinton era.

Oh, and NATO has become a serious military alliance - fighting in Afghanistan, patrolling the high seas and conducting special operations against terrorists. The Germans announced this week that they're sending another thousand troops to Afghanistan. France is re-engaging with NATO's military side. Where's the disaster, mon ami?

Whopper No. 6: As president, Barack Obama would bring positive change to our foreign policy - and John McCain's too old to get it.

Hmm: Take a gander at Obama's senior foreign-policy advisers: Madeleine Albright (71), Warren Christopher (82), Anthony Lake (69), Lee Hamilton (77), Richard Clarke (57) . . .

If you added up their ages and fed the number into a time-machine, you'd land in Europe in the middle of the Black Death.

More important: These are the people whose watch saw the first attack on the World Trade Center, Mogadishu, Rwanda, the Srebrenica massacre, a pass for the Russians on Chechnya, the Khobar Towers bombing, the attacks on our embassies in Africa, the near-sinking of the USS Cole - oh, and the US bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade.

Their legacy climaxed on 9/11.

You couldn't assemble a team in Washington with more strategic failures to its credit.

Whopper No. 7: Our troops are all coming home as psychos victimized by their participation in military atrocities.

Tell it to the Marines.



Good luck to anyone who owns this car...
Over the last few years, I have started to really hate Korean Films. They were just all flash and no substance. The plots were bad, the acting was horrible and by the end of the film, I would swear that I would never watch another Korean film ever again. Lately ever time I have broken that vow, I have been sorely disappointed by the crap that Korean films have become. I have only seen one Korean film that i even liked and it was a great one called, The Chaser

I had seen the previews for a film called The Crossing and I must admit, it looked good. It was telling about a family that was trying to survive in North Korea. I thought that it would be a good film. I had no idea that it would be a great film.

This review will be HEAVY SPOILER so if you do not want to know what happens then please stop reading now.



The film opens up and you see a family in North Korea just trying to get by. You see a sick mother a worried father and a boy and his dog. They are trying to work and stay alive in North Korea. Something is very wrong with the mother and her health is slowly getting worse. It get to the point where the father can not get food nor medicine to feed that family and they have to resort to eating the family dog.

You are also introduced to a black market person who likes the father and his son. They have a daughter and they are about the same age, she shows him a simple pencil sharpener and he looks with amazement. The men drink bootlegged Jack Daniels and they talk about life.

Then one day the black market person's family just simply vanishes and the father decides that he has to try and get a job to save his wife and to get a soccer ball for his son.

The rest of the story tel about how he tries, with a lot of outside help, to reunite the family in South Korea.

What was great about the film was the reaction to the little things that we take for granted. He sees a big Chinese city for the first time and wonders what a
McDonald's' is. He can not believe that the world is so big and that he has lived in darkness for so long. What I also liked was the child finding his lost friend and trying to take care of her until the very end. It was sad to see.

END SPOILERS.......................................................

I have no idea how this film will do in South Korea. It should be seen by the majority of the population and they should ask themselves one huge question, Why did we ever agree to the Sunshine policy if this is the result.

Please see the film when you can

Grade A+

How I saw it. CGV Theater

Opened in Korea 26 June, 2008
Well as a fan of Nochnoy dozor/Night Watch, I was curious to see Timur Bekmambetov's first US Film,Wanted. Well, I have now seen it and I love it.

Within the last few years, Russia has started to produce some great movies, with the Night Watch Trilogy and The 9th Company , some attention is being shown to these films. Now with this film wanted now showing, should we see more Hollywood films under Russian directors?

For this who do not know this movie was originally a comic book by Top Cow Productions written by Mark Millar. In the past I have shown my total disdain for bad cartoon rip-offs but this film is not one of them.

I will make this review as spoiler free as possible.

What I liked was the way that the film was shot, the CGI was very well done and looked very real. I also liked that, in a way, you could actually believe this film.
The film was well directed and had a great script and a great plot and one heck of a fracked up ending. If you like this kind of film, then you need to see this when you can.

Wesley: [Final Line] What the f___ have you done lately?

Grade A-

How I saw it CGV Theater.

Opens in Korea. 26 June 2008 (South Korea)
une 29th, 2008 at 12:38 pm

Exposing the Anti-US Activists as Violence Continues In Seoul

The protests against the importation of US beef into Korea (that really has nothing to do with US beef) broke out once again in downtown Seoul. The conflict began yesterday when the Korean police gave a deadline to the protests groups to remove their tents that were illegally occupying the front lawn of City Hall. The protesters refused and the police moved in an forcibly removed the tents:

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In an attempt to end the protests, the Seoul Metropolitan Government removed 27 tents that were built illegally by rally organizers from Seoul City Hall Plaza. About 50 workers and 2,000 riot police removed the tents, which had been used as the headquarters of the civic groups’ alliance, the People’s Conference Against Mad Cow Disease.

About 400 protesters tried to physically block the removal, but failed. About 10 people who violently resisted were taken to a police station for questioning.

The city said it gave the organizer yesterday a noon deadline to leave City Hall Plaza, but the protesters did not cooperate, causing the police to forcibly evict them. [Joong Ang Ilbo]

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While removing the tents the police also kept the road leading up to the Presidential Blue House blocked with their police buses in anticipation of the protest that was to begin that night:

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After the police tore down the tent city the protesters then brought out a banner depicting Korean President Lee Myung-bak:

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They then proceeded to walk all over it and eventually tore it up:

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The protesters as usual brought out their young kids to inflate their numbers:

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You are never to young to be brainwashed by these leftist goons:

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Politicians from the United Democratic Party came out and protested as well:

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UDP lawmaker Ahn Min-seok told the media he was assaulted by Korean riot police the night before that ended up being a total fabrication:

Representative Ahn Min-seok said he was assaulted by the police, although he had identified himself as a lawmaker.

Police disagreed. It was Ahn, they said, that actually assaulted three officers.

“We began collecting evidence to investigate this case,” Seoul police said yesterday.

Ahn’s punching a police corporal was captured by the video record of Joins TV, an Internet broadcaster affiliated with the JoongAng Ilbo. The footage was posted on the JoongAng Ilbo’s Internet site. [Joong Ang Ilbo]

The leftist propaganda sites though have been working overtime to spread the disinformation that Ahn was attacked despite the video evidence to the contrary. Below is a picture being spread on the Anti2mb website condemning the supposed attack on Ahn:

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I’m sure you will never see on the Anti2mb website:

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Here is an example of more violence against police officers from last night:

Around 1:20 a.m., Oh Myeong-hwan, a detective from the Namdaemun police precinct, attempted to arrest several protesters who vandalized the Koreana Hotel in central Seoul. He was soon surrounded by about 30 demonstrators. Lee Deok-wu, an attorney from the Lawyers for a Democratic Society, which represents the rally organizer, appeared 20 minutes later. Kim Won-jung, chief of the Namdaemun police, also arrived.

“The people nabbed Oh because they thought he was a kidnapper,” Lee said. At the time, Oh was not wearing his uniform. [Joong Ang Ilbo]

These people claim to be peaceful protesters yet they are vandalizing one of the better hotels in Seoul and beating policeman and then claim he is a kidnapper. How would a kidnapper kidnap “several” men at one time? These people will lie about anything.

These so called peaceful protesters have also ransacked offices of newspapers that have spoken out against the violence as part of the protesters campaign of intimidation to silence their critics:

Demonstrators have attacked journalists from conservative-leaning newspapers, which they claim carry unfair reports about the protests. They also broke windows to storm into the head offices of the Chosun Ilbo and Donga Ilbo dailies. [Korea Times]

Choe Sang-hun of the New York Times reported last night’s protests as having 15,000 people. Looking at the below pictures I would say that estimate is about right and would make this the largest of the violent protests so far:

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As night fell the violence began:

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Of course once again they were using ropes to pull on the buses with to try and move them:

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I may have even been able to locate King Baeksu’s fire extinguisher from last night’s protest:

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The Anti2mb site is claiming the policemen were beating down foreigners for no reason as well, just like Ahn Min-seok I’m sure:

beef-protests-64.JPG

To be fair some of the policemen were hitting some of the protesters pretty hard as this YouTube video shows but it tough to make out the context of what happened before the woman got hit with the batons. Did she she throw something that hit somebody in the head to provoke the attack? As we see with the Ahn Min-seok story, these groups will lie and lie regularly no matter how absurd the claims may be.

I actually thought this was kind of funny that some of the protesters brought their own water hoses to fight back with:

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I was wondering what protesters were doing with these water guns in the previous night’s protest:

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Well now we know:

“In the latest rallies, demonstrators shot acid at the police using water pistols and threw bricks at them,” said Han Jin-hee, chief of the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency. “The use of violence has crossed the line. It doesn’t feel like a democratic country anymore.” [Joong Ang Ilbo]

The leftist politician were also out getting their faces in the news again as well and fortunately there are no reports yet of them claiming they were beaten by police like the false claim from Representative Ahn Min-seok discussed earlier:

beef-protests-60.jpg

The guy dressed in the hanbok if anyone wondering is Hong Hui-deok is a member of the Democratic Labor Party (DLP) that two years ago was linked to a North Korean spy ring.

With that an excellent report was published today that shows the background of two of the main organizers of these protests that clearly shows their anti-American backgrounds:

He said the Korea Alliance for Progressive Movement, established last September, is the architect of the protests.
Oh Chong-ryol and Han Sang-ryeol, the co-chairmen of the civic group, as well as Park Seok-un, another senior leader, were singled out by Hong as ringleaders.

Oh, 70, who used to teach at Jeonnam Girls’ High School, is a well-known anti-U.S. activist. He is also a leader of the alliance of civic groups that oppose the U.S.-Korea free trade agreement as well as other anti-American measures.

Han, 58, whose career as an activist began as the student association president of Chonbuk National University, is famous for leading protests to demand the withdrawal of the U.S. forces from Korea. [Joong Ang Ilbo]

han-sang-ryeol.jpg
Han Sang-ryeol

Make sure to read the rest of the report but Han Sang-ryeol has a vast history of violence to include participating in the attempt to tear down the MacArthur Statue in Incheon and fighting with Korean police against the Camp Humphreys expansion. He is also a pro-North Korean stooge.

oh-chong-ryol.jpg
Oh Jong-ryeol

Oh Chong-ryol is the chairman of the Korea Progressive Coalition that is an umbrella group that includes mostly anti-US and pro-North Korean groups like Hanchongryun. Oh has been behind anti-US-ROK FTA protests as well as anti-US protests in 2002 in regards to the USFK armored vehicle accident. He was also involved in protests to shut down the USFK bombing range at Maehyang-ri in 2001.

It is pretty clear that these guys and others are hard core anti-US activists that have been spearheading these violent protests. In response to the violent protests the police have finally issued arrest warrants for organizers of the protests:

Police also said yesterday that they sought warrants to further detain two key members of the rally organizer on charges of violating laws governing assembly and demonstration. According to police, Ahn Jin-geol, 35, was suspected of inciting protesters to march toward the Blue House from May 13 to 25. Yun Hee-suk, 32, was accused of instigating a movement to oust President Lee Myung-bak by acting as a host for the candlelight vigils.

The police also applied for warrants to arrest eight others who are known as leaders of the anti-U.S. beef import rallies. Subpoenas were sent to two more activists. [Joong Ang Ilbo]

Ahn Jin-geol was one of the organizers of the violent protests and is a member of the Peace Network. The Peace Network is a anti-US (some Japan bashing too) and North Korean apologist group that has held seminars criticizing actions against North Korea such as UN resolutions condemning North Korea’s human rights abuses. Yun Hee-suk on the other hand I couldn’t find out much about his background but considering the company he keeps we can assume where he comes from.

Also I recommend everyone go and read this posting from Gusts of Popular Feeling that lays out in great detail on how the online scaremongering scheme by some shady leftist groups coincided with the now proven to be fraudulent PD Diary report that greatly fanned the anti-US beef fears across the Korean public. It is coming quite clear how organized these protests were and all the players behind them.

This is all quite clearly an attempt by the anti-US leftist groups to politically neuter Korean President Lee Myung-bak because he put a stop to their leftist agendas by winning the election. They are now trying to do through misinformation, smears, violence, and intimidation what they couldn’t do in the ballot box.

As things stand now they have been extremely effective.

As end of Reunion Arena draws near, memories flood back

10:33 AM CDT on Monday, June 23, 2008
By ERIC AASEN / The Dallas Morning News
eaasen@dallasnews.com

It was the house where Barack Obama blew his nose and the crowd went wild. Where Luciano Pavarotti belted out “Addio fiorito asil.”

And where Sam Burns came face to face with the tragedy of Hurricane Katrina.

Many will remember Reunion Arena for the deafening Mavericks and Stars games and the likes of Van Halen and R.E.M. But for others, it represents a place full of defining moments for a city and its people.

Now, as the aging arena faces the wrecking ball — the Dallas City Council is expected to vote Wednesday on shutting it down — some North Texans can’t help but reminisce.

The building may fade away, they say, but not the memories.

Kendall Richards, Plano

As a Jumbotron camera operator at Reunion Arena, Kendall Richards got to literally rub shoulders with Mavericks and Stars players in the late '90s.

But it was his encounter with "His Airness" that was unforgettable.

"The very first game I worked ... Michael Jordan is standing on the court at the line, waiting, and he was staring through me," Mr. Richards said. "It sent chills down my spine."

When he wasn't catching the action on camera, Mr. Richards was panning through the boisterous crowds.

"I never saw it as work," he said. "It was a blast. ... I always considered it a major privilege to do what I got to do."

Thanks to his time shooting Stars games, Mr. Richards got hooked on hockey and started playing the game. He even got signed sticks from goalies Roman Turek and Ed Belfour.

Although Mr. Richards, 46, was happy the Stars won the Stanley Cup in 1999, he was selfishly hoping they wouldn't have won it on the road. That way, he could have seen it with his own eyes – and captured it on the Jumbotron.

Sam Burns, Dallas

Sam Burns felt helpless three years ago as he walked around Reunion Arena, surrounded by Hurricane Katrina evacuees.

People wandered with their belongings stuffed in black trash bags. A sea of white cots covered the arena floor.

Mr. Burns, 39, established Internet access for Red Cross crews at the scene and set up computers for hurricane evacuees to check e-mail.

"There was no helping those people," Mr. Burns said. "It was so overwhelming to all of them. It was just in their eyes. ... They didn't know what to think."

Because of the evacuees, Mr. Burns said, Reunion was no longer just a place where you caught a game or a concert. He said he's glad the arena was used for something that "really mattered."

"It was transformed into this one city's civic responsibility to another city," Mr. Burns said. "That was probably the most useful Reunion Arena was to its fellow human being."

Michael Hanna, Rockwall

As Michael Hanna played piano on the Reunion Arena stage as part of Dan Fogelberg's band in the early '80s, it was a homecoming of sorts.

Mr. Hanna, a Corsicana native, was performing for a hometown crowd studded with friends and his mother, who was attending her first rock 'n' roll concert.

"She didn't know what to expect," said Mr. Hanna, 56. "I'm sure her eyes got wide open."

He worked for about 30 years with Mr. Fogelberg, who died in December.

But the Reunion concert almost didn't happen. Mr. Fogelberg was "sick as a dog" before his Dallas performance. There was chatter of canceling the concert, Mr. Hanna said. Fortunately, a throat specialist was flown in, and Mr. Fogelberg "sang like a bird."

A review of the performance in The Dallas Morning News declared: "It was so nice to see someone on that stage who seemed to be enjoying himself as much as those who crammed into practically every available seat in Reunion were enjoying listening and watching him."

David Marcus, Milwaukee

Like many fans who caught Mavericks games at Reunion, David Marcus remembers the deafening, bone-rattling noise.

The arena was practically shaking during one game in the '80s when the Mavs played the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals.

The crowd roared – and his ears rang.

"It got loud enough where you hear your ears reach this high pitch and you don't hear anything else," said Mr. Marcus, who grew up in Dallas. "It was the best headache I ever had."

Reunion Arena wasn't just a building for Mr. Marcus to watch pro sports. It helped influence his career choice – television sports anchor.

Mr. Marcus, 39, eventually covered sports for stations in Corpus Christi, Austin and Milwaukee. He's returning to Dallas and hopes to be a freelance reporter.

"It's not quite like Yankee Stadium closing," he said. "Reunion Arena will never be confused with the great, beloved, traditional venues in American sports."

But during Reunion's heyday, he said, it was "one heck of a place to be."

Buddy Shivley, Elba, Ala.

For Buddy Shivley, venturing to Reunion Arena was more than just watching famous athletes shoot hoops. It was a chance to bond with his girls over basketball.

In the late '80s, Mr. Shivley bought two Mavericks season tickets, and his young daughters, Sarah and Anna Lynn, took turns accompanying him to games, even on school nights. They'd mark down game days on their calendars.

Mr. Shivley treasures those moments.

"The longer you've been with them, the more they open up and get away from Mom and the house and the other sister," said Mr. Shivley, 59. "It was just good one-on-one time."

On game day, as Mr. Shivley drove from his Plano home down Central Expressway, his daughters would often tackle their homework in the back seat.

In the arena, they'd talk about who played well. (Rolando Blackman was his daughters' favorite.) They'd talk about how ugly some of the players were – particularly those who played for the Boston Celtics.

But the best part of being at Reunion?

For Mr. Shivley, it was walking up to the arena, holding his daughters' hands and seeing the excitement in their eyes.

Michelle Ordeneaux Jones, 32, Murphy

Memorable moment: Her first concert

"My best friend and I attended the Bon Jovi Slippery When Wet tour. With our giant bangs, matching acid-wash jean skirts and our newly purchased [tour] T-shirts, we donned the perfect hair-band-fan uniform."

Patricia Johnson, 50, Garland

Memorable moment: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus

"When I divorced, I decided to start some new traditions for my daughter. We started going to [the circus]. ... I would save my money all year and when the circus came, I went all out with the best seats I could get."

Clint Schroeder, 30, Norwalk, Conn.

Memorable moment: Sidekicks soccer games "I am sad that I will probably not be able to take my daughter past Reunion Arena and say, 'Look, honey. There is where your dad graduated from high school. And where your grandpa used to take us all to soccer games.' "

Katrina McNair, 28, DeSoto

Memorable moment: Ice-skating Chipmunks "My father had picked up my sister and me to attend the show. We picked up these little tiny hamburgers called 'Burger Buddies' and gobbled them down on the way to Reunion. I remember thinking how big everything looked to me – and how cold it was inside Reunion."

AND NOW FOR MINE................................................................................................................

Flynn McStay, 42 Daejeon South Korea. "It was the place to go see concerts at in the 80's. My first Reunion show was U2 and I paid 10$ for a so-called bad seat. I have seen, Dokken, Judas Priest, Journey, (a VERY BAD DATE WITH NEW EDITION), Phil Collins, RESTLESS HEART AND Many others.

I was never much of a hockey fan, but I loved the Mavericks, so I would go to the games on Saturday while I was going to college at UNT and for 10-12 $ I had a nice high level seat to a few games. Then when I found out about the best seat after 5pm for 20-25$ I had some great seats for some games.

A while back the "Sportatorium" was torn down and now with this, my 80's memories are slowly fading away.

So, um, college drop-outs can become English teachers now?

Today's Korea Times tells us:
``Some foreign students have to give up their university studies due to financial difficulties. We will invite those young English-speaking foreigners to our schools for the program,'' Hwang Ik-jung, an official at the education office, told The Korea Times. ``It is very helpful for our country as those students can be emissaries for Korea in the future.''

Talk about mixed signals. People bitch and moan all the time about quote-unquote unqualified teachers, and that term is used as a catch-all under which all foreigners' offenses fall. Foreigners sleeping with Korean women? Unqualified teachers. Foreigners taking drugs? Unqualified teachers. Foreigners earning high salaries? Unqualified teachers. Foreigners teaching private lessons, just like countless Korean teachers and college students? Unqualified teachers. Foreigners coming to South Korea at the invitation of the government and at the behest of the free market? Unqualified teachers.

Korean teachers aren't, of course, painted with the same wide brush domestically. There are plenty of legitimate gripes against foreigners here, and I make them pretty frequently, but you can't just hire white people willy-nilly with no plans in place and expect things to improve. Well, okay Korea can and probably will, but I meant to say they shouldn't. I suspect this won't sit well with the Korean Association of Foreign Language Academies, who told the Korea Times last month:
``The government is under the illusion that an unlimited number of English teachers exists overseas,’’ said Seo Jung-sook, information director of the association. ``Inviting more foreign teachers will eventually degrade the average quality of instructors and drive up costs for us.’’

and
``No hagwon owners want to work with unqualified foreigners. Most hagwon employers terminate contracts of unacceptable foreigners, those guilty of sexual harassment or taking drugs,'' general director Choi Chang-jin said.

``However, many of these `blacklisted' foreigners return and teach English at other hagwon. I have seen a foreigner, who was expelled on drug charges, return here within three days. This is because the government does not keep records on these foreigners,'' Choi said.

I already extended KAFLA an invitation to have intercourse with itself, but I'm a generous man and have no qualms about issuing another, should the opportunity present itself.


Stolen from here.

As most of us know, it was just last fall that foreign teachers---foreign teachers on E-2 visas, I mean---were the subject of a moral panic that arose when a teacher in Gwangju was arrested on child molestation charges for stuff he did in another country. We---foreign teachers on E-2 visas, I mean---were hit with all kinds of new regulations making the visa process more grueling and stringent. But because foreign teachers stopped applying---a recruiter on a Seoul Podcast episode said applicants were down by about 2/3rds---and because the teachers here started leaving, these regulations were greatly relaxed. So much so that I have no idea what they even are, and can't get any clear answers from my higher-ups at the local education office, a cause for concern since I need to renew my visa, like, soon. As I mentioned before, it's worth remembering that the Korean government went ahead and imposed all these regulations, even though foreign embassies were not equipped or interested in complying. We ought to call to mind, too, the arrogance of some officials, who had the gall to say shit like:
“I just don’t understand why [foreign embassies] cannot make some exceptions to accommodate the needs of their own nationals,” Choi [at the Justice Ministry] said. “In Korea, criminal records can be easily obtained online. But they don’t have a centralized system.”

As if South Korea has done anything of late to warrant this sort of consideration from foreign governments.

Also important to remember the statement immigration released last fall, in the middle of the moral panic:
The Korean Government will prevent illegal activities by verifying requirements of native English teacher and tighten their non-immigrant status [...] [and will] eradicate illegal activities of native English teachers who are causing social problems such as ineligible lectures, taking drugs and sex crimes. English teachers, who disturb social order during their staying in Korea such as illegal teaching, taking drugs and sex crimes, will be banned from entering South Korea.[...] [They will] prevent illegal English teaching activities and the taking of drugs and sexual harassment of English teachers, [...] teachers who disrupt the social order by taking drugs, committing sexual harassment and alcohol intoxication.

Um, that in the land where 73% of Korean men drink every day, in the land where rougly half smoke cigarettes, in the land that was labeled a "danger country for women," in the land where human trafficking is permitted to thrive and the sex trade openly plied, in the land where teachers routinely behave very badly, and in the land where private tutoring (.pdf) and after-school academies have long been part of the local culture, immigration decided to come out with that directed at a few thousand residents. Anyway, there have been all kinds of recruitment campaigns to get more foreigners in Korean schools after, paradoxically, the government and other forces had been working so hard to drive them away. Because there is little to no attention paid to how foreign teachers are to be used in schools, and because they often serve no greater purpose than window dressing, I do have to question how effective they'll be. But, given the extremely low abilities of many Korean English teachers, I suppose boatloads of foreigners can't do much worse. And given Koreans' remarkably low test scores, especially considering that education here revolves entirely around teaching toward tests, perhaps it is time for a change.

* Update: Galbijim brought up a good point:
Just wait till these guys see how little 1.6 is in this industry and how much they can make in privates or moonlighting at local hagwons and the govt realizes that they’ve created 600 teachers working illegally.
Violent Anti-US Beef Protests Continue In Seoul
» by GI Korea

The violent anti-US beef protests that have been paralyzing downtown Seoul continued on Thursday night, June 27th. The usual anti-US groups that have largely been abandoned by mainstream Korean society, continued to destroy property and assault Korean riot policemen.

Courtesy of another reader tip I have pictures of the June 27th protests. The number of protesters appears to be the usual 5,000-6,000 people that compose the anti-US groups that have been left protesting ever since most of the Korean public abandoned the movement when Korean President Lee Myung-bak implemented new US beef import regulations that seems to have largely addressed public fears of being killed by US beef:

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As usual these anti-US protesters were assaulting the young Korean conscripts that compose the country’s riot police:

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It just continues to piss me off how Korean society allows this people to bash in and assault young men that are conducting their mandatory service to the nation for about $40 a month. When I look at these young guys I think of the KATUSA soldiers I once led and how I would never allow people to treat them like these riot police are treated. No young men should be should be subject to this and is a national disgrace.

The protesters much like the night before, tried to move the buses blocking the path to the Korean Blue House by using ropes. Notice how one of the protesters has a police shield. I doubt the policemen handed it to him, which probably means he assaulted a policemen to get it:

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In a new tactic the protesters even used sandbags stolen from a construction site to make an artificial hill to go over the buses with:

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Looking at the age of the protesters in this picture, there is a high likelihood these are probably Hanchongnyun members:

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I will give these people credit for teamwork that’s for sure:

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The police tried to fight against the protesters by using what appears to be pepper spray:

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It appears the spray had little effect as the mass of protesters kept pushing forward against the riot police:

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As the protesters kept pushing forward they began to throw bottles filled with urine at the riot police:

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Should anyone forced to do mandatory service for their nation be subjected to having urine thrown at them? What a disgrace.

It also makes me wonder what this guy with the water gun is shooting at the police? Is it water or urine?:

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Once on top of the bus the protesters held up a banner saying Korean President Lee Myung-bak is fighting against the citizens of Korea:

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And finally of course there were more injuries due to the violent protesters:

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In response to this violence Korean President Lee Myung-bak has announced he is going to arrest the protest leaders and put die in the water cannons:

Police are getting tougher with protesters against U.S. beef imports.

The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency said Friday it will seek arrest warrants for eight protesters on charges of masterminding illegal demonstrations.

It is the first time that the police is seeking arrest warrants for leaders of the candlelight protests against U.S. beef imports.

The police also announced it will fire water cannons with colored water at violent protesters to make it easier to arrest them. [KBS Global]

I doubt this will do much, what the Korean authorities need to do is arrest people who assault policemen and destroy property. The people that assault policemen should be fined and jailed. It is a disgrace that these people are allowed to assault these conscripted riot police the way they are. The people destroying property should be arrested and then instead of sending them to jail, fine them the cost of the damage to property. If these people start getting hit in the pocketbooks I think the violence in these protests will drop dramatically.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Congrats NK

North Korea has handed over to China a dossier on its nuclear activities, and plans to destroy the cooling tower at its Yongbyon reactor complex.

The Bush administration will take North Korea off the State Department’s terrorism blacklist.

Secretary of State Condie Rice says the United States has the means to verify North Korea’s estimates of its nuclear programs. John Bolton thinks she’s full of shit:

“This is a sad, sad day,” said John Bolton, the former United States ambassador to the United Nations and a leading critic of the new American negotiating stance. “I think Bush believes what Condi is telling him, that they’re going to persuade the North to give up nuclear weapons, and I don’t think that’s going to happen. I think we’ve been taken to the cleaners.”

Well, at least Ban Ki-moon is happy.

Eight years, and we’ve got this steaming load of crap. The critics are right — if Agreed Framework 2.0 was going to be the result, we might as well have stuck with the Clinton deal.

Over at Think Progress, “Satyam” gives us a flashback to when Bush was governor and wondering why the hell he should care about North Korea. Funny thing is, the Ineloquent One had the right idea back then. If the Chinese and South Koreans want to pay off the nuclear basketcase in their backyard, that’s their business. Is it now US policy to pay off any regime that threatens to develop nuclear technology? Besides, assuming we’re concerned about North Korea’s sales of nuke technology to third parties (like Syria), isn’t rewarding them precisely the wrong thing to do?

North Korea should have been ignored and left to collapse on its own. Instead, it’s going to be another four years (at least) of watching North Korea play “let’s fuck with another US president.”

I can’t wait.

The More Things Change...

...the more they stay the same, as they say.

Read the words of the late Horace G. Underwood, whose words I am reminded of lately, and who had far more direct and passed-down experience in this country than I could ever hope to possess. It's spooky how similar many expats' experiences are in the present day to what this man, who quite literally stood at the center of modern Korean history as it was being made, had from decades ago. (HT to Dylan)

From the Korean-American Association Library

2003-11-01

"Refill the Reservoir" - Dr. Horace G. Underwood

For over one hundred years there has been a deep reservoir of basically friendly relationship between Korea and America. Of course there have been ups and downs in that relationship as historical factors influenced either or both countries, but the basic pool of good will has until recently been sufficiently deep that many people take it for granted and have seen no need to take measures to preserve it. We have assumed that the minor flurries of disagreements would soon die down and the basic friendship would remain. Unfortunately, in recent years, the minor disagreements have more and more been publicized and deliberately distorted in what seems like a planned campaign to discredit the relationship between our two people.

The time has come when friends of Korea and America must wake up to the deteriorating atmosphere and take steps to stop the drain on the reservoir of good will. Incidents will no doubt continue to occur, but efforts should be made to put them in context, to insure that both sides of the story are given equal publicity, to call people's attention to acts of kindness and assistance, not just conflicts.

The SOFA agreement is often criticized by ill-informed people for its "unequal provisions", but are they really unequal against Korea's rights and interests? SOFA requires that all U.S. service personnel accused of Korean crimes be tried in civilian courts, not military ones. Yet it is my understanding that any Korean soldier accused of a crime is kept by the military and tried by the military. This does not sound to me like American troops are getting equal treatment to Korean soldiers.

It is often claimed that compared to American troops in Japan and Germany American in Korea are prosecuted for only a very small percent of their crimes. The fact is that in Korea traffic violations are classified as "crimes" but not in Japan and Germany. If traffic violations are not included, the situation in Korea is similar to that in other countries, but people continue to claim that it is no equal. This well known to the Korean government officials negotiating SOFA, and I understand that the media know it, too, but neither the press nor the government says anything. The explanation is always left to an American spokesman, which many choose to think is just an American excuse. I am told there are similar problems about other provisions, but the Korean spokesmen seldom help clarify the situation.

Aside from SOFA, there is certainly very unequal treatment by the media. When an American officer was murdered in Itaewon last year there was minimum mention in the Korean press and I have never heard a report on the arrest and trial of the murderer. But when an American soldier murdered a prostitute there was great outcry over several days and many follow-up stories of the arrest, trial and imprisonment.

When the 8th Army mistakenly dumped a small amount of polluting material through the sewage system that is designed to handle such pollutants, there was a great outcry. A U.S. Army spokesman apologized and promises were made to be more careful, but even recently day there have been demonstration over the matter, and the newspapers report that someone is going to sure the officer in change. Yet when the Korean Army dumped 200,000 gallons of pollutants directly into the river there was only a simple news story, I have never heard that the Army apologized or that anyone was punished, or that environmental group held protests outside the gate of that unit.

There are on-going protests about bombing ranges used by the U.S. Air Force, but no protests about bombing ranges used by the Korean forces. The Korean military maintain a major firing range right next to one of the very popular summer resort beaches, firing over important fishing grounds, but if there have been any protests they have never been reported in the news media.

An American soldier on the subway was assaulted by a Korean passenger for touching a Korean woman-who was the soldier's wife!-but the news stories all blamed the soldier.

American military personnel are participating in the Habitat for Humanity program this summer, but were told they would get no publicity unless Korean troops were working with them. The American troops are glad to be joined by the Korean soldiers, but such an attitude by the press is hardly "equal treatment".

Far more than in the past, there seems to be a deliberate campaign to publicize fault of the Americans, but too many friends of America seem content to depend on the reservoir of good will, not realizing that it needs to be refilled from time to time. It is like the drought we are experiencing this year. Every year the water in the reservoir goes up and down depending on the weather, but there has never before been any real doubt that the water would be there when needed. This year, however, the reservoir are getting dry and extraordinary measures must be taken. Many farmers are urging that new reservoirs must be built for the future. So it is with Korean American friendship: we seem to be going through a very serious drought. The reservoir is getting dry and we must start taking extraordinary measure.

The Korean-American Association, and even more important, the individual members of the Association, must start taking positive steps to re-fill the reservoir. Where we have access to the media, to scholars, to private groups we must counter this constant draining of the reservoirs by refilling them. We must work to have both sides of the story told, to be sure that favorable items are publicized, to counter the bias that is all too evident in today's society.

In the 1950s and 1960s American soldiers disliked being assigned to Korea. many of them had bad experiences and even back in America there was a low opinion of Korea. Many in the American community in Korea were very disturbed by this and took measures to try to change opinions. I often spoke to both individuals and to groups to help them understand the country and the people. Where possible, I would explain the situation they were experiencing, but always I would tell of all the good things about being in Korea. I have no idea of how many minds I changed, but it is important for every one of us to speak up, to explain how the problem arose and to remind people of the good things that have happened. If we just sit back and no do nothing we will soon find that the reservoir of good will is dryer than the reservoirs thought they could depend on.
President Bush Removes North Korea from State Sponsors of Terrorism List
» by GI Korea in:

I can’t say I’m not surprised by this announcement, but I still find it to be utterly unbelievable:


It seemed dramatic. President Bush stepped into the Rose Garden to announce plans to remove North Korea from the U.S. terrorism blacklist and ease sanctions against a country he once branded as part of his “axis of evil.”

But just as soon as he said it, he played down its significance.

Bush said what the U.S. was giving North Korea in exchange for its long-awaited accounting of its secretive nuclear program was largely symbolic — that they would have little impact on North Korea’s financial and diplomatic isolation. [International Herald Tribune]

If dropping North Korea from the State Sponsors of Terrorism List according to President Bush is “largely symbolic” then so is North Korea’s nuclear declaration that is months late and totally incomplete because here is what is not in the declaration:

The number of bombs in storage, or information about what’s going to happen to them. The North proved it could build a working nuclear bomb when it carried out an underground nuclear test blast in October 2006. Details on the bombs, however, will be left to the next stage of the talks, when Pyongyang is supposed to abandon all its nuclear weapons program.

_Details about North Korea’s suspected nuclear program to seek weapons fueled by enriched uranium.

_An account of North Korea’s alleged role in helping Syria build what senior U.S. intelligence officials say was a secret nuclear reactor meant to produce plutonium used in making high-yield nuclear weapons. Israeli jets bombed the structure in the remote eastern desert of Syria in September 2007.

With this much left out it is amazing there is anything in it at all. It is official that President Bush’s North Korea policy is even worse then the first Agreed Framework signed with North Korea by Bill Clinton. Critics of the current North Korea policy are currently letting their voices be heard about their displeasure with this announcement:

The White House didn’t want Bush’s announcement to be viewed as the U.S. bowing to the communist regime. It also helped temper outrage from conservative Republicans, who want the U.S. to take an even tougher stance against the regime.

“It’s shameful,” said John Bolton, Bush’s former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. “This represents the final collapse of Bush’s foreign policy.”

“Profound disappointment” was the reaction of Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla.

Bush critics said even symbolism was too much give to a regime that can’t be trusted, but Bush insisted he was not giving in to North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.

You know who else must be really angered about this agreement? First of all the Japanese who has citizens still unaccounted for that have been kidnapped by the North Korean regime, not to mention the hundreds of South Korean citizens kidnapped as well, which the South Korean government cares so little about that a 66 year old grandma had to launch her own rescue mission to rescue her husband. So the South Korean government may not be angered but the families of the South Korean abductees surely are.

Then you also have the Kim Dong-shik family. Reverend Kim Dong-shik was a US permanent resident married to a US citizen who has lived in America that past three decades before being kidnapped in China by North Korean agents for aiding North Korean defectors. It is suspected he was brought back to North Korea where he was tortured and killed. Barack Obama promised the Kim family who are his constituents in Illinois that he would not allow the removal of North Korea from the terrorism list until they came clean on the whereabouts of Reverend Kim. Since starting his presidential campaign, Barack Obama has been in hiding on this issue ever since and is as expected quiet on it now as well. There is change you can believe in.

However the person most upset about this has got to be Muammar Gaddafi. Just think Gaddafi had to completely give up his nuclear program, dispose of his chemical weapons, lose a lot of face in the Arab world, and had to pay $2.7 billion dollars in compensation money to the victims of Pan Am flight 103 bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland to get off the terrorism list.

Kim Jong-il on the otherhand bombs Korean Air Flight 858 killing 115 people plus other terror attacks and does not have to pay any compensation money and is having people pay him instead for being taken off the State Sponsors of Terrorism List.

It is sad days when I’m hoping Jimmy Carter will show up and rescue the Bush administration from this poor North Korea policy choice like he rescued the Clinton administration from its poor policy choice of deciding to attack North Korea in 1994.

One Free Korea of course has more on this issue that is of course a must read.


MAN I AM TICKED OFF A BUSH FOR THIS ONE. WHAT IN THE FRACK IS HE THINKING ABOUT.




Get ready for NK's incomplete incorrect and flat out bull shit

[Updated below: Today, President Bush embarks on the process of throwing away most of our diplomatic leverage against North Korea in exchange for a declaration that’s incomplete, incorrect, and unverified. Those who rightly criticized President Clinton for appeasing North Korea after the 1994 Agreed Framework should be honest enough to admit that Bush’s eleventh-hour grasp at a diplomatic legacy is probably even more dangerous.]

[Original Post, 24 Jun 08] In a speech at the Heritage Foundation last week, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reported that North Korea’s nuclear declaration is imminent again.

Or not. North Korea was supposed to begin “discussing” the full disclosure of its nuclear programs and weapons by mid-April of 2007. The full written disclosure was due during a subsequent ”implementation phase,” though there was no deadline. In November, the North Koreans handed chief U.S. negotiator appeaser Chris Hill their idea of a declaration, but it was apparently so deficient that Hill told a little white lie and denied having received it. A deadline was set for the end of 2007, when the declaration was imminent until it wasn’t. It was briefly imminent again in January and in April.

This week, as Rice heads for Seoul and Tokyo, the declaration is rumored to be imminent again. It might coincide with an expensive act of what proliferation expert Henri Sokolski calls “nuclear theater“ – the demolition of the Yongbyon cooling tower on live TV. (It will cost us, of course.) There is even talk of Rice visting Pyongyang.

If you’re a superficial observer of this illusion – I’d say that describes AP correspondent Matthew Lee pretty well – you will believe. And ironically, that belief will find its widest acceptance among those who are usually Bush’s harshest critics.

False, Late, and Incomplete

But if the North Koreans finally do hand over their “disclosure,” we know it will be incomplete and incorrect. Our negotiators let the North Koreans know at the beginning of this year that we were willing to accept an incomplete declaration. Full disclosure has since been renegotiated down to a disclosure that essentially covers one worn-out 5-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon that age, overuse, and shoddy concrete disabled with greater speed and efficiency than our finest diplomatic minds could.

Absent from the declaration will be North Korea’s other, larger reactors, its proliferation activities, its uranium enrichment program, its completed fissile material, or its completed nuclear weapons. That’s not much of a declaration, and honest observers and experts of most partisan persuasions are in uncanny agreement about that:

“We appear ready to accept considerably less than the original agreement,” said Michael Green, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former Bush administration National Security Council official. “It appears that there have clearly been some corners cut. Acknowledging U.S. concerns about the (uranium enrichment) program, or proliferation, is not a declaration,” he added.

Bruce Klingner, a former CIA analyst and Korea expert now at the Heritage Foundation think tank, said the administration appeared upbeat about the declaration and welcomed movement on ending its plutonium program. “Any progress on getting North Korea working towards plutonium denuclearization is all to the good,” he said, but he added Pyongyang should not be allowed to “skate by” on giving information about any uranium and proliferation programs. [Reuters, Arshad Mohammed and Susan Cornwell]

More specifically:

Quid: What the North Koreans Will Do.

North Korea’s Existing Nuclear Weapons. North Korea will not disclose how many completed nuclear weapons it has, what their yield is, or where they are. Not now, and if listen to what they’re saying, not ever.

Fissile Material. Ditto. The North Koreas won’t have to tell us how much reprocessed plutonium they have ready for molding into nuclear weapons, or for resale to the highest bidder. Maybe this fall, maybe never. [See Update 1 below. The North Koreans are expected to disclose some amount of plutonium, although that amount is likely to be several bombs short of our own estimates. Regardless of the amount, it will be unverifiable for the foreseeable future, and the North Koreans say they’re keeping it.]

Other Reactors. I’ve been suggesting for months that disabling the 5-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon would mean very little if the North Koreans are almost ready to start up a 50-megawatt reactor next door. Judging as best I can from these Google Earth images I downloaded recently, the 50-megawatt reactor looks finished, but a 200-megawatt reactor 13 miles away appears to have a way to go yet. North Korea isn’t disabling either of these reactors.

Proliferation. As with its uranium program and fissile material, North Korea admits nothing, and we all ”sidestep a dispute over how much detail North Korea must provide about any past uranium enrichment-related activities and its involvement in a mysterious Syrian facility.” That facility has become more mysterious this week following a report by that notorious neocon mouthpiece, Der Spiegel, that the North Koreans weren’t just helping Syria get The Bomb, they were also helping Iran:

The weekly said the Syrian site at al-Kibar was used to produce nuclear material the Iranian regime needed to make a bomb. North Korean scientists worked alongside Syrians and Iranians at the site, where a reactor was being built to produce weapons-grade plutonium, Der Spiegel quoted the intelligence reports as saying. The report said Iranian scientists had made progress in enriching uranium but had no experience with plutonium and sought the help of the North Koreans. [Deutsche Presse-Agentur, via Ha’aretz]

See also the Khaleej Times, New Kerala, and the Irish Sun (which is both a newspaper and an oxymoron). Not that this should astonish us. At least as early as 2005, there were reports of an Iran-North Korea oil-for-nukes deal.

Uranium Enrichment. The ink on the 1994 Agreed Framework had barely dried when the CIA caught the North Koreans secretly dealing with Pakistan’s A.Q. Khan to build a capability to enrich uranium, an alternate route to a nuclear weapons capability that’s easier to conceal from our spy satellites (more).

The Clinton Administration chose to ignore this. When the Bush Administration confronted the North Koreans with the evidence in 2002, the North Koreans admitted it. Then they went back to denying it again, although we’ve since intercepted aluminum tubes suitable for centrifuge casings on their way to North Korea. Pakistan has since confirmed selling the North Koreans complete centrifuges. The Directorate of National Intelligence still thinks the North Koreans had an undisclosed uranium enrichment program, but the North Koreans have been far more stubborn in refusing to re-admit this than we have been in demanding that they come clean. The result was an agreement that the State Department would write North Korea’s declaration for it, and that North Korea would merely “acknowledge” our concerns. This makes it all the easier for them to disavow them later.

Last year, the North Koreans took one of our diplomats to a missile factory to prove that the aluminum tubes were merely for rocket fuselages. They agreed to provide a sample of the aluminum but insisted on smelting it down first. The sample tested positive for enriched uranium.

In May, the North Koreans handed over 18,000 pages of documents about their plutonium reprocessing. The State Department, under withering fire for giving away much and getting too little in return, paraded the documents before the press without having even translated them. And would you believe?

The United States in recent weeks has obtained new intelligence — fresh traces of highly enriched uranium discovered among 18,000 pages of North Korean documents — that are raising new questions about whether Pyongyang pursued an alternative route to producing a nuclear weapon, according to sources familiar with the intelligence findings.

Officials at the State Department and with the director of national intelligence declined to comment on the new information, but sources said Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made an oblique reference to it in a speech on North Korea policy to the Heritage Foundation on Wednesday.

“As we’ve gotten deeper into the process, we’ve been troubled by additional information about North Korea’s uranium-enrichment capability,” Rice said. “And this information has reaffirmed skepticism about dealing with North Korea.”

The new intelligence arrived at an awkward moment for the Bush administration. North Korea next week plans to submit its long-awaited declaration on its nuclear programs, which is expected to disclose that its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon produced about 37 kilograms of plutonium. Then, on June 27 or 28, North Korean officials are expected to blow up the cooling tower attached to the facility, diplomats said. [Washington Post, Glenn Kessler]

This report seems inconsistent with Sung Kim’s statement at that press conference that the documents were only photocopies. Call that another unresolved question.

Quo: What We Will Do for Kim Jong Il

Food Aid. No, we shouldn’t punish the North Korean people for Kim Jong Il’s actions. Yes, we should provide food aid, and yes, we ought to monitor it so that we know that the regime and the military won’t steal it. But that’s not what we’re doing.

Proliferation Aid. We’re paying for all of North Korea’s “disabling” activities. The State Department is currently seeking a waiver of sanctions under the Glenn Amendment.

Energy Aid. The rest of North Korea is slipping back into famine, but regime tour guides are boasting to foreign journalists that there are no more blackouts in Pyongyang. That’s because of the heavy fuel oil the United States has been shipping while North Korea proliferated and stalled on meeting its own obligations. (There have been reports that North Korea has diverted the oil for military use, but I put little credence in them. Heavy fuel oil is probably too thick to be re-refined into a suitable fuel for vehicles or aircraft.)

Diplomatic Relations. All of President Bush’s talk about human rights was just that. Concentration camps, gas chambers, infanticide, crushing repression, and the use of food as a weapon appear to be no impediment to recognizing Kim Jong Il’s regime and exchanging ambassadors, which could only mean that we have no standards whatsoever. North Korea is still counterfeiting our money and they’re running what may be, on a per capita basis, the most repressive regime in the history of mankind, but those are differences we can live with ”in the context of two states that have diplomatic relations.”

Terror Sponsorship De-Listing. Never mind the unexamined findings of the Congressional Research Service that North Korea has recently aided Hezbollah and the Tamil Tigers. The State Department is determined to de-list North Korea and throw away most of our leverage:

“We are looking to receive the declaration soon,” Hill said after talks with Japanese Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura and the Japanese and South Korean nuclear envoys. “We’ve done a lot of work on it.” Komura hinted the declaration may not be as thorough as previously hoped. “The Japanese government believes that a complete declaration is necessary for complete abolition” of the North’s nuclear weapons, Komura told reporters.

“But there’s an idea that it’s better to ease the stalemate and move forward, even by lowering (the hurdle) for the sake of reaching our goal of denuclearization,” Komura said. The U.S. has pressed North Korea, which conducted a nuclear test in 2006, to clear up allegations that it helped Syria build a nuclear facility and ran a secret plutonium program. The U.S. reportedly earlier agreed to let North Korea simply acknowledge the allegations without confirming them.

The reports triggered a backlash among conservatives in the U.S. They accused US President George W. Bush, who once branded North Korea part of an “axis of evil,” of rushing a deal in his last months in office. [AFP]

The idea of lifting this designation is to make it possible for Kim Jong Il to obtain the massive windfalls of World Bank loans and trade with the United States. North Korea is a Tier 3 country for human trafficking, which raises questions about Tariff Act prohibitions against importing goods made with forced labor.

Japan, our most important Asian ally, also sees these sanctions as important leverage in forcing Kim Jong Il to return the unknown number of Japanese citizens it has abducted. Japan reportedly will ask Rice not to remove North Korea from the terror-sponsor list. Refusing Japan’s request will strain our most important Asian alliance for dubious returns.

For those who are interested, I’ve added two press conference transcripts below the fold; one from Chris Hill and one from Condi Rice.

Update 1: According to this, the North Korean declaration — now expected this Thursday – will discuss other nuclear facilities besides the 5-MW reactor at Yongbyon, although it’s anyone’s guess which ones. There’s a link below to Google Earth images of the major ones. Chris Hill also contradicts me regarding the disclosure of plutonium, and giving Hill the benefit of the doubt for the time being (I see that one of my links is dead), I’ve made a correction to the post below:

“The key element of the declaration of course is the North Koreans, in addition to laying out all their facilities, giving us a verifiable figure on how much plutonium they have,'’ Hill said today in Beijing. “Plutonium here is really the heart of the game because that’s the stuff they make bombs out of.'’ [Bloomberg]

So the actual bombs they’ve already built — or sold — are not really the heart of the game?

If the North Koreans provide a disclosure on plutonium, they are likely to disclose an amount of reprocessed plutonium that’s far lower than our own estimates. And because there’s no verification mechanism in place, we’ll have no way of knowing for sure. And of course, disclosing some amount of plutonium is one thing; actually handing it over is another.

The Donga Ilbo gives more explanation of why the detonation of the Yongbyon cooling tower is mostly for show. But not so fast, say the North Koreans:

North Korea wants to obtain “final assurance” from the U.S. that it will remove the communist nation from its list of terrorism-sponsoring nations as promised, a South Korean government official said Tuesday, with the six-way talks on the nuclear crisis expected to resume soon. [Yonhap]

It’s clear from the article exactly what the North Koreans will stall, other than the next round of talks, if they don’t have their advance assurance of the de-listing, something that is certain to draw congressional opposition. In another sign of trouble, Japan continues to hint that it may publicly oppose de-listing North Korea as a sponsor of terrorism.

Update 2: They’ve handed it over, whatever it is. The uncritical shallowness of most of the coverage — even on generally conservative blogs — excrutiates, with only a few observers mentioning what’s not in this declaration. The Administration has most journalists looking at this story through its soda straw.

Uncharacteristically, the McPaper asks about The Pink Elephant in the Room: “One item that won’t make the declaration … will be North Korea’s nuclear bombs. The omission means the world will have to wait for an answer to the question at the heart of the nearly six-year-old standoff: Is the North ready to give up its nuclear weapons?”

The AP provides some background for how the North Koreans talked us down to a declaration that declares no weapons, uranium enrichment, or proliferation through “months of haggling,” but buries it deep inside its story. This story is slightly more inquisitive, but also deep down in the text:

Besides providing information about its nuclear facilities, North Korea’s declaration is to provide a verifiable figure on how much plutonium they have. That still won’t answer the question of how many bombs North Korea has stockpiled, but plutonium is the “heart of the game because that is the stuff they make bombs out of,” says Christopher Hill, the lead U.S. negotiator in the talks under way between Pyongyang and the U.S., China, Japan, South Korea and Russia.

What’s not in the declaration is as important as what it includes.

It won’t illuminate North Korea’s suspected program of developing weapons fueled by enriched uranium. As a result of the six-nation nuclear talks, the North has stopped making plutonium and begun disabling its nuclear facilities, but it still has a stockpile of radioactive material that experts believe is enough to build from six to 10 bombs.

The North proved it could build a working nuclear bomb when it carried out an underground nuclear test blast in October 2006. Details on the bombs, however, will be left to the next stage of the talks, when Pyongyang is supposed to abandon all its nuclear weapons program.

North Korea’s declaration also won’t give a complete accounting of how it allegedly helped Syria build what senior U.S. intelligence officials say was a secret nuclear reactor meant to make plutonium, which can be used to make high-yield nuclear weapons. Israeli jets bombed the structure in the remote eastern desert of Syria in September 2007. [AP, Deb Reichmann]

On the other hand, Don Kirk gets it: absolute must read.

The White House’s press release and a transcript of President Bush’s statement in the Rose Garden, with some Q&A, is added below the fold.

Assistant Secretary of State Christopher R. Hill
Trilateral Joint Press Availability with Director General Akitaka Saiki and Chief Nuclear Negotiator Kim Sook

June 19, 2008, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Tokyo, Japan

[Note: Director-General Saiki spoke in Japanese, and Chief Negotiator Kim Sook spoke in Korean. Their comments are not included except in reference to A/S Hill’s remarks.]

ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: Well, let me just say that we very much value these three-party meetings. Obviously, we’re at a very important phase in the Six-Party process. So I think it’s very appropriate that Japan, the ROK, and the U.S. get together and discuss how we can make progress at this very important moment. I think we did have a very good discussion about the various aspects of it. Of course there are sequencing issues that need to be discussed, but also issues relating to obligations that all the parties need to make and issues relating especially to, as Secretary Rice noted today in her speech, issues relating to the need for verification. So we’ve had a good discussion on all of these things and look forward to further discussions later on.

QUESTION: With regard to the question of America’s delisting of the DPRK and the abduction issue, what did Assistant Secretary Hill say about this?

DIRECTOR-GENERAL SAIKI: With regard to the question of America delisting the DPRK as a state sponsor of terrorism and with regard to U.S.-DPRK relations — if the DPRK submits a declaration, the United States will remove the DPRK. In the context of Japan-DPRK relations as well, the United States is well aware that this is a very significant development. Regarding progress in Japan-DPRK relations, we explained the situation to the U.S. The U.S. has said that it will continue to fully communicate with Japan about the matter and act accordingly. That’s our awareness.

QUESTION: (directed to Assistant Secretary Hill) How about this question?

ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: That’s exactly as we discussed it. I think that Secretary Rice spoke to this issue today. We have felt that it has been very important to be in close coordination with the Japanese Government throughout this issue. Obviously, the question of abductions is not just a question that is of interest to the Japanese government; it’s also of interest to the U.S. Government as well. So we stay in very close contact with Japan on this. We have followed the progress very closely of these new discussions that have taken place between Japan and the DPRK. And I think that as we go forward, we will stay in close contact with each other.

QUESTION: I’d like to ask about the declaration. A complete and correct declaration has been demanded, but actually the amount of plutonium and other issues will not be addressed at this point. Regarding the fact that nuclear weapons are not included, Japan and South Korea are located near North Korea, so they are exposed to this threat. America is especially focused on nuclear proliferation, but isn’t it rather lax on other issues?

ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: First of all, I want to make very clear that our position is a position that has been set out in the Six Parties all along — which is, the goal here is complete denuclearization. The goal here is not just the declaration. The goal here is complete denuclearization.

Now we have done this in phases, with the understanding that we could not just complete everything in one phase. We needed more than one phase. So our position is that as we go forward, we need to achieve the complete goal — and that is the complete abandonment of all nuclear programs, nuclear weapons, and the return of the DPRK to the NPT and to IAEA safeguards. And that’s very clearly spelled out, very clearly spelled out, in the September ’05 statement.

So we will not finish this process until we have achieved the full implementation of that September ’05 statement. In return for this complete denuclearization, we are also obligated to do some things for the DPRK, including normalization. So we understand we have obligations, but we shall not be able to achieve our obligations if we do not get a complete denuclearization. I want to be very clear that is the purpose of this, and the purpose is not just to stop half-way.

Remarks, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, En route Berlin, Germany, June 23, 2008

[….]

QUESTION: Thank you. I have two questions on North Korea. First, we expect so much things will happen this week out of North Korea. But the Japanese people feel – some Japanese people feel some sort of disappointment because we don’t – we haven’t got any real progress on the abduction issue. We – you are ready for removing North Korea from the sponsors terrorist list. So my question is: How do you explain to Japanese people on U.S. intention and how will U.S. facilitate the progress on abduction issue from now?

And the second question is: Could you tell me about the timing of the ministerial meeting on the six-party talks?

SECRETARY RICE: There has been no ministerial meeting set at this point. We will see when it is appropriate to have a ministerial meeting for the six parties.

In terms of the ending of phase two of the denuclearization efforts vis-à-vis North Korea, we will see if North Korea, indeed, delivers to China, which is after all the chair of the denuclearization group, if they deliver to China a declaration that, as we’ve said, would have to be verifiable as complete and accurate. It would be an important step. The North Koreans – we also have to do a verification protocol with North Korea so that we could make certain that we did have the means to verify. And so we’ve not – the Chinese have not received that yet, and so it’s premature to judge what steps the United States and the other members of the six-party talks would take.

As to the abduction issue – or I should say, of course, if the declaration is there then the second phase does anticipate that the United States would, as a part of several actions that others – that states are taking, that the United States would, indeed – the President would notify the Congress of our intention to de-list. That takes then 45 days before it goes into effect, in which time we would continue to monitor and assess what North Korea’s doing to live up to its obligations.

Now, we’ve been very clear that the United States is not going to set aside or forget the Japanese abduction issue. Indeed, I think it’s fair to say that the bilateral talks that Japan and North Korea have had are in no small part due to the efforts of the United States to press North Korea on this issue.

And so I would hope that Japanese people would recognize that, that this was an issue that was going nowhere until the United States pressed the issue. In fact, it is my understanding that the North Koreans took some – I think they were described by Japan as small steps. And Japan, in return, took some steps. So we will see. But this issue is not going away. It’s not going away for Japan; it’s not going away for the United States and we’re going to continue to press North Korea to make certain that this issue is dealt with.

Japan is America’s – one of America’s strongest allies in Asia and we recognize the – I should say one of America’s strongest allies in the world – and we recognize the sensitivity of this issue. It is a deep humanitarian issue. It is a wounding issue that this kind of thing could have been allowed to happen. And the President has met with family members of the abducted. We have never – we’ve never made a statement in which we did not raise this issue publicly and privately. And so the Japanese people can be assured that it is an issue of extreme importance for the United States and we’re going to continue to press on this issue.

Thank you.

[….]

# # #

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________

For Immediate Release, June 26, 2008

STATEMENT BY THE PRESS SECRETARY

The United States welcomes the North Korean declaration of its nuclear programs. Today’s development is an important step in the multi-step process laid out in the Six Party Talks between North Korea, China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States.

The Six Party Talks are based on a principle of “action for action.” North Korea has pledged to disable all its nuclear facilities and tomorrow will destroy the cooling tower of the Yongbyon reactor. North Korea also pledged to declare its nuclear activities. This information will be essential to verifying that North Korea is ending all of its nuclear programs and activities.

The United States will respond to North Korea’s actions by lifting the provisions of the Trading with the Enemy Act as well as announcing our intent to rescind North Korea’s designation as a State Sponsor of Terror in 45 days. During this period, the United States will carefully assess North Korea’s actions particularly with regard to verification.

There is still more work to be done in order for North Korea to end its isolation. It must dismantle all of its nuclear facilities, give up its separated plutonium, and resolve outstanding questions on its highly enriched uranium and proliferation activities. It must end these activities in a fully verifiable way.

Multilateral diplomacy is the best way to peacefully resolve the nuclear issue. North Korea should seize this moment of opportunity to restore its relationship with the international community.

The President will make a statement on this subject in the Rose Garden at 7:40 am EDT today.

# # #
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT ON NORTH KOREA

Rose Garden

7:40 A.M. EDT


THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. The policy of the United States is a Korean Peninsula free of all nuclear weapons. This morning, we moved a step closer to that goal, when North Korean officials submitted a declaration of their nuclear programs to the Chinese government as part of the six-party talks.

The United States has no illusions about the regime in Pyongyang. We remain deeply concerned about North Korea’s human rights abuses, uranium enrichment activities, nuclear testing and proliferation, ballistic missile programs, and the threat it continues to pose to South Korea and its neighbors.

Yet we welcome today’s development as one step in the multi-step process laid out by the six-party talks between North Korea, China, Japan, Russia, South Korea, and the United States.

Last year, North Korea pledged to disable its nuclear facilities. North Korea has begun disabling its Yongbyon nuclear facility — which was being used to produce plutonium for nuclear weapons. This work is being overseen by officials from the United States and the IAEA. And to demonstrate its commitment, North Korea has said it will destroy the cooling tower of the Yongbyon reactor in front of international television cameras tomorrow.

Last year, North Korea also pledged to declare its nuclear activity. With today’s declaration, North Korea has begun describing its plutonium-related activities. It’s also provided other documents related to its nuclear programs going back to 1986. It has promised access to the reactor core and waste facilities at Yongbyon, as well as personnel related to its nuclear program. All this information will be essential to verifying that North Korea is ending its nuclear programs and activities.

The six-party talks are based on a principle of “action for action.” So in keeping with the existing six-party agreements, the United States is responding to North Korea’s actions with two actions of our own:

First, I’m issuing a proclamation that lifts the provisions of the Trading with the Enemy Act with respect to North Korea.

And secondly, I am notifying Congress of my intent to rescind North Korea’s designation as a state sponsor of terror in 45 days. The next 45 days will be an important period for North Korea to show its seriousness of its cooperation. We will work through the six-party talks to develop a comprehensive and rigorous verification protocol. And during this period, the United States will carefully observe North Korea’s actions — and act accordingly.

The two actions America is taking will have little impact on North Korea’s financial and diplomatic isolation. North Korea will remain one of the most heavily sanctioned nations in the world. The sanctions that North Korea faces for its human rights violations, its nuclear test in 2006, and its weapons proliferation will all stay in effect. And all United Nations Security Council sanctions will stay in effect as well.

The six-party process has shed light on a number of issues of serious concern to the United States and the international community. To end its isolation, North Korea must address these concerns. It must dismantle all of its nuclear facilities, give up its separated plutonium, resolve outstanding questions on its highly enriched uranium and proliferation activities, and end these activities in a way that we can fully verify.

North Korea must also meet other obligations it has undertaken in the six-party talks. The United States will never forget the abduction of Japanese citizens by the North Koreans. We will continue to closely cooperate and coordinate with Japan and press North Korea to swiftly resolve the abduction issue.

This can be a moment of opportunity for North Korea. If North Korea continues to make the right choices, it can repair its relationship with the international community — much as Libya has done over the past few years. If North Korea makes the wrong choices, the United States and our partners in the six-party talks will respond accordingly. If they do not fully disclose and end their plutonium, their enrichment, and their proliferation efforts and activities, there will be further consequences.

Multilateral diplomacy is the best way to peacefully solve the nuclear issue with North Korea. Today’s developments show that tough multilateral diplomacy can yield promising results. Yet the diplomatic process is not an end in itself. Our ultimate goal remains clear: a stable and peaceful Korean Peninsula, where people are free from oppression, free from hunger and disease, and free from nuclear weapons. The journey toward that goal remains long, but today we have taken an important step in the right direction.

I’ll take a couple of questions.

Mike.

Q Mr. President, thank you very much. After declaring them a member of the “axis of evil,” and then after that underground nuclear tests that North Korea conducted in 2006, I’m wondering if you ever doubted getting to this stage. And also, I’m wondering if you have a message for the North Korean people.

THE PRESIDENT: I knew that the United States could not solve, or begin to solve, this issue without partners at the table. In order for diplomacy to be effective, there has to be leverage. You have to have a — there has to be consequential diplomacy.

And so I worked hard to get the Chinese and the South Koreans and the Japanese and the Russians to join with us in sending a concerted message to the North Koreans, and that is, that if you promise and then fulfill your promises to dismantle your nuclear programs, there’s a better way forward for you and the people. In other words, as I said in the statement, it’s action for action.

It took a while for the North Koreans to take the six-party talks seriously, and it also took there to be concerted messages from people other than the United States saying that if you choose not to respond positively there will be consequences.

And so I’m — it’s been a — multilateral diplomacy is difficult at times. It’s hard to get people heading in the same direction, and yet we were able to do so along — our partners helped a lot, don’t get me wrong.

The message to the North Korean people is, is that we don’t want you to be hungry; we want you to have a better life; that our concerns are for you, not against you; and that we have given your leadership a way forward to have better relations with the international community. This is a society that is regularly going through famines. When I campaigned for President, I said we will never use food as a diplomatic weapon. In North Korea, we have been concerned that food shipments sometimes don’t make it to the people themselves — in other words, the regime takes the food for their own use.

So my message to the people is, is that we’ll continue to care for you and worry about you, and at the same time, pursue a Korean Peninsula that’s nuclear weapons free. And today we have taken a step, and it’s a very positive step, but there’s more steps to be done.

Deb.

Q Mr. President, what do you say to critics who claim that you’ve accepted a watered-down declaration just to get something done before you leave office? I mean, you said that it doesn’t address the uranium enrichment issue, and, of course, it doesn’t address what North Korea might have done to help Syria build its reactor.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, first, let me review where we have been. In the past, we would provide benefits to the North Koreans in the hope that they would fulfill a vague promise. In other words, that’s the way it was before I came into office.

Everybody was concerned about North Korea possessing a nuclear weapon; everybody was concerned about the proliferation activities. And yet the policy in the past was, here are some benefits for you, and we hope that you respond. And, of course, we found they weren’t responding. And so our policy has changed, that says, in return for positive action, in return for verifiable steps, we will reduce penalties. And there are plenty of restrictions still on North Korea.

And so my point is this, is that — we’ll see. They said they’re going to destroy parts of their plant in Yongbyon. That’s a very positive step — after all, it’s the plant that made plutonium. They have said in their declarations, if you read their declarations of September last year, they have said specifically what they will do. And our policy, and the statement today, makes it clear we will hold them to account for their promises. And when they fulfill their promises, more restrictions will be eased. If they don’t fulfill their promises, more restrictions will be placed on them. This is action for action. This is we will trust you only to the extent that you fulfill your promises.

So I’m pleased with the progress. I’m under no illusions that this is the first step; this isn’t the end of the process, this is the beginning of the process of action for action. And the point I want to make to our fellow citizens is that we have worked hard to put multilateral diplomacy in place, because the United States sitting down with Kim Jong-il didn’t work in the past. Sitting alone at the table just didn’t work.

Now, as I mentioned in my statement, there’s a lot more verification that needs to be done. I mentioned our concerns about enrichment. We expect the North Korean regime to be forthcoming about their programs. We talked about proliferation. We expect them to be forthcoming about their proliferation activities and cease such activities. I mentioned the fact that we’re beginning to take inventory, because of our access to the Yongbyon plant, about what they have produced, and we expect them to be forthcoming with what they have produced and the material itself.

So today I’m just talking about the first step of a multi-step process. And I want to thank our partners at the six-party talks. It’s been incredibly helpful to achieve — the beginnings of achieving a vision of a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula to have the Chinese to be as robustly involved as they are. You notice that the North Koreans passed on their documents to the Chinese; after all, we’re all partners in the six-party talks.

The other thing I want to assure our friends in Japan is that this process will not leave behind — leave them behind on the abduction issue. The United States takes the abduction issue very seriously. We expect the North Koreans to solve this issue in a positive way for the Japanese. There’s a lot of folks in Japan that are deeply concerned about what took place. I remember meeting a mother of a child who was abducted by the North Koreans right here in the Oval Office. It was a heart-wrenching moment to listen to the mother talk about what it was like to lose her daughter. And it is important for the Japanese people to know that the United States will not abandon our strong ally and friend when it comes to helping resolve that issue.

Today is a positive day; it’s a positive step forward. There’s more work to be done, and we’ve got the process in place to get it done in a verifiable way.

Thank you.

END 7:53 A.M. EDT


Thursday, June 26, 2008

June 26th, 2008 at 12:05 pm

Looking for the Next Spike in Anti-US Activity

» by USinKorea

GI Korea asked me if I’d like to do some posts here at his blog and I was honored. He runs a top flight K-blog, and it is a little daunting to prepare to write at a level to do the blog justice.

I admire GI Korea and One Free Korea for doing the difficult day jobs they have - yet also - finding time to write out long, detailed, sourced posts for their blogs.

I avoid that kind of writing for the most part on my blog. I spent too many years in college and grad school writing research papers. Blogging was a way to release some of that stress by just typing as I thought. I did long posts for the www.usinkorea.org website, but that only required a few days of intense work combing the media archives, collecting notes, then writing then going back to being lazy the rest of the year.

But, in posting here at GI Korea’s, I plan to beef up my typical posts.

With that introduction stated —- on to the current post — which concerns what might happen on the anti-US front in the near future now that Cows Gone Wild!! Hysteria has died down:

It is safe to believe Korean society feels strong after pushing President Lee around for a month - and that the society feels good about feeling strong.

That is not a good combination for the US in Korea…

In 2000, Korea put on months and months of anti-US activity over a variety of issues — The Great Water Dump was the most memorable one (GI Korea’s Review). But, the Koon-ni/Maehyang-ri Bombing Range Saga was also finally picked up by average Koreans. And there were other much smaller issues brought up during this period as well.

Both the water pollution and training range issues were as frivolous as the beef issue: The pollution case involved a small amount of formaldehyde dumped in the Yongsan base sewer system. It had no potential whatsoever to harm a single Korean - but this editorial illustrates how far Korean society was willing to freak out about it:

These toxic chemicals are widely known to cause cancer and birth defects. The Han river supplies drinking water for over 10 million citizens residing in metropolitan Seoul and its satellite cities. Are Koreans disposable people?

The news is ethically repulsive. Environmentally, the act is destruction-friendly. In psychiatric terms, it comes close to an act of quasi-murder [oh my!]. For, what matters here is the sick mind and attitude that made possible the dumping of the cancer-causing substance. Whether or not the quantity of the discarded was enough to cause cancer is not the issue here.

Korea Times Editorial

The myth that was created during the Maehyang-ri incident was that a USFK plane dropped a bomb that missed the range and landed “in the heart of the town.” But, in reality, the initial spark was simply that the plane dropped the bomb, on the range, unannounced:

No pilot training was scheduled that day, because the plane that dropped the bombs was heading for another range when it developed engine trouble and was diverted to Koon-ni to drop its load before returning to base.

The fact that villagers weren’t notified ahead of time was the original cause celeb for the protests — but when the media and average Koreans jumped on board — they quickly altered the truth to justify the level of anger put on display by claiming that the bombs had hit outside the range and hurt people and did “much” damage to houses in the area.

This shifting of “root cause” is typical in anti-US culture — and we saw it in the Cows Gone Wild!! Hysteria too: when it became obvious that Korea might look stupid in the world’s eye due to the irrational “fear” of US beef, they shifted to the idea it was about President Lee’s arrogance…

The main point here —- however —- is that Korean society does not need a solid reason for even large spikes in anti-US activity to occur.

So - Anything might set off the next spike after Cows Gone Wild!!

But the Korea Times editorial above also demonstrated another factor we need to include in guessing about future activity:

Frankly, some Koreans are also scared of the idea of a defense by those who commanded to dump the toxic substance; who murdered many Korean hostesses, the poor souls, who had to sell sex to earn their subsistence; and, who care little about those Koreans suffering from constant bombing exercises like the one in Maehyang-ri. Why are they reluctant to fully disclose the facts about Nogun-ri massacres? Is the SOFA really a fair arrangement?

“Are they here to defend us? Thanks but from whom?” The answer to the question is in a sense becoming more and more ambiguous and ambivalent in the post inter-Korean summit detente.

See. 2000 was the year of the Great NK-SK Summit.

For a few months back then, even many die-hard Korean conservatives really believed peace in our time might be at hand.

Korean society as a whole was drunk with the idea North Korea was really going to change.

That made Koreans feel really, really good - and proud -

- and that feeling was easily transferred into venting long-held anger at the US in Korea — especially with the summit making it seem USFK was no longer needed…

Pent up and long held are perfect ways to describe the phenomenon. Look back at the last quote from the Korea Times editor: he throws in all the big ticket anti-US/USFK issues - pollution, GI crimes, Maehyang-ri, the SOFA, and so on. Economic bullying is absent, but he hit most of the others.

And that is how it goes. We witnessed it again with Cows Gone Wild!! Of course other issues were quickly mixed together in the street demonstrations — that is simply how the process works.

All of these issues peculate in the society, with periodic reminders spaced throughout the year - every year - waiting for the right time to activate. And when one item scores a direct hit, the others are usually brought along.

And one thing that activates them is Korean pride.

In 2002, what made Korean society feel strong and prideful wasn’t another summit with North Korea —– it was their impressive showing in the World Cup - coupled with pride in hosting the games on Korean soil.

My Korean language skills are weak — but I believe in this video from 2002 - the Korean student demonstrates the link between World Cup fever, Korean pride, and anti-US activity.

In 1997-98, Korean pride was the primary factor in the IMF bailout short spike in anti-US activity: In that case, Korean pride was badly damaged as their Miracle on the Han economy, the greatest source of their national pride, tanked. In Nov. and Dec. of 1997, within about a week’s space in time, Korea’s president both stated Korea would not ask for an emergency bailout, talking as if such a thing would be too dishonorable to even consider, then asked one. Korean society felt great humiliation.

And - they decide to release some tension about that by — going nuts over how the IMF chief sat on a couch in a media photo op with the Korean president when the IMF team was in town discussing the bailout. You see — the IMF chief, who wasn’t American, sat back on the cushion and even dared to cross his legs - looking comfortable, while Korea’s president was forced to sit ramrod style on the edge of his chair kowtowing to the foreigner.

The US government, through the IMF, was providing billions of dollars in an emergency loan to stabilize the Korean economy that was in a rapid downfall, and this is how Korean society chose to respond — with hurt pride and anti-Americanism. (thus showing that the pride factor is at play whenever Korea’s sense of national pride is too low or too high)

So what does this mean for us today?

Korean society most likely feels strong and proud of itself with what they accomplished through their hysteria over US beef imports.

President Lee is supposed to be arrogant and a bulldozer.

His mandate after the last election was very strong. The GNP/conservatives were given a very strong hand in the National Assembly and they controlled the Blue House. The liberals were crushed…

…But Korean society, through massive protests, brought the conservatives to their knees immediately after handing them so much power. Pres. Lee even went several times on TV in front of the nation and kowtowed - begging for forgiveness.

That only validates the society’s sense of pride and strength…

So, I do not think we will have to wait two or three years for the next anti-US spike to occur.

In the 1990s, my rule of thumb said that an anti-US spike in activity occurred about every 8 to 16 months — or about once a year.

I don’t think we’ll have to wait 16 months.

I can’t give a good guess about what might spark it.

We’ve seen clearly - anything can.

I don’t know what stage the Pyongtaek base expansion is in. One of the big hurdles was crossed a year or two ago when the moved off the squatters. If that was something that needed to be done this year, I’d put my money on it, but it has already passed.

USFK base pollution is an issue always ready on hand.

This recent Korea Times article said pollution is becoming a bigger issue for Korean society. The cost of decontamination of US bases has been in the news. Maehyang-ri was in the news on the pollution angle this past January.

Pyongtaek could finally be the spark - much like with Maehyang-ri.

In both issues, The Priest had been trying to generate a society-wide outrage for years before such an outrage finally arrived. He just hasn’t been successful with Pyongtaek, yet.

Don’t be surprised to see him and his people repeating the violence of 2005.

That video is just one of several from 2005. You can see the others via this page.

The objective in most of those violent protests was to rip down the fence line at the USFK base. The Priest did the same thing at Maehyang-ri in 2000 to grab the society’s attention.

It didn’t work in 2005. In fact, the media didn’t report it at all. I just happened to catch it on a routine review of video postings at the leading anti-US/USFK website www.voiceofpeople.org that I do every 4 to 6 months or so.

Those multiple riots were large and very violent. They were staged by both the usual shock troops - university students + union members. But, because they had the potential to harm the US-SK relationship and possibly motivate Roh to “do something” — when they couldn’t trust what the hell Roh might do — the media decided to bury them.

With President Lee in the Blue House, The Priest might be much more successful if he makes this play again.

The cost of relocating USFK bases off the DMZ and out of Seoul could be the spark itself — especially because Korean society has long opposed the perceived “weakening” of the US commitment to defend Korea such a move implies. This link is to a Korea Times archive search for “bases” in which you can see the costs have been in the news.

A crime by a US soldier could be the spark - but I wouldn’t put my money on that…

GI Crimes and The SOFA are two bedrocks of anti-US culture in Korea, but oddly enough, they don’t directly inspire that much street protest activity. (GI Korea’s SOFA Review + GI Crimes and GI Crimes again)

Technically speaking, the 2002 armored vehicle accident and the 2000 water contamination cases were about crimes and the SOFA, but I have seen murders and rapes pass without significant street protests.

Those events do help solidify anti-US ideas in the society through the media and schooling. But, the 1995 subway brawl and the early 1990s Markle murder case are the only two I can think of that caused significant street activity.

Given the society’s mood, the militant labor unions might also strike gold sometime this year over things like the FTA that it wasn’t able to generate support for with President Roh in the Blue House.

Even North Korea could help start the next spike:

Things are looking bad in the North — as One Free Korea has been showing repeatedly the last few months.

South Korea under President Lee is also unlikely to give Pyongyang as much as it has been used to getting since 1998 when President Kim started the Sunshine Policy.

So, we could see North Korea do some very provocative things this year.

And when tensions rise on the peninsula, South Korean society often transfers that tension onto the US-SK alliance.

This article noted by GI Korea and others in the K-blogsphere says that 28% of Koreans believe the US is the biggest security threat to South Korea. That number rises dramatically when tensions with the North go up, because Koreans take it as a given the North will not attack as long as USFK in is Korea, because it would be suicide, but they have MUCH less faith that the US will not bomb the North - thus potentially starting a war.

So, if Kim Jong Il decides to act up this year in a big way, it could directly lead to another anti-US spike in South Korea.

Who knows?

Time will tell what the next spark will be - and how long of a wait until it comes - but my money is on the idea that it will take place within 8 months.

Winter break for the universities might be a time to watch….

June 26th, 2008 at 9:00 am

Remembering the Korean War in Pictures

» by GI Korea

With the success of the Incheon Landing Operation US and ROK forces on the Pusan Perimeter moved north to recapture land previously occupied by the North Koreans. Along the way bodies of captured US soldiers massacred in Daejon are discovered:

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Besides executed US soldiers many South Korean civilians were also killed by the retreating North Koreans though Charles Hanley and the Korean Truth & Reconciliation Committee would probably agree that US soldiers are really responsible:
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A month later and bodies of massacred South Korean civilians in Daejon are still being discovered:

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As the allies moved north they found themselves with more and more North Korean POWs:

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General MacArthur makes the decision to cross the 38th parallel and reunite Korea by force:
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While advancing into North Korea an Australian soldier found time to use portraits of Kim Il-sung for target practice:

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British troops also participated in the offensive into North Korea most notably during the Battle of Kunu-ri which saw the Chinese enter the war:

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The US Air Force conducts a bombing operation against a North Korean freight train:

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This picture of the North Korean masses cheering the allies entering Pyongyang is probably one that Kim Il-sung was none too happy to see:

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Here is a picture for all you airborne types out there:

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General Milburn confers with ROK 1st Division Commander General Paik Sun-yup:

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The casualties against civilians during the war was just as deadly north of the 38th parallel as it was in the south:
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With the Chinese entry into the war the Marines and the 7th Infantry Division fought a desperate battle to escape a Chinese trap in brutal winter weather at the Chosin Reservoir:
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This bridge was destroyed to delay the Chinese advance on Hamhung:

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After the Marines and the 7th Infantry Division escaped the Chinese trap, they conducted an amphibious withdrawal which included many North Korean civilians from the port city of Hungnam:

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If you read most popular histories of the Chosun Reservoir campaign you would have no idea the Army was just as critical in the operation as the Marines, but receive little credit for their part in the campaign. The Army fought just as hard and withdrew just as orderly as the Marine Corps:

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After the withdrawal from Hungnam the port city was completely destroyed:

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As the Chinese forces advanced south more young conscripted ROK soldiers were committed to the front lines:

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Captured Chinese soldiers pleading to a South Korean soldier:

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South Korean civilians once again flee Seoul as refugees as the Chinese army prepares to capture the city in January 1951:

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ROK soldiers cross the Han River to recapture Seoul as part of an allied offensive in March 1951:

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Seoul destroyed even further after the battle to retake the city from the Chinese:

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US & ROK soldiers battle to retake the city of Munsan north of Seoul:

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Korean Service Corps personnel transport ammunition for the allies:

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ROK Army soldiers advance into Hwachon in March 1951:
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MBC’s excuse maddens translator

A translator who worked on a controversial Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation program about mad cow disease in April lashed out at the company’s claim that mistakes in the show were errors in translation.

Jeong Ji-min, who said she did translation work on the April 29 episode, reacted furiously yesterday when MBC’s investigative report program “PD Diary” blamed translators for the errors.

Jeong claimed she had warned the producers of the program about possible translation errors, but she said her comments had been ignored.

PD Diary spent 20 minutes of its program on Tuesday night defending itself against allegations that its producers intentionally distorted interviews and documents to exaggerate the risk of mad cow disease in the April 29 program.

“So, MBC is now blaming translators?” Jeong wrote yesterday afternoon in one of her postings.

“While I was checking the translation, I told the producers repeatedly and strongly that linking a downer cow and mad cow disease is a distortion. Those controversial parts [were not my translation] but later selected by the producers.”

Jeong said the problems are not translation issues but reflect deliberate editorial intent.

“The producers should have excused themselves by saying they wanted to emphasize the risk of mad cow disease. Why are they blaming the translation?”

However, the production team behind the show stuck to its translation line of defense. “We regret that we left room for misunderstanding because we didn’t provide word-by-word translation,” the program makers said.

The government, though, is not convinced. The Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office launched an investigation earlier this week into accusations put forward by the Agriculture Ministry that MBC had aired a false report on mad cow disease.

The ministry claimed PD Diary had exaggerated the risk of mad cow disease from U.S. beef, defaming the minister and beef deal negotiators.

Meanwhile, PD Diary’s Internet message board was bombarded with thousands of postings yesterday, including a series of messages from Jeong, following the program Tuesday. Many accused MBC of irresponsible behavior as the program had sparked angry protests against the decision by Lee Myung-bak’s administration to resume beef imports.

The program’s April 29 episode included an interview with the mother of Aretha Vinson from Virginia.

The report’s subtitles showed her mother as saying that “human mad cow disease” had caused the American patient’s death.

The term the mother had actually used was CJD or Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, not vCJD.

Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is commonly known as the human form of mad cow disease.

PD Diary said Tuesday that “we thought Vinson’s mother, who had no professional medical knowledge, was confused about the two terms,”

explaining why it went ahead and broadcast the translation.

On its Internet page on June 12, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the National Prion Disease Pathology Surveillance Center had resolved the issue.

It had “ruled out the possibility of vCJD as the cause of death of a young Virginia woman who died earlier this year,” it said.

Although this suspected case received international media attention, NPDPSC said it concluded the cause of death was not due to vCJD, it continued.

PD Diary also claimed Tuesday that the host of the show made a simple slip of tongue when he called a downer cow “a cow suspected of being infected with mad cow disease.”

Its earlier translation of “dairy cow” as “mad cow disease-infected cow” was not a poor translation, but a translation with interpretation, the program argued.

“[Conservative media] are not looking into the substance, and they are just picking on our translation to criticize us,” PD Diary said Tuesday.

“We regret we could not produce a perfect program ... But we cannot agree with the criticism that the entire report was distortion and instigation.”


By Ser Myo-ja Staff Reporter [myoja@joongang.co.kr]
Is Military Intervention Needed In Zimbabwe?
» by GI Korea

With the withdrawal of Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai from elections scheduled this week, it looks like Zimbabwe strongman Robert Mugabe will once again steal an election and remain in power. Mugabe was able to use tactics that would make his North Korean idol Kim Il-sung proud by torturing, kidnapping, and murdering his opposition to stay in power.


Robert Mugabe meeting with his North Korean idol Kim Il-sung.

However, he hasn’t been as successful as Kim Il-sung was over the years just by the sheer fact that an opposition even exists in Zimbabwe unlike in North Korea where they died long ago. With that I do find it interesting that there are now voices in the media advocating for an invasion of Zimbabwe to remove Mugabe from power:

Military intervention in Zimbabwe would be justified to stop the violence there deteriorating into mass slaughter, Paddy Ashdown told The Times last night.

Lord Ashdown of Norton-sub-Hamdon said: “The situation in Zimbabwe could deteriorate to a point where genocide could be a possible outcome - something that looks like [another] Rwanda.”

In that case, international military action, with Britain playing a “delicate role”, would have to be considered, said the former European Union High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina. Britain and the United States became the first countries to refuse to recognise Robert Mugabe as President of Zimbabwe yesterday after Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), sought refuge at the Dutch Embassy.

The Dutch Government said that Mr Tsvangirai had been granted sanctuary soon after announcing he was withdrawing from the run-off presidential election on Friday because of mounting violence that has killed more than 85 supporters, left hundreds wounded and tens of thousands displaced. Yesterday Zimbabwean police raided the MDC’s headquarters, seizing 60 of its supporters. [The Times Online]

More calls to invade Zimbabwe can be read here, here, here and here as well. I also love how these pundits believe how easy an intervention will be:

The Zimbabwe military is beatable; economic factors have severely weakened loyalties. Only the special forces are competent. With more than half the population now in support of Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC, many soldiers may refuse to fight to keep Zanu-PF in power.

Unlike Iraq, there’s little danger of sectarian splits. Before Mugabe decimated the Ndebele tribe on political grounds, there was little history of ethnic antagonism.

No tribalism in Africa? A military that is armed by China and trained by North Korea will not fight back? If you say so.

All these calls of military interventions in Zimbabwe seems very similar to recent calls for military intervention in Burma to overthrow the regime there. I do just find all these calls to remove dictators quite interesting considering all the bashing of the United States intervention in Iraq where Saddam had far more blood on his hands and was a far greater global security threat then Burma or Zimbabwe.

Then you have the North Korean regime which is even worse then the Saddam Hussein regime and is also helping to prop up Mugabe, which the international community appears to show little concern or care about.

You have to love the selective outrage.

I believe the UN should sort this out and write Mugabe a nasty letter as Zimbabweans continue to be tortured and murdered instead of launching a war of choice not authorized by the UN. Just think if the US goes in there to remove Mugabe civilians will die and Lancet and George Soros funded groups will release a study saying millions of civilians were killed by Bush’s War. Better to let them be tortured and killed instead by Mugabe thugs. Plus our military will commit all of these war crimes and our soldiers will return to America with PTSD, become alcoholics, and wander the streets killing helpless civilians.

This is all too much to bare. Instead I think we should all just buy “Free Zimbabwe” bumper stickers to put next to our “Free Tibet” stickers which is much easier and will make us all feel better.

DAMNED IF WE DO SOMETHING AND DAMED IF WE DO NOTHING. LOVE THE CATCH-22.



Far East Economic Review On Korea’s Misinformation Age
» by GI Korea

Courtesy of a reader tip comes this article from Korean born US citizen Hancho Kim who is a retired businessman who has lived in Seoul for 27 years:

Welcome to the Misinformation Age. The premise behind this entire issue and its ensuing paralysis is a remarkable demonstration of the power of a lie today. Right now, South Korea is still battling the Avian Flu, while it simultaneously stares down the barrel of its belligerent, uncooperative and now, nuclearized, neighbor to the north. Despite these very immediate dangers, South Korea’s population is fixated on the threat posed by 42 million perfectly healthy cows in the United States. It defies logic. [Far East Economic Review]

Yes it does defy logic, but so does fan death. Mr. Kim continues on:

Seoul’s descent into madness didn’t come out of thin air. It was exploited—perhaps even manufactured—by political opponents who saw an opportunity in the perception that the new president was more businessman than statesman. His CEO-style presidency combined with his immediate coziness with Washington gave opponents the opportunity to depict U.S. beef imports as favoring U.S. interests over South Korea’s. Never mind the fact that U.S. beef meets an international standard for safety that exceeds South Korean standards.

The fact that this story is helping revive the fortunes of the recently ousted liberal party in Seoul while drawing attention away from their favorite charity in Pyongyang is likely no coincidence. Recent local by-elections handed them resounding wins and Pyongyang isn’t in the headlines for once, so it’s a strategy that’s working—for now.

As ROK Drop readers have long known that the anti-US groups and their media allies were behind the misinformation campaign that mobilized the protests. Once the protests were in full force the anti-US groups used them to initially to politically neuter Lee Myung-bak before shifting the attention of the protests towards these groups’ real agendas which are anti-US and pro-Pyongyang. However, this strategy may have backfired because since the shift in message attendance at the protests has fallen and there are signs average Koreans are not buying the leftist anti-US agenda being brought forward now.

Also ROK Drop readers also have long known that US beef is safer then domestic Korean beef since Korea refuses to meet global safety standards for beef set forth by the OIE. It is good to see these facts getting spread in the mainstream media. Mr. Kim then goes on to provide some good advice for Lee Myung-bak in regards to moving forward on this issue now which I recommend everyone read.

However, I do wish Mr. Kim would have addressed the undertone of anti-Americanism in Korean society that made these protests possible in the first place. Just the fact that the Korean public could actually believe that the US government is out to poison and kill them with imported beef is a perfect example of how bad the underlying anti-Americanism is in Korea. I continue to see this on going tendency to make excuses or ignore this fact, and ignoring it doesn’t make it go away and only sets conditions to justify the next big anti-US flare up in Korea.


AND SOME OF MY FRIENDS STIL SAY ITS NOT ANTI-USA...ARE YOU FRACKING KIDDING ME?

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

WHY I HATE THE KOREAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM


Another Classic Example that Justice for GIs is Hard to Find in Korea

This comment by DMZ Dave provides a perfect example that justice for American servicemembers in Korea remains little changed over the years:

As a new contributor to this blog, I apologize for this long post but believe I can provide some additional perspective.

Although I had spent years in Korea and speak Korean fluently having graduated from the Korean Army College, it wasn’t until I entered the “Twilight Zone” of a false accusation and in police custody at the Itaewon Police Box that I received my post-graduate education in Korean justice.

The year was 1989, on this particular evening, I had just left the UN Compound and was about to pull out from some apartments near Itaewon heading up the hill to the main road at the Burger King intersection. As I sat in my car waiting to make a left turn onto the street, I observed two young girls holding hands and preparing to run across the busy street and I thought it looked like a bad situation. As I watched, to my horror, the girls suddenly dashed into the street, were struck by a taxi and thrown to the side of the road. The taxi sped on without looking back.

I jumped out of my car, ran to the girls, checked them for injuries (I started my military career as a Navy Corpsman) picked one up, checked her for serious injuries and moved her to the sidewalk, consoled the other and began shouting directions in Korean to the those standing by to call an ambulance. I asked if anyone knew the children and asked someone to call their parents. Soon an ambulance arrived and one child left for the hospital and the other less injured child was taken to her home. I then returned to my car and drove toward the main drag in Itaewon where I had been headed when this all took place. As I stopped at the light in front of the Burger King, a small mob suddenly surrounded my car and began slapping and pounding on it. I recall thinking “what the hell?” I had no idea what was going on but some policeman appeared and literally dragged me from my car and hustled me off to the Itaewon Police Box where I was told to sit and wait. This was the time you would expect Rod Sterling voice to announce “you have just entered the Twilight Zone.” It was that unreal.

I protested that I had done nothing except try to aid the children who had been struck by a taxi. “If you were not at fault, why would you have stopped” I was asked by one incredulous policeman? I explained what had happened and he took me roughly by the arm and suggested we both go to the “scene of the crime.”

Make sure to read the rest of the story because it is incredible, but not surprising to those of us who are familiar with justice for GIs in Korea.

This incident happened in 1989 and it is interesting to compare it with later incidents involving US servicemembers such as the 1995 subway brawl:

It all began when an American soldier put his hand on a Korean woman’s rump.

The version that has captured the local imagination is that a group of drunken American soldiers were rampaging through the subway, molesting Korean women, and that the soldiers then attacked good citizens who dared protest the errant hand.

The American understanding of events starts with a fact that the Koreans tend to leave out: The American soldier and the Korean woman whose behind he patted were in fact a married couple.

The Americans say the problems arose when some angry young Koreans on the subway accused the American of sexually harassing the Korean woman. When the Korean woman explained that she was the American’s wife, the Korean men allegedly spat at her and slapped her — leading the woman’s husband to punch the man who slapped her.

In any case, the result that evening in May was a huge brawl in the subway. It has reverberated through the country and underscored the delicacy of the mission of the 37,000 American military personnel in bases in South Korea.

Now fast forward to 2002 when three US soldiers were kidnapped from the subway, beaten, and forced to make coerced statements in front of a large stadium audience and televised on national television:

3 US soldiers and a group of university student activists (and one elder leader) promoting a large anti-US/USFK rally were involved in a big brawl on the subway in Seoul.

1 GI was held captive by the students and forced to participate in the rally and write out a “confession” against himself for the subway incident and write statements against USFK concerning the recent tank accident.

Guess who was charged with assault? The GIs of course.

Fast forward once again, this time to 2006 where in two separate incidents GIs were assaulted by Korean mobs and since the soldiers retaliated they were convicted of crimes while the Koreans received no punishment:

So one kid who got the crap beaten out of him by a mob including get hit across the face with a pipe has paid $9,000 in compensation money and is looking at 18 months in Korean jail, while another GI whose sole crime was pushing a bar owner after being grabbed first by the bar owner, and he then proceeded to get the crap beaten out him by a Korean mob and the GI has since paid $18,000 in compensation money and is looking at a year in Korean jail for that push.

The latest example comes just last year where a GI was jailed for months before finely being released on appeal because the conviction against him was so dubious:

PFC Feldman was clearly innocent when he was originally convicted. Feldman claimed he was trying to hail a taxi while SGT Basel went to use the restroom. This alibi is highly likely since the victim did not remember seeing Feldman in the restroom. Also the Korean restaurant owner who heard the woman yell in the bathroom originally wrote on a sworn statement after the incident that he saw only one man in the restroom. Then days later after the police got a hold of him he changed his statement to say he saw Feldman in the restroom. Additionally the Korean prosecutors were linked to trying to coerce Basel into writing a statement saying that Feldman was in the restroom for a lighter sentence.

The evidence against Feldmann was so dubious that when he was convicted the chief judge encouraged Feldmann to appeal the sentence which is what he did. Finally, on appeal Feldmann was found not guilty and when look at the evidence he should have never had any charges brought against him in the first place.

It is pretty bad when you are convicted of a crime and the chief justice pretty much admits the conviction is dubious but goes ahead and convicts you anyway. These are just a small sampling of how GIs have not been receiving fair treatment in the Korean justice system and is something that has obviously been going on for quite some time. It makes you wonder who is really getting unequal treatment in the US-ROK Status of Forces Agreement?

The important thing to remember is that one of the things all these incidents have in common is that Korean witnesses lie and often encouraged to do so by the police. Also keep in mind the lies and travesties of justice are not just limited to GIs either but foreigners as well.

Despite USFK having an extremely low crime rate when compared to the surrounding civilian population, clearly justice for GIs will continue to be hard to find in Korea.

Obama Gets Another Unwanted Endorsement

[Update: Well, that didn’t take long. Welcome from Little Green Footballs, Michelle Maklin, the Jawa Report, the unlinkable Memeorandum, and my good friend at Gateway Pundit. Regulars here know that I’m completely disgusted with Bush’s own appeasement of Kim Jong Il, but while you’re here, don’t miss the story of Esther Kim, an Obama constituent whose husband was kidnapped and killed by the North Koreans. Obama inspired her Hope, then crushed it with Change.]

The Chosun Sinbo, the mouthpiece of North Korea’s Japanese front organization Chongryon and often for the North Korean regime itself, has announced its preference for Obama over McCain, whom it calls “a variant of Bush” and “nothing better than a scarecrow of neoconservatives,” which is a bit odd considering that the Bush Administration’s giveaway diplomacy is better for Kim Jong Il than even Clinton’s awful performance.

[Update 2: Original Korean here:

조선반도와의 관계에서 본다면 부쉬정권의 잘못을 엄하게 비판하고 조선의 지도자와 조건없이 만나겠다고 공언해온 오바마가 《부쉬의 아류》이자 네오콘의 허수아비나 다름없는 매케인보다 낫기는 낫다. [Chosun Shinbo]

I’m sure someone can improve on this translation:

We will see a better relationship between the U.S. and the Korean Peninsula with Obama, who sternly criticizes Bush and who would meet the leader of Chosun without pre-conditions, than with the “Bush clone” and scarecrow of the neocons McCain.

Somehow I had neglected to put the World Tribune link in there before. I’ve fixed that.]

It’s worth pausing to consider the disturbing rhetorical similarity between the Chosun Sinbo and Daily Kos, although the sheer incoherence of Bush’s North Korea policy makes any comparison to it questionable.

Bush’s North Korea policy may be a poor baseline for comparison, but the candidates themselves have given the North Koreans plenty to judge them by. Both Obama and McCain have told us how they’d deal with the North Koreans. McCain has expressed his distaste for the latest variation of Bush’s policy and emphasized his willingness to raise uncomfortable topics, including human rights. Obama has already shown a disappointing lack of consistency in holding North Korea accountable for its intolerable behavior. If I understand Obama’s policy to consist of direct summit talks, aid, and trying to coax North Korea into opening itself up, that same policy was tried for years, without success, by the South Koreans, and it’s now being tried without success by President Bush. If I understand McCain’s policy to consist of tightening sanctions until North Korea verifiably disarms, that was tried briefly by the Bush Administration and showed signs of considerable success until its inexplicable and premature abandonment.

(Bear in mind that the sanctions the Bush Administration applied for just 17 months were a pale shadow of the power we could potentially apply but did succeed in driving Kim Jong Il back to the bargaining table. When we lifted the pressure, the North Koreans resorted to form and balked at full disclosure or disarmament. And as we’ve since learned, they weren’t dealing in good faith to begin with. The key to any successful negotiation with the North Koreans is showing them that you’re fully capable and prepared to hasten and accept the collapse of the regime as an alternative.)

North Korea’s endorsement of Obama will probably draw comparisons to the unwanted Hamas endorsement of Obama. Hamas withdrew the endorsement after Obama spoke at AIPAC’s convention. Fidel Castro, by contrast, took a more sophisticated and self-aware approach:

[O]n Monday [Castro] gave Senator Barack Obama an endorsement of sorts, calling him “the most progressive candidate to the U.S. presidency” while also berating him for his plan to continue the trade embargo against Cuba. “Were I to defend him, I would do his adversaries an enormous favor,” Mr. Castro said. “I have therefore no reservations about criticizing him.” [N.Y. Times, The Caucus]

Which Castro then proceeded to do, on Obama’s stated support for trade sanctions during a campaign speech to Cuban exiles in Miami.

The Republicans’ efforts to capitalize on the Hamas endorsement made me slightly squeamish, because there are separate issues here that shouldn’t be mixed. It isn’t fair for anyone to imply, based on an unwanted endorsement, that a candidate in any way supports the endorsing entity’s ideology or actions. It is fair to ask whether the endorsement suggests that the endorsing entity knows something about the candidate. Why would Hamas or Kim Jong Il both believe that if Obama is elected, his policies would mean boom times for evildoers? Are they wrong?

Finally, as with Ron Paul’s refusal to return contributions from white supremacists, it’s reasonable to demand that a candidate unambiguously disavow the endorsement and denounce the endorser. In the case of Hamas, Obama rightly did this. Given that North Korea’s human rights atrocities are as repellent as any since the Khmer Rouge was driven from Phnom Penh 30 years ago, Obama has both the duty to speak out about the evils happening in North Korea today and an opportunity to refute those who say he would merely appease tyrants.

Update 3: Now I’m been linked by the Hillary Clinton forum:

One of the reasons he supports Obama is that he knows he’s a fool and Obama flip flopped on removing N. Korea (de-listing) from the terrorist nation list. He NOW says he would remove them even though they haven’t divulged the whereabouts of Rev. Kim (a legal US citizen living in N. Korea). See my post about compiling a list of Obama’s broken promises.

This needs to be blogged and sent everywhere!! Obama is a very dangerous man! Fearing him is not paranoia. It is rational thought!

Update 4: Thanks to Ace, Neal Boortz, and the Freepers for linking.

And we have dredged a swamp. Pandagon, which will forever be remembered (by most of those who do at all, at least) as an embarrassment to the John Edwards campaign, offers a characteristically incoherent and foul rant. Your thirteen minutes are over, ladies. I can say “ladies,” can’t I? See your doctor if any of that seems coherent to you. I didn’t think we could set a lower bar, but Kos diarist “Gramarye” links with this fatwa calling for prayers for Michelle Malkin’s death. No, seriously:

According to her blog,

Take me now, Lord. My life as a blogger is complete.

[….]

So let’s all help Michelle’s request along and say a little prayer to the Lord. [….] But I have HOPE for Michelle’s plea. [Daily Kos]
Hey, they have standards to uphold over there. Yes, I kept screenshots. To be fair, even most of the Kos commenters are aghast.

Well, At Least They Knew the War Happened. I Think.

Your ROK-US Alliance warm-and-fuzzy moment of the week, courtesy the Korea Times:

The Ministry of Public Administration and Security said Monday that a survey of 1,016 middle and high school students showed nearly 57 percent didn’t know the war started on June 25, 1950.

Moreover, 51 percent did not know that the war started with North Korea’s invasion of the South. About 14 percent picked Japan as the nation responsible for the war; 13.4 percent, the United States, and 11 percent Russia. About 2 percent even said it was the South invading the North.

While the United States is regarded as the main ally of the country, 28 percent said it was the key “threat” for national security, 4 percentage points higher than North Korea.

Only 56 percent said they felt threatened by the North’s nuclear weapons development, adding that the chance of another Korean War taking place was very low.

I bet 99% knew the latitude and longitude of Dokdo, though. And all were PhD’s about Mad Cow Disease.

Still, I guess one can only be so upset about this. At least they’re not making packs to get knocked up.

THE FOLLOW UP BY THE METOPOLITICIAN

Told Ya So (Again)
Jeez. I don't know what's more disappointing -- the fact that I and other thinking humans figured out from the day PD Notebook aired that their claims were specious-to-false while everyone took their word as gospel, or the fact that everyone's acting as if they were snookered when they should not have been.

If the con artist at the bus stop says they need a 10,000 won bill to get home and they lost their wallet and will promptly pay you back by wiring the money to your account as soon as they arrive, you're an idiot. But hey, it's a learning experience.

If you get fooled twice, you're a maroon.

Three times, and you're a fucking moron.

Hmm -- PD Notebook's track record of being sensationalistic and reporting false claims or going unethical routes to gather information is well known to the Korean public. So why is the government and the people acting so shocked and surprised at the fact that their claims about "genetic susceptibility", out-of-context use of "downer cow" footage, and the report of the "woman who died of mad cow disease" that was mistranslated -- I knew all those things from day 1.

And I'm not a frickin' genius -- so did other members of the media, and so should have many members of the population.

If you're snookered by the same character in the same way several times, who's really at fauly? PD Notebook does what it does, and sometimes they're wrong (like now) and sometimes they're right (like with Hwang Woo Suk); but this ain't nothin' new.

The Korean public is just pissed and angry for being snookered, but this time it was much more embarrassing. But, even if PD Notebook is taken off the air or whatever (it was before, after all), it'll be back up again and nothing will have changed.

This, from the same public that still thinks you can die from sleeping in front of a fan. The problem's much bigger than PD Notebook.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Told Ya So, Or Why Memories of the Panic Is All Is Going Down the Memory Hole Again

GREAT POST BY THE METROPOLITICIAN

On the day when protest numbers peaked, I said that the beef protests would be dead within 4-6 weeks, especially after getting wind that the two middle school girls incident was planning to be inserted into the mix, as well as other issues.

I was more right than I could have hoped.

Of course, things could flare up again, and you might get more people back out there in response to new decisions made here and there, but I think the large protests are indeed over, and things will go back to normal, since this wasn't a "movement" so much as public venting.

Still, I don't buy the whole revisionist thinking that many Koreans have, that this was "never about anti-Americanism" and people trying to act like this was a peaceful, thoughtful expression of public will, akin to a people's referendum on the president's decision-making style.

It was what it was. At first, it was pure, irrational panic over the story that broke on PD Notebook, the Korean equivalent of the American show 60 Minutes, except that the former is a piece of sensationalist yellow journalism, whereas the latter is generally seen as setting the standard for in-depth, professional journalism.

Koreans not only failed to see the ridiculousness of many claims on their face, but also instantly forgot the history of the show itself, including its reputation for questionable ethics and having received intense criticism from the KOREAN PUBLIC for its previous reporting, which was perceived to have been done more for ratings than for the public good. It had actually been taken off the air because of the intensity of public demands -- yet Koreans were for some reason looking at the obviously specious claims and stringing together of flimsy evidence as gospel.

That is and was disturbing, and no attempt to spin this all as some rational reaction to the president's policies will work, since anyone here at the time should be able to tell you that that is NOT what this was about. Now that the beef thing has become embarrassing, as more and more information has come out, people are rationalizing this away as actually having been about something else, but it wasn't -- it simply wasn't.

I and many other foreign observers with some distance from the issue saw this in terms of other public panics to which we had also been witness -- it's just that the recent one was shown to be bullshit quickly, whereas the Ohno or middle school girls incidents didn't have such a clear and simple way of debunking: the genetic susceptibility argument was shown to be ridiculous (why that was even news is still shocking to me), the downer cows shown had nothing to do with CJD (a fact that was also obvious at the time, yet that didn't seem to make any difference), the woman the show claimed to have died from mad cow in fact didn't (a fact readily available from any of the Korean journalists who have the same access to foreign news media as I do), combined with the fact that the Korean beef industry actually has lower standards than every point for which the American beef industry was being taken to task.

Eventually, the bullshit's gotta float to the surface.

And now, as people shift their initial anger into the rationalizations that take place after one realizes that they've overreacted, or that they are even wrong, now the media is getting a lot of criticism for having "deceived" the people. Hey -- I was saying all this from day ONE, back at the beginning of May (see here and here). So why am I OK today, but I was an asshole at the beginning of June? My position hasn't changed one iota, yet everything I said then is now socially acceptable all of a sudden. To all those people who were nearly rabid with fury at possibly getting mad cow, how they might get it from using everything from maxi-pads to makeup, but now are suddenly possessed of omsbudsman-like media criticism skills and are jumping down the throats of the newspapers, I do have to allow myself an uncensored moment:

Give me a fucking break.

This is why Korean public discourse is counterproductive and embarrassing, in that is mercurial and irrational. When PD Notebook aired its "expose", people around me were parroting those pieces of evidence, to which I replied exactly as I did in the paragraph above. People accused me of being an apologist for American empire, which I wasn't, or simply being defensive, which I wasn't. And PD Notebook isn't doing anything they haven't ALWAYS been doing, nor the newspapers.

Yet, now when people are coming around, instead of using the realization that they were simply overreacting to think more deeply about WHY they were so overreacting and why they were so easily snookered and manipulated in the first place, people have just decided to throw what happened down the memory hole and simply remember events as something they weren't at that time.

That is what continues to frustrate me about this and the inevitable future protests to come. At the same time, the cycle of overreaction, mass demonstration, and petering out seems to be much shorter than I anticipated -- but again, I wonder if that was because this issue has such a relatively easier "right answer" that would eventually see the light of day, more than a sign of popular patience for this sort of thing having gotten shorter, i.e. people have "learned something" from all this.

2002 Tank Incident and Aftermath


Students and other participants stage a candlelight vigil to commemorate the 2002 death of two middle schoolgirls in central Seoul, June 13. The girls ― Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun ― were accidentally struck and killed by a U.S. armored vehicle north of Seoul six years ago. The commemoration was part of the ongoing demonstrations against U.S. beef imports. / Korea Times

By Brian Deutsch

Since the beginning of the anti-beef protests, the media has been drawing cautious parallels between these demonstrations and the anti-American rallies that swept the nation in 2002 and 2003.

Those came after two middle schoolgirls were accidentally killed by an American military vehicle. Conservative newspapers were, last month, expressing concern that these latest protests might equal the level of anti-Americanism on display back then.

We have certainly been reminded of those 2002 demonstrations these past few weeks. Newspapers often mention them in articles on the anti-beef protests, because for a lot of cities and towns, the last time the citizenry got together for a candlelight protest was to rally against the American military.

We saw anti-Americanism on display in Gwangju during commemorative festivities for the Gwangju Massacre, where paintings of shredded American flags, tanks and corpses, grieving mothers, and ``F* USA" were prominently exhibited next to information booths on mad cow disease.

And, now that the sixth anniversary of those girls' deaths is upon us, we see some groups have decided, as expected, to incorporate them into these latest rallies to inject even more emotion into an already hysterical public.

But now that we're six years on from the incident, it's time for some reflection. In the aftermath of the accident, after the U.S. genuinely and sincerely apologized numerous times, paid damages, and followed all protocol dictated by culture and by treaty, we witnessed a display of anti-Americanism and plain old xenophobic hatred that perhaps may never be rivaled here again.

Soldiers were stabbed, kidnapped, beaten up, and showered with rocks and aggression. There were numerous cases of assaults against foreigners, and countless cases of intimidation and discrimination against foreigners and Korean women in the company of foreign-looking men.

Restaurants and businesses prohibited foreigners from entering, with signs that said ``Americans not welcome here'' and ``USFK You are all guilty.''

And the netizens and mainstream media, then as now, distorted facts, fabricated accounts and intentionally mislead the public into taking to the streets with a wild-eyed fervor usually reserved for democratic movements and soccer games.

As with the anti-beef protests of today, when it comes to this incident, opinions seem to be divided according to nationality.

Koreans, in general, still firmly believe the U.S. military committed a grievous error and still contend the incident represented U.S. arrogance and carelessness.

On the other hand, Americans look at the events of 2002 and see that, though the deaths were a tragedy, the public outrage was far too aggressive for such an accident.

Yes, no amount of money can bring those two girls back, but is it not hypocritical to be so outraged in a country ranked the most-dangerous in the world for pedestrians? Is it not hypocritical to protest the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) when South Korea has them with countries that quarter the ROK military?

Is it not hypocritical to bemoan the U.S. military in this case when vehicular homicides involving South Koreans go unnoticed every day? And is it not hypocritical to profess to want to internationalize and welcome foreigners, while at the same time attacking them, blaming them, and forcing them away?

Thus, in order to properly normalize relations between cultures, it is proper that South Korea and its level-headed citizens apologize for the ugly behavior exhibited in the aftermath of this accident.

Apologize for attacking foreigners indiscriminately, and for holding all military members accountable for the actions of a few. Apologize for assaulting and discriminating against foreigners who were no more related to the accident than Koreans in the U.S. were to Cho Seung-hui and his massacre on the campus of Virginia Tech.

And apologize for fostering an environment of irrational hate and reckless journalism that still can be seen today and which still threaten its foreign residents.

If South Korea is a nation that truly wishes to accept foreigners, foreign culture, and perhaps most importantly foreign investment, it cannot let its crimes of hate and anger be unaccounted for.

And, if South Korea is a mature, dignified, modern nation, it will not let itself be associated with thuggery and discrimination on par with some of the worst campaigns in recent memory.

As a gesture of good faith in these trying times, South Koreans need to recognize the ugliness and irresponsibility of their actions and make atonement.

Brian Deutsch is an English teacher in Suncheon, South Jeolla Province. He can be reached at deutsch.brian@gmail.com. The views expressed in the above article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of The Korea Times.



The 2002 Accident Myth
To be honest, I had no real hopes for this film. I was wrong in my judgment, it was actually worse than I thought it was going to be. Welcome to the film Get Smart

I used to watch the Tv show and it always made me laugh. While watching this film the only thing I did was shake my head and ask, "Why"?

The film is hopelessly mismatched as Steve Carell and Anne Hathaway try and have some on screen chemistry. The mismatch worked on the tv show but fails miserably in the film.

It was so bad, I just guess,after 7 minutes in to the movie, that the double-agent will be..... and I was correct. It was a huge set up and a huge failure.

The only thing I really liked about the film was the end credit where it said, For Don Adams" then it added and Edward Platt. I thought that it was a nice touch.

If you like Steve Carell, then please see this film. If you are a fan of the TV show, then please pass on this turd,at all cost.

Grade D-

Opened in Korea on 19 June 2008

How I saw it CGV Theater.

Extra scene at the end of the movie. No

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

It's whitey season again in Daejeon.

A Korea Times reporter accompanied some Daejeon police as they went around trying to bust foreigners teaching illegally.
Hur Chang-goo, a veteran immigration police officer, hopped in a car with his partner, a female interpreter. Their mission: To catch a foreign national illegally teaching English at a kindergarten.

Tipped off that a Canadian teacher was hired to teach at the private institute, they needed to check it out. On their way, they discussed ways to block any possible attempt by the teacher to flee. The Korea Times accompanied them.

You'll recall that Daejeon was where the local Foreign Language School association (sic) advertised on buses last year that "you are watched," that "private tutoring of English is a legal offense" (lol), and that informants would be rewarded for leading to the capture and deportation of illegal foreign teachers. Well, you might not recall that bullshit anymore, but you should.



Anyway, take a few minutes to read the KT piece. It's ridiculous and infurating, as usual, and I'm definitely tempted to pull out my overworked "Go fuck yourself" stamp for the piece's topic and its "just another day in the neighborhood" tone. But for the time being I just wanted to point out the sequence highlighted by "Ya-ta Boy" on Dave's:
The police officer did not go into the classroom

. . .
The officer failed to secure any concrete evidence that immigration law had been violated.

Busting Illegal Foreign Workers Elusive

By Park Si-soo
Staff Reporter

DAEJEON ㅡ Hur Chang-goo, a veteran immigration police officer, hopped in a car with his partner, a female interpreter. Their mission: To catch a foreign national illegally teaching English at a kindergarten.

Tipped off that a Canadian teacher was hired to teach at the private institute, they needed to check it out. On their way, they discussed ways to block any possible attempt by the teacher to flee. The Korea Times accompanied them.

It's illegal for any foreign national, even those with an E-2 visa, to work at an institute registered as kindergarten. Under Korean law, kindergartens are banned from providing English classes.

Upon arrival, the officer silently walked into the kindergarten's porch, the noise of kids filtering down from upstairs.

``We are from Daejeon Immigration Office. Please call the foreign teacher,'' Hur declared. Caught off guard by the uninvited, abrupt ``guests,'' the chief rushed to the building's upper floor and soon came down with a Canadian instructor.

The officer asked a couple of questions. What are you doing here? Did this institute hire you? Are you teaching kids? The teacher, 28, refused to answer any of the questions.

On behalf of the teacher, the institute's president claimed the person ``happened to be at the institute by chance to eat snacks, not to teach kids,'' adding that he works at a nearby language institute.

The two presidents were ordered to appear at the immigration office the following week for additional questions.

The police officer did not go into the classroom where the person might have possibly been teaching kids, taking into consideration the possible negative impact it might have had on the children.

He called the two school presidents days later for further questioning. They strongly denied that the teacher was teaching kids at the kindergarten.

The officer failed to secure any concrete evidence that immigration law had been violated.

``Nobody admits their wrongdoing from the beginning,'' Hur said returning to his office. ``The two presidents' statements were a bit conflicting and did not fit well. But, as the kindergarten president did not admit hiring the foreign teacher, we couldn't prove anything.''

The officer said that the case illustrates how hard it is to nab illegal foreign workers, with the difficulty compounded by a lack of manpower at the immigration office.
``We have lots of work to do, causing most immigration officers to work late at the office almost everyday. This case apparently imposed another burden on us,'' he said with a bitter smile.

Chronic Hurdle

His office covers not only Daejeon, where the headquarters are located, but also South Chungcheong Province.

The office estimates there are more than 58,000 foreign nationals, including roughly 12,000 illegal foreign workers, in the area. The number has jumped in recent years.

Even if they wanted to catch all the illegal foreign workers, there are only nine investigators at the office.

``It is basically impossible to put the whole area under our control with the current manpower,'' said Son Jong-ha, chief officer of Daejeon Immigration Office. ``We sometimes fail to react immediately to tip-offs on illegal foreign workers.''

He said an increase of manpower was the only way to get back on track.

``We need at least 40 to 50 more investigators,'' Son said. ``Any administrative reform without additional staff would be meaningless.''

The immigration office focuses on catching those working illegally at private language institutes, and kindergartens.

There are two foreigner-only prisons in the Daejeon area _ Daejeon Correction Center and Cheonan Correction Center. They hold approximately 60 percent of foreign lawbreakers sentenced to three months or longer in jail.

Son expressed concerns over civic groups that denounce the immigration offices' crackdown on illegal foreign workers.

``Whenever our raids hit the headlines, civic groups attack us. They say illegal foreign laborers are here with the pure purpose of making money and supporting their family members in their home countries,'' he said. ``If any foreigner is injured during the raid, they condemn us. But weeding out illegal foreign workers is important to protect them from being abused by employers.''

Noting that the government's inconsistent policies on illegal foreign labor have created sympathetic feelings toward illegal foreigners, he said ``In the past, foreigners had limited access to work here. Nowadays, however, the government offers diverse opportunities to would-be foreign laborers, ensuring their legal status.''
US Beef Protests Dwindle as Anti-US Groups Show Their True Colors
» by GI Korea

It looks like since the real forces behind the US beef protests are beginning to show their true colors, more and more of the Korean public is being turned off by them:

Over the weekend, the coalition plans to hold another relay rally, and will decide Friday whether to go ahead with a full-fledged campaign to bring down Lee if his government fails to relieve public worries on various policies.

But its official Web site has started to receive criticism over “too many political issues” during the candlelit protests and many demand the rally should focus on the beef issue.

“The original theme should be protected. I hope everyone knows that,” an Internet user with the ID ‘marin’ said on the Web site.

Professor Bak Hee-je from Kyunghee University said that various political issues dealt with in the protests are some of the reasons that citizens have turned away from the rally.

“It is a transition period, definitely,” Bak said. “Those who don’t want to deal with political issues may have left the scene. They’re now waiting to see what the government will offer. But if the government comes up with a lukewarm stance again, they will come back to the streets.” [Korea Times]

I think the most disgusting example of the political nature of these protests is when the anti-US groups set up a memorial tent outside City Hall in Seoul that has blatantly linked the US beef protests with the 2002 USFK armored vehicle accident:

green-korea-pic3.jpg

If you look closely at the below image you can see how propaganda images of crazy cows has been intermingled with pictures of the two girls tragically killed in the accident:

green-korea-pic1.jpg

The fact that these anti-US groups did this is made even more disgusting by the fact that the families of the two girls killed in the accident clearly said they did not want these protesters to link the two girls to the US beef protests which they went ahead and did anyway.

Something else that bothers me is that an art department went to the Highway 56 Memorial for the two girls built by USFK and began painting images on it that link the memorial to the candlelight protests going on now:

2008061300339_1.jpg

It is pretty easy to see where this artist received his inspiration for the image from considering it looks just like the image on the Korean Internet site the Candlegirls which has been attacking fellow K-blogger Brian Deutsch for daring to write about the absurdity of the US beef protests:

candlelight-girls.gif

The defacing of the Highway 56 Memorial for political purposes by these anti-US groups is nothing new and something I have written about before and I see no signs of stopping anytime soon.

The anti-US groups also made sure to bring out the kids and indoctrinate them in anti-US hate as well during the beef protests:

green-korea-pic2.jpg

Bringing kids to protests is an often used tactic by the Korean left to include even having them participate in violent protests such as what everyone saw at Camp Humphreys:

For those that don’t know many of the same groups behind the US beef protests were the same ones behind the violent Camp Humphrey's expansion protests that featured epic Braveheart style battles:

When you see video like this of the beef protesters attacking the police it is easy to see many of the same people are involved.

Interestingly enough the images of the two girls memorial by the beef protesters come from none other then the Green Korea site out protesting US beef. Even though this organization has nothing to do with US beef they were out dressed in their own crazy cow outfits protesting Korean President Lee Myung-bak’s grand canal project:

green-korea-pic4.jpg

The sign she is holding roughly says stop the canal, which is something I could sympathize with except from these people who have been key in spreading propaganda about the US camp pollution issue in their attempts to stop the USFK transformation plan. These people care little about the environment and like many other of the groups involved in these protests are nothing more then front groups for anti-US activity in Korea. This was made quite evident when many of these groups to include Green Korea were linked to a North Korean spy scandal.

These people are predictable as well as disgusting and I hope the fact that protests numbers are dwindling has more to do with average Koreans finally seeing through the fraud these groups represent and not just simple fatigue.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Stephannie White sent a message to the members of A Mother is looking for answers about her son..

--------------------
Subject: Thank you~!

Because of YOUR generous donations.. we now have enough funds to cover the costs of Mike's morgue and cremation costs.

I can not ever thank all of you enough... without your generous time, donations and good will, this would have been more of a disaster then it already has been. I just dont know how to thank you all enough..instead it always seems I'm asking for more... and I really hate that part of things... I"m so sorry but I don't know what else to do~

Breaking NEWS in USA~
The story will be coming out in the Star Herald out of Kosciusko Mississippi... my Aunt Emogene arranged it~ (THANK YOU EMOGENE!)

http://www.starherald.com/site/news.asp?brd=484

Folks inside Korea might have trouble accessing the site. The first time I tried, I couldn't access it... but for some reason now I can... go figure??

Now, we just have to keep the story going... please log in and read the story, then please take the time to write a letter to the editor and send it to both your local (hometown, no matter which country your from~)newspaper and to the Star Herald.

If we can get enough grassroots folks spreading the news among small town newspapers around the world, it has a chance to be picked up by AP & RUETERS...

Mike deserves justice... please help me spread the word so the Korean authorities know they can't just sweep this under the rug... like the last 3 mystery deaths (Bill Kapoun, Matthew Sellers and Jamie Penich) of foreigners in Korea.

In humble thanks~
Mike's mom
Stephannie
--------------------

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Andy’s US beef article (plus a bit on Obama)

Yes, you are sick about seeing stuff about it. Yes, here it is one more time.

I have a piece on the US beef issue in today’s Korea Times. The first half mainly deals with how the Lee administration was totally unready to deal with the rapid spread of misinformation regarding the issue. The second half gives my humble opinion on some things Lee can to to turn things around.

Here is a bit on the involvement of our friends at the Korean Teachers and Education Workers Union:

It is no accident that at least half of the participants in earlier protests were middle and high school kids, and not only because they are more susceptible to believing Internet rumors.

Members of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers’ Union have been pushing propaganda CDs and other materials on their students in an attempt to fan fears of death by eating American beef. A KTEWU chapter in North Chungcheong province went as far as to post banners saying, “We Don’t Want American Mad Cow Beef” at a Children’s Day festival on May 5.

Source: Ye Olde Chosun

There may be legitimate issues with US beef, but they are not what is driving the protests.

Here is a bit that might raise an eyebrow or two:

The Lee administration must also be more effective in dealing with Internet rumors and fear mongering campaigns conducted by groups like the KTEWU….

The presidential campaign of Barack Obama, which has also had to deal with numerous Internet-based falsehoods, has established a site solely dedicated to debunking rumors (entitled “Fight the Smears”). It publishes documents to counter the most common falsehoods spread about him and gives supporters the means to quickly reply to rumors spread online. A similar site regarding the beef issue could be a step in counter Internet-based misinformation.

I have already been accused of loving Obama, but it is just not so. I sincerely want him to lose this fall.

That being said, all these Internet rumors against Obama as just as bad as the Internet circus going on over US beef. I hope that Obama site helps put some of them to rest.

I don’t want folks to vote against Obama because of Internet rumors about him. I want folks to vote against him because is a leftist (7.37% lifetime American Conservative Union ranking, perfect score for the liberal Americans for Democratic Action this year except for some missed votes) pretending to be a moderate.

I am in no way an Obama supporter.

In other words (let me channel the Maverick himself for this one):

Vote McCain, damn it!


Rumors, Fear and US Beef

By Andy Jackson

Fed by a steady diet of Internet rumors and half-truths at best, tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets to protest, among a myriad of other things, the resumption of American beef imports. At the same time, support for President Lee Myung-bak has plummeted to less than 20 percent in several public opinion polls.

How have things come to this? It is worth noting some of the events leading to the current state of affairs as it could very well serve as a model for similar campaigns in the future, both in Korea and elsewhere.

On April 28, MBC's TV journal ``PD Notebook" aired a program containing several falsehoods. Among them was that a young American woman had recently died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD), the human form of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as mad cow disease, and that Koreans are genetically susceptible to catching CJD.

The most damaging part of the report was when they showed footage of weakened cows being dragged into a slaughterhouse. PD Notebook placed the caption ``BSE-infected cow" with that footage, implying that Americans knowingly slaughter BSE-infected cattle for human consumption.

The show was forced to air a retraction on May 13 but by then the falsehoods had taken a life of their own through Internet rumors. The rumor mill introduced new falsehoods, such as the myth claiming the U.S. government was trying to force Korea to take meat from older cattle that Americans do not eat (in fact, Americans regularly eat beef from animals over 30 months).

It is no accident that at least half of the participants in earlier protests were middle and high school kids, and not only because they are more susceptible to believing Internet rumors.

Members of the Korean Teachers and Education Workers' Union have been pushing propaganda CDs and other materials on their students in an attempt to fan fears of death by eating American beef. A KTEWU chapter in North Chungcheong province went as far as to post banners saying, ``We Don't Want American Mad Cow Beef" at a Children's Day festival on May 5.

The usual suspects, such as leftist professional protestors like Oh Jong-ryeol, head of Solidarity for Reunification, among other organizations, politicians and labor groups have also jumped into the act as the protests evolved into a multi-organizational campaign criticizing both real and imagined faults of the Lee administration.

During all this time, President Lee Myung-bak could hardly have been less effective in countering the rumors and effectively communicating the reasoning behind the beef agreement. The result has been a freefall in his popularity, with even conservatives losing faith in his ability to govern effectively.

So what should Lee do from here?

First, he needs to communicate the facts surrounding the reopening of American beef imports. There have been no known cases of CJD caused by eating American beef. The only confirmed cases of vCJD (the version of the disease cause by consuming tainted meat) in America were found in people who got it by eating European beef.

In May 2007, the World Organization for Animal Health, known by its historical Spanish acronym OIE, the world body in charge of assessing meat safety, unanimously concluded that American beef and beef products from cattle of all ages can be safely traded. It has also stated that American testing methods are credible. The OIE reports are the basis for the reopening of the beef trade, a process that began with the Roh administration.

The Lee administration must also be more effective in dealing with Internet rumors and fear mongering campaigns conducted by groups like the KTEWU.

Of course, that is more easily said than done. Mark Twain once said, ``A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes." The speed of the Internet and text message communication has only sped the spread of rumor and misinformation since Twain's day.

However, it is a task that must be attempted.

The presidential campaign of Barack Obama, which has also had to deal with numerous Internet-based falsehoods, has established a site solely dedicated to debunking rumors (entitled ``Fight the Smears"). It publishes documents to counter the most common falsehoods spread about him and gives supporters the means to quickly reply to rumors spread online. A similar site regarding the beef issue could be a step in counter Internet-based misinformation.

Lee must secure a base of support by uniting conservatives under his leadership. His reported efforts to bring Park Geun-hye in as prime minister would be hugely helpful in repairing fissures among conservatives and would certainly give him a needed boost.

One thing he should not worry so much about is placating the protesters so they will get off the streets. They will be around in one form or another for the rest of his presidency. That is fine as long as they are not allowed to disrupt the lives of the other 13 million citizens who call the Seoul area home.

To get things going in the right direction, the President needs to pick up a couple of victories to demonstrate that he is still a strong leader. He should and forcefully campaign for opposition parties to abandon their boycott of the National Assembly and push for passage of the free trade agreement with the United States. Both positions are supported by strong majorities of the public, according to recent polls.

Lee Myung-bak's term has gotten off to a rocky start, but this early stumble is an opportunity to retool and emerge as a more effective president.

Andy Jackson teaches American government in the Lakeland College bridge program at Ansan College, Gyeonggi Province. He can be reached at andyinrok@yahoo.com


Fan death

Fan death is a South Korean urban legend which states that an electric fan, if left running overnight in a closed room, can cause the death (by suffocation, poisoning, or hypothermia) of those inside. Fans manufactured and sold in Korea are equipped with a timer switch that turns them off after a set number of minutes, which users are frequently urged to set when going to sleep with a fan on.

Beliefs

The belief in the myth of fan-death often offers several explanations for the precise mechanism by which the fan kills. However, as explained below, these beliefs do not stand up to logical and scientific scrutiny. Examples for possible justifications of belief in fan death are as follows:

  • That an electric fan creates a vortex, which sucks the oxygen from the enclosed and sealed room and creates a partial vacuum inside.[citation needed] This explanation violates conservation of matter, as indoor fans are not powerful enough to change the air pressure by any significant amount.
  • That an electric fan chops up all the oxygen particles in the air leaving none to breathe. This explanation violates mass conservation and well-known properties of molecules and gases.
  • The fan uses up the oxygen in the room and creates fatal levels of carbon dioxide.[citation needed] There is no actual conversion of oxygen to carbon dioxide happening; unlike a candle, the electric motor in a fan does not alter the chemical composition of the air (apart from creating some ozone if the motor uses brushes, and outgassing from the materials).
  • That if the fan is put directly in front of the face of the sleeping person, it will suck all the air away, preventing one from breathing. This explanation ignores the fact that most people point a fan towards themselves when using one which would result in more air being blown towards them, not sucked away.
  • That fans contribute to hypothermia, or abnormally low body temperature.[1] As the metabolism slows down at night, one becomes more sensitive to temperature,[citation needed] and thus supposedly more prone to hypothermia. If the fan is left on all night in a sealed and enclosed room, believers in fan death suppose that it will lower the temperature of the room to the point that it can cause hypothermia. Empirical measurements will show, however, that the temperature in the room does not fall, at least not due to the fan; if at all, it should rise slightly because of friction and the heat output of the fan motor, but even this is generally not significant. Fans actually make one cooler by increasing the convection around a person's body so that heat flows from them to the air more easily, and by the latent heat of vaporisation as perspiration evaporates from the body. However, there is no scientific study which indicates that this effect would be sufficient to cause hypothermia unless the temperature were already very low (in which case, there would be no need for a fan anyway).
Electric fans sold in Korea are equipped with a "timer knob" switch, which turns them off after a set number of minutes: perceived as a life-saving function, particularly essential for bed-time use.
Electric fans sold in Korea are equipped with a "timer knob" switch, which turns them off after a set number of minutes: perceived as a life-saving function, particularly essential for bed-time use.
  • That fans contribute to hyperthermia, commonly known as heatstroke.[2] The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency warns that during excessive heat events, people should not "use a portable electric fan in a closed room without windows or doors open to the outside."[3] The EPA's position is based on the fact that a fan alone will not prevent hyperthermia brought on by hot weather, not that a fan will exacerbate hyperthermia.
  • That fans contribute to prolonged asphyxiation due to environmental oxygen displacement or carbon dioxide intoxication.[2][1][4][5] In the process of human respiration, inhaled fresh air is exhaled with a lower concentration of oxygen gas (O2), and higher concentration of carbon dioxide gas (CO2), causing a gradual reduction of O2 and buildup of CO2 in a completely unventilated room.[6] Other indoor sources of carbon dioxide include burning fossil fuels, such as a gas-fueled water heater, and seepage through foundations in areas of high CO2 soil content.[7] Carbon dioxide is a colorless, odorless gas, and because it weighs 1.5 times more than normal air,[8] it tends to concentrate toward the floor,[5] depending on temperature and air currents. In South Korea, some people sleep on traditional floor mats, called yos, while others prefer western-style beds, and floor vents may be absent when ondol radiant underfloor heating is employed.[9] According to The Straight Dope website run by the Chicago Reader newspaper, asphyxiation is an unlikely cause of fan death because "few rooms are totally sealed, and the fan would tend to keep CO2 and other gases well mixed."[2]

South Korean government position

The Korea Consumer Protection Board (KCPB), a South Korean government-funded public agency, issued a consumer safety alert in 2006 warning that "asphyxiation from electric fans and air conditioners" was among South Korea's five most common seasonal summer accidents or injuries, according to data they collected.[10] Also included among the five hazards were air conditioner explosions, and sanitation issues, including food poisoning and opportunistic pathogens harbored in air conditioners. According to the KCPB:

"If bodies are exposed to electric fans or air conditioners for too long, it causes bodies to lose water and [causes] hypothermia. If directly in contact with [air current from] a fan, this could lead to death from [the] increase of carbon dioxide saturation concentration and decrease of oxygen concentration. The risks are higher for the elderly and patients with respiratory problems. From 2003 [to] 2005, a total of 20 cases were reported through the CISS involving asphyxiations caused by leaving electric fans and air conditioners on while sleeping. To prevent asphyxiation, timers should be set, wind direction should be rotated and doors should be left open."

[edit] Fan-related hyperthermia research

Research suggests that fan use may be a contributing factor in heat-related deaths such as fatal cases of hyperthermia.[11] A U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association advises that "although the use of fans may increase comfort at temperatures less than 90°F (less than 32.2°C), fans are not protective against heatstroke when temperatures reach greater than or equal to 90°F (greater than or equal to 32.2°C) and humidity exceeds 35%,"[11] and provides a similar but simpler warning to the public on their website.[12] These temperature and humidity conditions are consistent with a death cited in an earlier article critical of fan death, which suggested that fan use was irrelevant.[2]

Texts on industrial hygiene and ventilation will describe conditions when the use of a fan will increase a worker's heat load. Those conditions include very high temperatures found in foundries and similar industries like heat treating metals. Similar problems occur with high heat and high humidity.

A 2007 meta-analysis of studies on heat wave-related deaths explains that "a fan induces air movement that increases evaporation and lowers skin temperature, but in warm environments increased wind speeds of hot air can actually raise the skin temperature and thus produce opposite results by increasing core body temperature."[13] The study concludes that definitive recommendations on fan use require further study.

An analysis of risk factors contributing to 700 "excess deaths" during a 1995 Chicago, Illinois, heat wave found no evidence that fans either increased or decreased mortality, but noted that "interpretation of the data on the use of fans is complicated by the need to take into account specific environmental factors (for example, whether the fan is used in a room with an open or a closed window) and the health status of individual subjects."[14] Fear of crime was cited as a factor in people keeping windows and doors locked shut.

[edit] Media coverage

The explanation[clarify] of fan death is accepted by many Korean medical professionals. In summer, mainstream Korean news sources regularly report on cases of fan death.

A typical example is this excerpt from the July 28, 1997, edition of the Korea Herald, an English-language newspaper:

The heat wave which has encompassed Korea for about a week, has generated various heat-related accidents and deaths. At least 10 people died from the effects of electric fans which can remove oxygen from the air and lower body temperatures...

On Friday in eastern Seoul, a 16-year-old girl died from suffocation after she fell asleep in her room with an electric fan in motion. The death toll from fan-related incidents reached 10 during the past week. Medical experts say that this type of death occurs when one is exposed to electric fan breezes for long hours in a sealed area. "Excessive exposure to such a condition lowers one's temperature and hampers blood circulation. And it eventually leads to the paralysis of heart and lungs," says a medical expert.

"To prevent such an accident, one should keep the windows open and not expose oneself directly to fan air," he advised.

According to The Straight Dope website, when informed that the phenomenon is virtually unheard of outside of their country, "some locals claim Koreans are uniquely vulnerable due to a peculiarity either of their own physiology or of Korean fans."[2]

Published professional opinion

Dr. Yeon Dong-su, dean of Kwandong University's medical school in South Korea:[15]

Many people say that these victims die from lack of oxygen, but that is not true. Hypothermia does not only occur in the winter when it is cold. The symptoms can also take place if a person has been drinking and turns on a fan in a closed room. Most people wake up when they feel cold, but if you are drunk you will not wake up, even if your body temperature drops below 35 degrees Celsius, at which point you can die from hypothermia. It doesn't matter so much about the temperature of the room. If it is completely sealed, then in the current of an electric fan, the temperature can drop low enough to cause a person to die of hypothermia.

It is likely that the symptoms discussed by this doctor are actually due to excessive alcohol consumption, which can decrease body temperature.[16]

Gord Giesbrecht, a professor of thermophysiology at the University of Manitoba in Canada,[17] is a leading expert on hypothermia:

It's hard to imagine death by fan, because to die of hypothermia, one's body temperature would have to get down to 28 [°C], drop by 10 degrees [Celsius] overnight. We've got people lying in snowbanks overnight here in Winnipeg and they survive. Maybe if someone was elderly and they were sitting there for three days in a sealed room with an electric fan turned on. Someone is not going to die from hypothermia because their body temperature drops two or three degrees overnight; it would have to drop eight to 10 degrees." In addition, "the only way to verify whether someone had really died of hypothermia during the night would be to take a core body temperature the following morning. Waiting three days while the body was in the morgue wouldn't work because the corpse's temperature can drop during that time.[1]

Dr. John Linton at Yonsei's Severance Hospital, who attended medical school at Yonsei University, is licensed to practice medicine in South Korea:[1]

There are several things that could be causing the fan deaths, things like pulmonary embolisms, cerebrovascular accidents or arrhythmia. There is little scientific evidence to support that a fan alone can kill you if you are using it in a sealed room. Although it is a common belief among Koreans, there are other explainable reasons for why these deaths are happening.

Dr. Lee Yoon-song is a professor at Seoul National University's medical school and works with the school's Institute of Scientific Investigation. He has conducted autopsies on some of the people who have been described in Korean media as having succumbed to fan death:

When someone's body temperature drops below 35 degrees, they do start to lose judgment ability. So if someone was hiking and later found dead, that could be part of the reason. But we can't really apply this to fan accidents. I found most of the victims already had some sort of disease like heart problems or serious alcoholism. So hypothermia is not the main reason for death, but it may contribute.

He blames the Korean media for the persistence of the urban legend:

FROM THE MIGHTY MIKE WEB SITE.............................................................................................


Salutations my friends,
I'm writing to you today in response to your sign-up at the old "ning" site for Mike White. When you listed talents you have to offer, in some way you offered creativity, positivity and artistic expression. There is a group project forming which would be greatly helped by your offering of talent and skills to both honor Mike's memory, yet also to send out a positive message about his passing.
Julian has come up with a fantastic idea of creating positive synergy around Mike's memory... through song and music,
He has begun the lyrics... and while I've been good with words in the past, I find it difficult to write lyrics without a tune... and I dont read guitar music... that was Mike's family specialty.
below are the lyrics begun by Julian, the idea is to record these (or others) for placing on YouTube, then embedding the videos via widgets into the MightieMike website. Dont worry, I do know how to handle the technical stuff~ just need video clips~!!

If there is a way you'd like to help~ contribute~ lend voice or instrument~ please contact Julian at julian.gwangju@gmail.com
Feel free to improve lyrics~


1.)
Chorus
Mightie Mike loved Korea
He lived here for a few years.
He could have stayed away this time
But he chose to come back again.
Mightie Mike loved the PCs
and high technology
always wanting new games
and flat screen TV's
Mike just bought a new phone
with radio and TV
Mightie Mike did love Korea
and Korean technology
Chorus
Mightie Mike loved Korea
He lived here for a few years.
He could have stayed away this time
But he chose to come back again.
Mike he loved animals
he loved so many parks
Everywhere in Korea
there's a neighborhood park
With rescued puppies
and his faithful dog Spot
Mike could always be seen
there, hanging out in the park
Chorus
Mightie Mike loved Korea
He lived here for a few years.
He could have stayed away this time
But he chose to come back again.

Mightie Mike loved his mother
Like he loved very life itself.
He told her he loved her
Kissed and hugged her
then Went on by himself.

Mightie Mike loved Korea
He loved the sauna too.
He could have stayed away that time
Now he's not going back again.

The 14 other men there
And the sauna workers too
The emergency services phone operator
And police need no thank you.
Chorus
Mightie Mike loved Korea
He lived here for a few years.
He Should have stayed away this time
Because Korea didn't love him back.

****************************************
http://mightiemike.com
WOW LOOK AT THIS INSANITY. GO GET EM BRIAN...............

I've attracted the ire of Korean netizen bullies.

This morning a couple Korean blogs have started linking to me as well as the "Candlegirls" cafe. The Candlegirls site links to me as a "촛불시위를 비하하는 외국인강사." Another blog, in an entry called "광우병 촛불집회를 비하하는 외국인," has posted my name, blog, and Facebook page, as well as the information of the Gwangju News, and has reposted the article I wrote in this month's issue. It also includes the name, school, and contact information of my editor, and has directed readers to email our employers. I'll copy and paste what they wrote in case the link changes.
안녕하세요. 제가 이렇게 글을 올리게 된 계기는 최근에 광주 전남지역 국제교류센터의 외국인들과 지역 영어교육인들을 대상으로 발간되는 ‘Gwangju News’라는 잡지에서, 국내의 광우병 촛불시위 그리고 더 나아가 한국인들을 너무 심하게 조롱하고 있는 한 외국인의 글을 보고 너무 분통이 터져서입니다. 한국인들의 촛불시위가 광우병에 대한 과장과 잘못된 정보, 그리고 그것을 확대하는 정치인과 언론때문이고, 한국 중고학생들은 주체적인 생각없이 그냥 그런 잘못된 정보를 믿고 우르르 거리로 나온 것 뿐이라고 하네요. 그리고 한국에서 광우병으로 병거리고 죽을 확률보다 교통사고로 죽을 확률이 훨씬 많다면서, 광우병 신경쓸 에너지 있으면, 교통사고 문제나 더 신경쓰라고 합니다. 이 글의 저자 Brian Deutsch은 그 전 ‘남대문 화재’ 및 ‘박진희의 코리아나’ 관련 기사에서도 계속 한국에 관해 비아냥거리는 글을 올려서 제가 항의메일을 보냈지만, 이번 기사에서 보여지듯이 아무런 태도의 변화를 보이지 않고, 오히려 노골적으로 더욱 한국을 비하하고 있습니다. 그리고 실제에 이 사람 블러그에 가시면 훨씬 많은 한국을 비하하는 글들을 볼 수 있을 것입니다. 이 밖에 이 잡지의 이번 호에서는 한 주한미군 장교가 ‘효순,미순’의 장갑차 사건을 다루면서, 그 사건은 단순히 교통사고 발생 위험성이 높은 지역에서 우연히 발생한 한 사건이었을 뿐인데, 몇몇 선동가들이 지나치게 사건을 확대시켰다고 주장하고 있습니다. 한국에대해 이렇게 몰이해적이고 한국인을 비아냥 거리는 글들이 계속 실리는데는 이 잡지의 편집장인 JS의 책임이 크다고 할 것입니다. 심지어 저를 비롯한 여러 한국사람들이 반론을 보냈음에도 한국인들의 의견은 무시하고 일방적으로 편협하고 한국을 비아냥 거리는 외국인의 글들을 계속 출간하고 있으니까요. 무엇보다도 제가 기분이 나쁜 것은 이렇게 한국을 비하하는 한국인들이 한국에서 한국인들에게 자기들의 모국어를 가르치면서 많은 돈을 벌면서, 한국과 한국인을 비웃고 있다는 것입니다.이런 몰지각한 외국인의 버릇을 고쳐주기위해서 여러분의 힘이 필요하다고 생각합니다. 먼저 편집장인 JS의 근무처인 xx대와 그녀의 email에 항의합시다. 그리고 순천에 계시는 분들은 Brian Deutsch이 어느 학교나 학원에 근무하는지 확인해서 항의 부탁드립니다. 그리고 그들의 블러그에도 적극적인 항의 부탁드립니다. 한국에 있는 외국인의 시각도 교정하지 못한다면, 어떻게 미국의 부시의 버릇을 잡아주겠습니까?[출처] 광우병 촛불집회를 비하하는 외국인|작성자 개나리꽃
It's also mirrored here. I'd appreciate it if somebody could translate what this says. [Update: Rough translation here, thanks "Juicy."] Running it through Babelfish it looks like this guy has taken issue with my tone in several articles and originally sent a letter to the Gwangju News that was apparently ignored (I myself haven't received any feedback on my latest article). Apparently the guy is also upset that I'm criticizing the country that employs me. And, it looks like they want to find out my school and send letters of protest there, too. I'm curious, though, if these people actually took the time to read what I've written, or if they just jumped to conclusions based on the topic. Regardless, I'm sure we'll be getting tons of emails now, and any inflammatory or threatening ones that come my way will be shared with you here.

* Update 1 (Saturday, June 14, 11:03): Somehow the original poster "개나리꽃이 필때" found out where I work and put that information online.

* Update 2: I discovered the identity of the original poster, and the one who posted all of our information online but I don't think I should post it just yet, because we'd like to investigate this and potentially press charges. Posting the name and information as retribution would perhaps damage any case we have, especially since we're disadvantaged already as foreigners. Needless to say I think you will be quite shocked to find out who it is.

* Update 3 (June 15, 17:30): Okay, so maybe you won't be "shocked" but it's from a surprising source. I can't say anything right now, though I am really itching to do a full write-up as soon as I can because while it came from what is apparently a no-name blogger, I can assure you it's not a random attack, and I am absolutely furious about this and the response from what I'll call "his corner." Thanks for all of your comments. I'm too busy to respond to everyone right now. I have taken out my colleague's name from the original post, and taken out her school. Also, looks like a commenter alerted the blogger to a post on Dave's about this. Yes, he's right, we are all planning a response now.

* Update 4 (Monday June 16, 18:30): The blogger changed it from the original message to:
여러분의 많은 지지 덕분에,

광주 전남지역 국제교류센터의 외국인들과 지역 영어교육인들을 대상으로 발간되는 ‘Gwangju News’에서

'광우병 위험성이 있는 미국쇠고기 수입에 반대하는 한국인의 의견'을 다음달 호에 올리기로 결정했습니다.

한국에 있는 많은 외국인 친구들에게 우리의 생각과 의견을 알릴 수 있도록,

영어 실력이 출중하신 많은 분들이 아래의 메일로 '광우병 위험성이 있는 미국쇠고기 수입에 반대하는 이유'를 보내 주셨으면 합니다.

여러분의 이런 소중한 노력이 국내 외국인들을 설득시키고, 나아가 미국에서의 국내 입장에 대한 좋은 여론을 조성하는데, 소중한 역할을 할 것이라고 생각됩니다. 그럼 ~~^^

Also wanted to remind people that this little campaign was against two foreigners, not just me, and that he's made life quite difficult for us the past three days. I plan to do a full write-up on this whole ordeal, sooner rather than later I hope, once things get back to normal and get resolved a little bit. Sorry, Roboseyo, I don't have a mystery guest blogger, and the culprit isn't Scott Hall.
The Real Identity of the Mad Cow

The People's Association for Measures Against Mad Cow Disease on Wednesday issued an ultimatum against the Lee Myung-bak administration, demanding the scrapping of the Korea-U.S. beef accord and the start of all-out renegotiations of the accord with the U.S. by June 20. "If the government decides to ignore the mandate from the people, who hold the sovereign power in this country, we will not hesitate to launch a campaign to drive President Lee Myung-bak out of office," it said in a statement. The association has been acting as if it has been leading the candlelight vigils.

Article 1 of the Constitution of the Republic of Korea says the sovereign authority of the country lies in the public and all power comes from the people. But nowhere in our Constitution is there any reference to the People's Association for Measures Against Mad Cow Disease as representing the public. Yet that association used insolent language to say it is "ordering" the government and would not hesitate to launch a campaign to oust President Lee. Judging from such words, the association must think the participants of the candlelight vigils are its supporters and that it feels empowered beyond imagination. But if you ask the housewives, high school students and office workers who took part in the vigils if that association represents them, most would wave their hands in denial and question just what that group does. Yet this very group is going around shouting out demands as if they own the candles that were carried by the people and have been empowered to be their leader.

A search through the association's Internet homepage reveals that it was launched on May 6 following a proposal by the People's Solidarity for Participatory Democracy and another civic group called the Korea Progressive Coalition. The coalition was created in September of last year after pro-North Korean groups such as Hanchongryun, the Solidarity for the Practice of the South-North Joint Declaration and other civic groups got together. The co-chairperson of the coalition, Oh Jong-ryeol, takes center stage during news conferences or rallies protesting against U.S. beef imports, acting as if he is the head of the People's Association for Measures Against Mad Cow Disease. A search through newspaper archives reveals that Oh had served as co-chair of a citizens' movement to close down a U.S. military bombing range in Maehyang-ri in 2001. He co-chaired another citizens' task force protesting the accidental killings of two Korean schoolgirls by a U.S. armored car in 2002, yet another citizens' task force seeking to nullify an impeachment motion against former President Roh Moo-hyun in 2004, an anti-APEC movement and a group opposed to the expansion of a U.S. military base in Pyeongtaek in 2005, and another movement opposed to the Korea-U.S. free trade agreement in 2006. He is a professional "co-chairperson." And it is obvious what types of groups he has co-chaired.

The people working at the association's briefing room are mostly affiliated with the PSPD or the Korea Progressive Coalition. A PSPD official heads the association's briefing room and he was the one who stood on the stage during a candlelight vigil on May 25 and shouted "Let's go to Cheong Wa Dae!" The person who created the song "Article 1 of the Constitution," a favorite at the candlelight vigils, was arrested during a spy crackdown back in 1992 for creating a song praising the late North Korean leader Kim Il-sung.

The Korean citizens who came out to the candlelight vigils, with their children in strollers, out of genuine concern for the health of their families, will be surprised if they find out such people are acting as their representatives. Moreover, Koreans will be appalled to learn that these people are threatening to nullify the election that even they participated in six months ago within the framework of the Constitution. The members of the association should be held jointly responsible for the mismanagement of the country during the Roh Moo-hyun administration. They are the very people who took this country backwards and divided the people by siding with Roh shouting anti-American and pro-North Korean slogans. And these people, who had been chased away by the public, are now using the crisis facing the Lee administration and hiding behind the mad cow scare to agitate others and calling on them to storm the presidential compound. The public needs to see the true faces of these people who are hiding behind a mask.

Auto Workers' Strike Would Be Suicidal

A high-ranking union official at Hyundai Motor is reported to have said that striking to resist the import of American beef is justified since productivity would be hurt if people get sick after eating beef from U.S. cattle infected with mad cow disease. The union official's comments came in response to a call by Hyundai Motor management to refrain from holding politically motivated strikes. The umbrella Korean Confederation of Trade Unions had ordered member unions on Friday to vote on whether to strike to support protests against U.S. beef imports.

Unionized workers at Hyundai Motor stand to benefit the most from the Korea-U.S. free trade agreement. Once it goes into effect, Korean cars with engines smaller than 3,000-cc will see their 2.5 percent tariff abolished, while Korean-made passenger cars and vans with engines bigger than 3,000-cc will see their 25 percent tariff removed within three years. Korean-made trucks sold in the U.S. will see tariffs disappear within 10 years. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said Korea exports hundreds of thousands of cars to the U.S. (690,000 in 2006), while American automakers sell less than 5,000 (3,000 in 2006) to Korea. He said the Korea-U.S. FTA was "badly flawed" since it would make this situation even less advantageous for U.S. carmakers.

A group of Grand National Party lawmakers who went to Washington D.C. for additional beef talks said there are already movements in the U.S. to link the beef issue with renegotiating the auto segment of the FTA. If the FTA deal breaks down or the auto segment is revised to be disadvantageous for Korea, and Hyundai and Kia fail to boost their inroads into the world's largest market, then Hyundai and Kia auto workers will be the first to suffer from cutbacks in production hours and layoffs. So a strike by Hyundai unionists in support of the beef protests is suicidal. They are acting like spoiled children.

The head of the KCTU, which counts Hyundai's unionized workers as members, said it originally wanted to launch a full-pitch-assault-style strike against the Lee Myung-bak administration, like in soccer. But he said the Korean Transportation Workers' Union ended up striking first, so the KCTU shifted its strategy to baseball. The first batter is the KTWU, which went on strike starting last Friday, while the construction workers' union, which begins striking today, will be second batter. The Korean Metal Workers' Union, which Hyundai Motor unionists are part of, and the Korea Railway Workers’ Union will be fourth and fifth. A KCTU spokesman said the latest nationwide strike should not be referred to as a "summer" offensive, since they will continue "until it snows." If they try to strike until it snows, they will first be out of their jobs and no longer be able to strike.

Top Five Lessons Learned from the Tragedy of 2002
» by GI Korea

There are plenty of lessons to be learned from the 2002 Armored Vehicle Accident from all sides of this issue to include the Korean public, government, and media, but I am going to focus my concluding comments solely on the US government and military since my prior posting clearly showed the many of the lessons Koreans can learn from this tragic accident. From the American perspective the bottom line is that from all levels of US government and military commands there are valuable lessons that can be learned from this tragedy that are relevant to not only people working or stationed in Korea, but in other countries as well. What happened in 2002 could easily happen in another country and have the same side effects that continue to persist today in Korea, if not handled properly. That is why it is important that what happened in 2002 is not forgotten by the military as the years go by and hopefully my top five lessons learned can serve as constructive criticism to ensure such mistakes are not repeated.

1. Recognize Public Sentiment
An important lesson that should be learned from the US government perspective is to realize what the sentiment of the Korean public was at the time. There was a number of clear signs early on that showed that the accident could explode into a major diplomatic incident. First there was ongoing trend of anti-US incidents cumulating over the past few years, the World Cup had brought Korean nationalism to all time highs, and Korea was in a Presidential election year; the US Embassy should have predicted what was going to happen in response to the accident when these factors are considered.


The 2000 Yongsan Water Dumping Scandal was one of many anti-US incidents leading up to the 2002 anti-US orgy of hate.

The US government had a few weeks to coordinate a response plan because the accident did not begin to make major headlines and draw large protests until after the conclusion of the World Cup. The USFK leadership had already made numerous apologies, but the US government did not give official apologies until a month after the accident probably because they felt the numerous USFK apologies were sufficient[i]. President George Bush even ended up apologizing for the accident a few months later, but by then it was too late and the perception that America’s apologies being insincere had firmly taken root in Korean society.

In a Stars & Stripes interview of a South Korean man this is what he had say a year after the accident happened, “There is still no apology from the US government.”[ii] A full year after the accident and people in the Korean public still thought the US government had not yet apologized. I have spoken with Koreans that to this day believed that the US government never apologized for the accident. This was all made possible because the US government had incorrectly judged Korean societal attitudes; it should have been apparent that USFK apologies were not going to be sufficient to meet public expectations and vigorous apologies from at least the US ambassador should have immediately been made. The US government has obviously learned from this accident because when a Korean woman was killed in a traffic involving a USFK truck in 2005,[iii] apologies from the US government were quick to come to include from President George Bush himself which helped prevent the accident from having any political consequences.

2. Make Apologies Consistent with the Local Culture
Additionally with the apologies that were made in 2002, which I have no doubt were sincere by all people involved, Korean critics were able to claim they were not sincere because the people making them showed little emotion. US military and government officials are more reserved in regards to showing emotions, where Koreans are very emotional people and they expect sincere apologies to be made emotionally.

As corny as this sounds, if the people making the apologies would have showed more emotions when making the apologies it would have helped to calm the fury because the Korean public would have interpreted it as showing real remorse. I’m not saying the US ambassador or the USFK general need to cry and shave their heads but something showing a little emotion would have been better then delivering robotic apology statements and press releases. The apologies of course would never be accepted by the anti-US groups but most average Koreans would have accepted them as being sincere if they saw the apologies made in the first place which leads to my next point.

3. Directly Engage the Korean Media
Another major lesson that the US government as well as USFK leadership should learn from the accident is how to manage Korean public relations. The US Embassy and USFK published many press releases about the accident that dispelled the Internet rumors and media sensationalism, but these press releases were pretty much limited to the US Embassy website and the Stars & Stripes newspaper. These are all media sources that the average Korean does not read. Even though USFK had plenty of reliable information made available to the public they should have realized that the Korean media was never going to present this information on their own to the Korean public. They had their sensational storyline and were not going to do USFK or the US government any favors. With the appearance that USFK was not challenging the Internet rumors and media slurs directed against them it caused the perception to the Korean public that the rumors and slurs must be true.

To get the USFK side of the story told, both USFK and the US Embassy need to get more websites and spokesmen to be bilingual and integrated into the Korean media. With the campaign in Iraq, US government and military leaders there have made great strides in engaging the Arabic language media while also providing a tremendous amount information on their websites in Arabic and have even opened its own YouTube channel. In Korea the ability to get the American side of issues expressed to the domestic Korean audience is still severely lacking despite having forces stationed in the theatre far longer then US forces have been stationed in Iraq.

While stationed in Korea not once did I see a bilingual Public Affairs Officer (PAO) speak directly and challenge the Korean media on the various Korean news programs televised in the country. Press releases and interviews given in English to news reporters are not adequate to engage the Korean media because press releases are either ignored or quoted out of context and interviews in English are often deliberately mistranslated. The lack of bilingual PAO’s to engage the Korean media directly is a deficiency I continue to see handicapping USFK’s ability to get its side of the story told.

USFK in recent years has done a better job in providing more Korean language content on their websites such as with its Good Neighbor site, but it is still inadequate to penetrate the vibrant South Korean Internet culture. For example the USFK website doesn’t even fully open up in some popular web browsers such as Firefox and doesn’t even have a link to translate the page into Korean unlike the Multi-National Force Iraq website which has a link on its front page to translate the website into Arabic. South Korea has a number of Internet message boards and content sharing communities to include YouTube where many South Koreans rely on to get their news from, but USFK has to date done little to engage this audience. Though there has been some improvement in directly engaging the Korean media, USFK continues to be nearly as deficient in this area as it was back in 2002.

4. Make Decisions Based Off How the Korean Public Would Perceive It
The next lesson learned which I mentioned earlier in my earlier posting is that the decision by USFK Commander General Leon LaPorte to court martial the two soldiers was a tremendous mistake due to senior leadership only thinking about how the court martial would be perceived in their American oriented minds and not how it would be perceived in the audience they were trying to target, the Korea public. The court martial decision was a disaster that validated much of the propaganda of the anti-US groups and reignited the anti-US protests once again after they had some what died down; not to mention the effect the trial was having on the two soldiers being tried for purely political reasons by their command.


Former USFK Commander General Leon LaPorte.

Since then USFK has improved in this regard which was noted on how it handled the 2005 traffic accident that caused the death of a Korean woman. The soldiers involved in that court martial were not court martialled thus preventing anti-US groups from making cover up claims. Any decisions made by senior leaders that target the Korean public need to made not on how someone in the American public would perceive it, but how the Korean public would perceive it.

5. Improving Small Unit Safety
The biggest lesson that should be learned from this accident is that military unit leaders both large and small, need to better appreciate concerns in regards to the safety of the surrounding civilian population. At the time the US military took great care to ensure safe training that protects our servicemembers from harm, but obviously in regards to this accident little thought was put into making sure the training was safe for Korean civilians as well.

It is important to realize for people not stationed in Korea at the time, that it wasn’t just this accident where little thought was put in to the safety of the surrounding population. Many times while I was stationed in Korea during this timeframe “tactical” movements were done with tired soldiers on roads that had heavy Korean vehicle and pedestrian traffic as part of some larger training operation. I even had a senior unit commander tell me there is no such thing as an administrative convoy in Korea, everything is tactical. So it wasn’t uncommon to find your unit participating in an all night training mission and then the next morning with little to no sleep conduct a tactical convoy to another training area for another mission.

The unit involved in the 2002 accident was participating in one of these training operations and had little sleep and time to conduct a proper convoy when the accident happened. Yes the small unit leadership was at fault for the safety aspects that helped lead to the accident, but if proper policies had been set by higher commanders to ensure all convoys traveling on Korean roads had proper sleep and administrative time, then possibly this accident could have been avoided. The strict implementation of such policies should have been quite obvious considering the danger of the narrow country roads in the 2ID area of operations that are filled with heavy Korean vehicle and pedestrian traffic.


Example of a USFK convoy rehearsal.

Since the accident, USFK has implemented draconian safety practices in regards to convoy safety. I once sat through a five hour convoy rehearsal that was briefed to the Assistant Division Commander of the 2nd Infantry Division. That is how serious convoy safety became. Also, no longer are tracked vehicles allowed on civilian roads. All tracked vehicles are now shipped on military flatbed trailers to the different training areas. Also the driver’s training for new drivers in USFK is extremely intense and I personally believe that the 2nd Infantry Division has the strongest driver’s training and traffic safety measures in the entire United States Army now.

Additionally measures have been taken to ensure proper sequencing of training missions to avoid conducting convoys with little to no sleep. Additionally there is always enough administrative time available to conduct proper convoy procedures before traveling on Korean roads. These are all proper policies set by the higher leadership that are now vigorously enforced by small unit leaders. The 2002 accident happened for variety of reasons, but from solely a military perspective this accident could have prevented if the safety polices that exist today had been enforced back then.

The attention to small unit safety I say is the most important lesson learned because the prior lessons in regards to engaging the media and understanding Korean customs and cultures if not corrected will not kill anybody; slacking on small unit safety will. Every time I have ever conducted a convoy since then, I think back to this accident. I continuously brief soldiers about what happened to Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun because today few soldiers have ever heard of this accident unless they were in Korea during this timeframe. This small unit traffic accident ended up having strategic consequences for the US government that still reverberates to this day and should not be forgotten as the years go by as less and less people are familiar with what happened.

Conclusion
Regrettably the 2002 accident took on much political connotations instead of directing energy at improving traffic safety overall in Korea. Despite these political connotations we as military still cannot forget that at the heart of this issue poor safety policies and decisions by members of the US military directly caused two families to be without their daughters today. This is indisputable and a shame we as a US military will have to continue to live with. No civilian families should ever have to lose the lives of their loved ones due to a preventable military traffic accident.

This most important lesson learned is where USFK has made the most sweeping improvements in. Let’s hope that this lesson learned is something that is never forgotten and a lesson that all other military units can learn from to avoid such tragedies from ever happening again.

Note: If you haven’t already make sure to read my prior posting that explains in great detail what happened in regards to the 2002 Armored Vehicle Accident. Also feel free to add any other lessons learned you feel are pertinent to this issue in the comments section.


[i] Lee Chul-jae, “US Ambassador Apologizes for Deaths of Girls in June Accident”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 30 July 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1906700

[ii] Jeremy Kirk, “US Troops and South Koreans Mark Somber Anniversary”, Stars & Stripes, 15 June 2003, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=15437&archive=true

[iii] Seth Robson & Hwang Hae-rym, “Family Says It Forgives 8th Army Driver Who Hit Woman” Stars & Stripes, 19 June 2005, http://www.estripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=29027&archive=true

Monday, June 16, 2008

Anti-US Groups Linked to Beef Protests
» by GI Korea

It is becoming clearer and clearer the usual suspects are behind the anti-US beef protests:

The People’s Association for Measures Against Mad Cow Disease on Wednesday issued an ultimatum against the Lee Myung-bak administration, demanding the scrapping of the Korea-U.S. beef accord and the start of all-out renegotiations of the accord with the U.S. by June 20. “If the government decides to ignore the mandate from the people, who hold the sovereign power in this country, we will not hesitate to launch a campaign to drive President Lee Myung-bak out of office,” it said in a statement. The association has been acting as if it has been leading the candlelight vigils. (…)

A search through the association’s Internet homepage reveals that it was launched on May 6 following a proposal by the People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy and another civic group called the Korea Progressive Coalition. The coalition was created in September of last year after pro-North Korean groups such as Hanchongryun, the Solidarity for the Practice of the South-North Joint Declaration and other civic groups got together. The co-chairperson of the coalition, Oh Jong-ryeol, takes center stage during news conferences or rallies protesting against U.S. beef imports, acting as if he is the head of the People’s Association for Measures Against Mad Cow Disease. A search through newspaper archives reveals that Oh had served as co-chair of a citizens’ movement to close down a U.S. military bombing range in Maehyang-ri in 2001. He co-chaired another citizens’ task force protesting the accidental killings of two Korean schoolgirls by a U.S. armored car in 2002, yet another citizens’ task force seeking to nullify an impeachment motion against former President Roh Moo-hyun in 2004, an anti-APEC movement and a group opposed to the expansion of a U.S. military base in Pyeongtaek in 2005, and another movement opposed to the Korea-U.S. free trade agreement in 2006. He is a professional “co-chairperson.” And it is obvious what types of groups he has co-chaired.

The people working at the association’s briefing room are mostly affiliated with the PSPD or the Korea Progressive Coalition. A PSPD official heads the association’s briefing room and he was the one who stood on the stage during a candlelight vigil on May 25 and shouted “Let’s go to Cheong Wa Dae!” The person who created the song “Article 1 of the Constitution,” a favorite at the candlelight vigils, was arrested during a spy crackdown back in 1992 for creating a song praising the late North Korean leader Kim Il-sung. [Chosun Ilbo]

As you can read about here all these groups have been against Lee Myung-bak even before he took office so it should be no surprise they are the puppet masters pulling the strings behind the US beef protests now.

They are also all anti-American groups as well. For example People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) and Hanchongryun have long been an umbrella groups for the anti-US movement in Korea. The PSPD was a member of the Korean Alliance Against the Korea-U.S. FTA that even had one of their own set himself on fire outside one of the FTA meetings in Seoul long before the US beef issue ever came up.


PSPD involvement in the violent Camp Humphreys protests.

PSPD was also one of the groups against the relocation of USFK forces to Camp Humphreys:

Mr. Kim of the PSPD said, “The Roh Moo-hyun government should look back to its identity. In the past, the government said it would resolve economic polarization, but it pushed talks for a free trade agreement with the U.S. In addition, the government said it would say what it has to say in diplomacy, but it allowed the U.S. forces to move their base to Daechu-ri.”

The PSPD has been one of the leading groups trying to stop the USFK transformation and relocation to Camp Humphreys and even tried to ferment anti-American sentiment when Korean missionaries were taken hostage by the Taliban.

The PSPD in the past has also joined forces with North Korean apologists the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) which two years ago was linked to a North Korean spy ring, to attack the US-ROK alliance:

In the declaration, they demanded that the U.S. government apologize for crimes involving GIs, thoroughly investigate the massacres of Koreans during the Korean War and offer compensation. They also called for an immediate closure of the Koon-ni bombing range in Maehyang-ri, Kyonggi Province and revision of the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) between the U.S. and south Korea.

The 200 figures who signed the declaration included former Deputy Prime Minister Han Wan Sang; Kang Man Gil, professor emeritus at Korea University; Kim Jong Bae, co-leader of the People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) and Dang Byong Ho, chief of the south Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU).

So it should be no surprise that PSPD is now working with the pro-Pyongyang linked KCTU to ferment anti-American sentiment over the beef issue.


Hanchongryun protesters outside Camp Casey.

Hanchongryun is an even clearer cut case of being a pro-North Korean front group. Hanchongryun used to be illegal under the National Security Law due to their financing from North Korea, but since the Korean liberal ruling parties won the presidency the group has been allowed to operate freely again. This doesn’t mean they have given up being sponsored by North Korea considering their leader makes trips to North Korea to receive the group’s marching orders. Here is what another one of the groups leaders, the student body president of Kyunghee University had to say about the group he belongs to:

But when asked about the political opinions that got him into trouble, he sounds more like a North Korean Communist affiliate than a college student in a U.S.-allied country.

“Kim Jong Il is an outstanding leader,” says Yoo. “No other country can stand up to the U.S. Only North Korea can.” (…)

“Kim is just another leader and not a despot or a dictator,” he says. “If he really is a dictator, the North Koreans wouldn’t have tolerated that and overthrown him. They’re not that brainwashed. They must see something in the system that’s right.”

So it should come as no surprise that Hanchongryun has consistently protested the US military presence in South Korea to include even attacking US soldiers.

These groups are clearly anti-US groups with pro-Pyongyang connections that are using the US beef protests to move forward their anti-US agenda. I have been saying this for some time to expect them to eventually shift the focus of the protests from US beef to an anti-USFK issue such as the Camp Humphreys relocation due to their past activities trying to stop the move. The recent hijacking of the memorial to the two girls killed in the 2002 armored vehicle accident is the first sign of these groups true intentions which has nothing to do with the safety of US beef.

During the violent protests in 2006 against the Camp Humphreys expansion, these same groups were unsuccessful in getting the general Korean public to support their cause. What will be most interesting to see is if the beef protests will be enough of a catalyst to get average Koreans to join them in their anti-USFK efforts which right now seems like a toss up at best.

Sunday, June 15, 2008



"Back when I was a child, before life removed all the innocence
My father would lift me high and dance with my mother and me and then
Spin me around 'til I fell asleep
Then up the stairs he would carry me
And I knew for sure I was loved
If I could get another chance, another walk, another dance with him
I'd play a song that would never, ever end
How I'd love, love, love
To dance with my father again
When I and my mother would disagree
To get my way, I would run from her to him
He'd make me laugh just to comfort me
Then finally make me do just what my mama said
Later that night when I was asleep
He left a dollar under my sheet
Never dreamed that he would be gone from me
If I could steal one final glance, one final step, one final dance with him
I'd play a song that would never, ever end
'Cause I'd love, love, love
To dance with my father again
Sometimes I'd listen outside her door
And I'd hear how my mother cried for him
I pray for her even more than me
I pray for her even more than me
I know I'm praying for much too much
But could you send back the only man she loved
I know you don't do it usually
But dear Lord she's dying
To dance with my father again
Every night I fall asleep and this is all I ever dream"

Today is Fathers Day in the USA. For me its a double edge sword. I lost mine a few years ago to cancer and I have no way of contact my 2 children, Claudia and Sean.

What can we as children say about our fathers? A lot of times I see him in me. The heart of kindness, the protection of others, do honest work for honest pay and try and do right by God. Dad I still cry every time Luther Vandross' - Dance With My Father is played. I have no idea if I will ever stop. I still miss you.

So people is your father is still alive, please call him and tell him that you love him. I wish I could.

To Sean and Claudia.

After the divorce I thought that I would be able to see you and to talk to you. I have no idea where you 2 are and you both think that I have forgotten you. When I say my prayers throughout the day, you 2 are always in them.

Claudia, I remember when they put you in my arms and I was so afraid that I was going to drop you. You just fell sound asleep in my arms and I knew that you were my little girl.

Sean when I first saw you, I was scared to death. Something went wrong and I did not know if you were going to make it. I was so worried that week. From what I last heard about you, you are very healthy and love sports.

I miss you 2 both very much and pray for the day that I can hug the both of you 2.

So parents,If you have children, enjoy them, love them and teach them to love and to love the Lord.

Some days I am ok, some days I just duck and cover.

Happy Fathers Day Dad
I am sure that there was a message to the film, The Happening but after seeing the film, darned if I know what the frak it is.

HEAVY SPOILER ALERT REVIEW..........................................................

So the film is telling us that plants will one day see humans as a threat and release chemicals that will make people kill themselves? It will take someone a lot smarter than em to explain this one to me,I just never could grasp that concept.

I have no idea what is going wrong with M. Night Shyamalan. Maybe, he peaked too early. But with this being his 3rd disappointment in a row, one could really ask should he ever direct a film and as a movie going audience, should we give him another chance?

END SPOILER ALERT....................................................................

After I left the theater, I kept thinking, "I saw a good film in there but what a mess of the editing." I had earlier seen a interview of the director, M. Night Shyamalan, being giddy about this being his first "R" rated film. I wonder what in the heck was the "R" for? Somewhere in this film, their is a good movie. I could not find it.

A huge disappointment for all of those involved. What should have been a horror film turns into an evil Al Gore Documentary.

Grade C-

Opened in Korea 13 June 2008

How I saw it. CGV Theater.

Extra scene st the end. No
I have never been that huge of a fan of the "Hulk", so when Ang Lee's Hulk bombed, I was not that surprised. I was hopping that we would never hear from the "Hulk" ever again. That would have been a shame because I like the New Hulk film, The Incredible Hulk.

The film opening credits told you that you were going to see something different. I saw references to Tony Stark, SHIELD, Nick Furry and basically a relaunch of the Hulk franchise, while ignoring the 2003 film. If you notice, they showed a clip of Bill Bixby, (as a nice little nod to the man who portrayed Bruce Banner in the 70's TV show). I could not believe that they were tying the Marvel Universe together in the film. I also liked the fact the they used Stan Lee (the creator of the comic book), Lou Ferrigno (The TV Hulk) and Paul Soles (who voiced Banner in the 1966 The Marvel Superheroes cartoon) and a nice little tip towards "Captain America"

The film ultimately works as a love story between Banner and Betsy Ross. She loved David Banner and when he became the Hulk. She lost the man that she loved. When he returns, you can see her pain and when he becomes, Hulk, she is the only one who can calm him down. She loves the man and can calm the monster.

The film has it usual villains, General Thaddeus E. "Thunderbolt" Ross and Abomination trying to work together to destroy the "Hulk".What I also liked that the film was setting up Samuel Sterns as The Leader to be a future villain.

There is definitely an "Oh Frack" moment at the end of this film and it really shows that maybe, Marvel will try and finally get it right.

If you liked the first film, then you will not like this one. If the reverse is true, then you will probably like this one. Please see it when you can.

Grade A.

Betty Ross: [Betty and Bruce need to get across own in New York City] The subway is probably quickest.
Bruce Banner: Me in a metal tube with hundreds of people in the most aggressive city in the world?
Betty Ross: Right. Let's get a cab.

Opened in South Korea on 12 Jun 2008

How I saw it. Primus DLP Screen.

Extra scene at the end. No
How is IT Transforming Korea


The dark side of Internet groupthink The seventh in a ten part series By Matthew Weigand and Chun Go-eun



The Internet has enabled a lot of social changes - events that were not possible twenty years ago happen all the time now. It is difficult to measure and catalogue all of the myriad changes this medium for instantaneous communication has wrought, but people try - on the Internet, of course. Korea has been no exception, and some say is in fact affected more than other countries. The "flash mob" is one of the new kinds of Internet-organized phenomena. As defined by Wikipedia, a flash mob is a large group of people who assemble suddenly at a specific place, perform an unusual action for a brief time, and then quickly disperse. They are a combination of art performance, prank, and social experiment.

The first flash mob was organized in 2003, and involved strangers, who were organized on the Internet, gathering together to pretend that they were a hippie commune shopping for an expensive rug at an upscale rug store. The event was over in 15 minutes, and was mildly amusing. However, in Korea, the internetorganized mob has gone to the next level. This reporter first encountered the new power of the Internet when speaking to the children of a Korean friend. When asked why they looked so sad, the children looked like they were almost going to cry. They said their president, Lee Myung-bak, had doomed the entire Korean people. When asked for details, the two children, approximately 12 years of age, detailed that their president was going to import 30-month old American beef, which was at high risk of carrying mad cow disease.

This diseased beef would be sold in supermarkets and eaten by innocent Koreans such as themselves, who would then get Creutzfeldt- Jakob's Disease (CJD). These Koreans would get it because they had a genetic susceptibility to the disease due to their unique genetic heredity. It would be contagious, pass through the population, and everyone would eventually die from it. The entire Korean race was going to die. Evil American beef exporters did not care, President Lee Myung-bak did not care, and shifty Korean beef importers could not be trusted to correctly label their beef. Or, actually, they could be trusted to mislabel cheap American beef as Korean or Australian to make a profit. Additionally, the child emphasized, Americans did not even eat 30 month old beef, so Koreans were going to die by eating America's rejected meat.

Then they explained that there was no cure for Mad Cow Disease, it was certain death after being contracted, and the death was painful. Being a little stunned by hearing the potent mix of current event fact and malicious fiction from these students, I asked where they had got all this information from. From the Internet, of course, they said. From Daum, a popular Korean Internet search engine and portal site. When asked if they believed it, they said, "Of course, it was on the Internet." They were asked if their friends had also heard about that news, and they nodded emphatically. They also said that their friends told of something more sinister they had read on the Internet, which was that Korea was doomed to be destroyed according to an ancient prophecy.

They heard that when Namdaemun, the former south gate of Seoul during the Joseon Dynasty, was built, a prophecy was written on the wooden beams of the gate. This prophecy stated that nothing bad would happen to Korea as long as Namdaemun was protected. The Internet said Namdaemun had been slightly damaged shortly before Japan annexed Korea in 1905, and that was a terrible time for Koreans. Now, the gate had burned down entirely, and they were all going to die from Mad Cow. When questioned more closely, these children said that they did not really believe that it sounded fake. They were slightly skeptical of ancient prophecies preaching doom, but were convinced that Mad Cow Disease would take them all anyway. In the days following, there were a few articles from major newspapers refuting several claims of the rumor.

The claim that US beef was still at risk for carrying Mad Cow Disease was challenged by saying that only three cases of Mad Cow Disease were ever reported in the US, and not in cattle bred for consumption. There was a little emphasis put onto the tenuous link between human CJV and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the cow variant of the disease. It was mentioned that nobody had ever died from Mad Cow Disease in the United States. And, finally, the scientific paper which was used to say that Koreans had a genetic weakness for mad cow disease was found to only be speaking about the susceptibility of Korean people to the spontaneous CJV variant, not the BSE-induced variant. In any other place, this would have been the end of a minor food scare.

However, in Korea, things instead took a surprising turn into protests and violence. On May 2nd, 10,000 Korean protesters showed up in the center of Seoul to hold a candlelight vigil in opposition to resuming US beef imports. An online petition calling for the impeachment of the Korean President had reached 600,000 signatures by that time. The entire month of May was full of US beef import controversy. Korean university, high school, and middle school students were the majority involved in the protests, which may mark this as the comingof- age event for an entire new generation of Korean protestors. One bombastic student got up onto a stage at a protest in downtown Seoul, the capital of democratic South Korea, and said "Has the United States taken everything from us? It seems North Korea's Kim Jong-il is stronger. Wouldn't it be better to stand up to the United States like North Korea? 'Doing it our own way.' Doesn't that sound nice?"

The Internet has remained the focal point for most of the reactionary responses to US beef imports. In the second week of May several user-created videos on Korean video sites featured photos of President Lee Myung-bak with President George Bush and various shots of protestors, interspersed with a kung fu fight scene between a cow and a martial arts expert from the 2002 movie "Kung Pow: Enter the Fist". Other photo montages featuring inspiring music and shots from candlelight protests spread around the Korean Internet, keeping the protest feelings alive and well in the minds of citizens. Reports from major news sites cited a press conference in Los Angeles around the middle of May where Korean immigrant community leaders tried to assure South Korean journalists that US beef was among the safest in the world and fears about Mad Cow Disease were baseless. Korean internet users, already with the reputation for being a little over the top, and with the nickname 'netizens' to give them coherency, blasted the report in online discussion groups and blogs, accusing the Korean immigrants of betraying their mother country and being a lapdog of the American government.

Editorials in major newspapers such as the Chosun Ilbo called for reason and rationality, and accused various people of basically trying to set fire to the country with sensationalistic and inaccurate news reports. However, their traditional media voice was drowned out by online photos of police arresting crying middle school girls who were taking part in the increasingly frequent candlelight vigil protests. In fact, on May 27th, 211 people were arrested for participating in the protests, according to leading Internet news site, news.naver.com. One girl was reported on the site as screaming "I want to go home", while being hauled away in a police van. This was a tragic and heart-wrenching tale on the Internet. The next day, the Seoul Metro Police's cybercrimes division identified a 32 year old Korean-American named Jang involved in an online crime - posting a fake video on the Internet. Jang, who has lived in the United States since 1992, posted a video showing riot police using water cannons, and close up shots of an infamous "White Skull Unit" of riot police attacking anti-US beef protestors in Gwanghwamun.

The video included a call for protestors to hit the streets against US beef. The fact that the police were wearing winter coats was possibly ignored by most viewers, who took it as accurate. Since Jang has been living outside of the Seoul Metro Police's cybercrimes division's remit, it is unlikely he could be arrested and tried for defamation, with which he is charged. Despite this public protest, South Korea's agriculture minister passed the US beef agreement on May 29th. This did nothing to stop the candlelight vigil protests, however. In fact, protestors began to use the Internet in another way, to ridicule police efforts to stop them. More photo montages were posted on the Internet referring to a "chicken cage car tour." The white riot police busses with barred windows that authorities have been using to arrest protesting citizens are called "dakjangcha" in Korean, which literally means chicken cage cars. Citizens, spurred on by anonymous Internet posts, began to turn themselves into the police to get the chicken cage car tour. They would then take photos of themselves on the bus with their mobile phones and upload them as a badge of honor onto web sites.

There have been accusations by the right-wing conservative government that left-wing losers in the recent election have been stirring up the people. However, ring leaders or protest organizers have yet to be found. Instead, most participants say that the protest formation is spontaneous and leaderless, with advertisements and requests for volunteers going up on popular portal sites like Daum and Naver. Protest crowds are also becoming more organized, with tough, militarylooking citizens forming a buffer between police and protestors. Volunteer medical workers are also organizing themselves and seeing over protest crowds. The protests also include a wider range of participation, with children as young as eight and grandparents as old as eighty being reported there. The flash mobs are growing, and becoming more intelligent. The tone of the protests is changing now, after one month. Protestors are becoming bolder, with a group of 20,000 marching up the road to Cheong Wa Dae, the official residence of Korean President Lee Myung-bak on Saturday night. They were stopped with water cannons after vandalizing and passing riot police busses set up as a barrier.

Images of bleeding protestors and police using water cannons against aged protestors have quickly appeared on Daum's Agora Web site. The protestors are now saying that US beef is no longer the only issue. Some say that the indifference of Lee Myung-bak, who was elected in the largest landslide in Korean democratic history just three months ago, is the larger issue now. There are rumors that the President will let go some of his cabinet as a sacrifice in an attempt to appease the flash mobs. At the time of writing, it is not sure what the outcome will be, but what is sure is that the Internet, as a connecting and communicating force beyond any other, has enabled the quick and efficient organization and sustainability of this month-long protest. And perhaps only the Internet can put it to rest.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Memory of Shim Mi-son & Shin Hyo-sun Hijacked By Anti-US Beef Protesters
» by GI Korea

This should pretty much lay to rest any claims that the anti-US beef protests are not anti-American:

It appears that on June 13th, the sixth anniversary of the deaths of Shin Hyo-sun and Shim Mi-seon, killed after being struck by a US military armored personnel carrier, will become the main focus of the candlelight vigils which have been going on for over one month.

On the 12th the “Citizens’ Committee on Mad Cow Disease” announced that the 37th candlelight vigil to be held in front of Seoul City Hall on the 13th against the importation of US beef would incorporate a memorial ceremony for Hyo-sun and Mi-seon.

The sixth anniversary of Hyo-sun and Mi-seon’s deaths will easily excite anti-American sentiment among the citizenry, and the Committee will, on the 13th and 14th, intensify its calls for banning the import of US beef. [Korea Beat]

Read the rest over at Korea Beat but this just confirms my prior statements that the forces behind the US beef protests would next move to use their new found political power to go after USFK. I do have to say it is absolutely disgusting what these groups are doing once again demagouging and hijacking the memories of Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun for their own partisan political purposes. Then again these are the same people that would regularly hold up signs showing the dead girls bodies at their anti-US protests against the wishes of their families.

Once again these anti-US groups could care less about what the families of these two girls think and are ignoring their requests to not link the US beef issue to the memory of their daughters. These people have no shame, but considering their past actions it is not surprising.

___________________________________________________________________

Required reading, and I never use that term lightly.



Y'all need to make some time and read GI Korea's post "GI Myths: The 2002 Armored Vehicle Accident." He recaps in great detail the events surrounding the deaths of two middle school girls six years ago, and the intense, intense outpouring of anti-Americanism across the entire nation. The article, in our own time of nationwide anti-beef protests and rampant yellow journalism, provides an important reminder of how hateful and how ugly our friends and neighbors can be at the slightest provocation, and is something to keep in mind the next time you hear about Korea's desire to embrace foreigners or its love affair with English. It's exactly why I don't feel at all comfortable around large numbers of angry Koreans, such as we find at the beef protests going on today. Then, after you've read GI Korea's report, go over and read the Metropolitician's take, as well as the vast compilation of material on USinKorea.org's page on the incident and on other anti-American orgies of hate, to appropriate his term.


One of many massive anti-American rallies, this one 50,000-strong.

When I brought up this incident and its aftermath in one of my teachers' workshops---as I was making the connection between Mad Bull Shit and total indifference toward terrible traffic safety---I got the familiar lines "the US never really apologized," "people were mourning the girls," and "the US was arrogant." They were completely ignorant, though, of the basic facts surrounding the actual accident and of the particulars of the aftermath of hate. "Some Koreans" participated, they said. Well, after kidnappings, stabbings, numerous assaults and innumerable cases of harassment, intimidation, and discrimination, is it too much for us to demand an apology? I'll tell you what, and yes I'm being completely serious, that's something we as a community ought to be fighting for.

While most of you who read this site are bloggers yourselves and will most likely have read GI Korea's page well before you got to mine, I'd encourage the rest of you---especially my new visitors in Jeollanam-do---to pass these reports along to friends, family, and coworkers, in order to put both these latest protests and ourselves as foreigners into some context here.


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So Beef Protest Not Anti-American

Today is the sixth anniversary of the tragic incident in which two Korean middle school students were struck and killed by a US Army vehicle while walking to a birthday party. The aftermath of that incident looked similar to what you see right now over US beef — massive protests and candlelight vigils, anti-American signs and sloganeering, calls for the president to be replaced (which he was, as Roh Moo-hyun was swept into office).

So organizers of the current round of candlelight vigils are going to incorporate this anniversary into their protests. I personally think that this should put to bed the idea that anti-Americanism is not an animating force for protestors whose real target is Lee Myung-bak — I mean, if that were so, why did people until beef was coming to start expressing their discontent with his governing style?

It appears that on June 13th, the sixth anniversary of the deaths of Shin Hyo-sun and Shim Mi-seon, killed after being struck by a US military armored personnel carrier, will become the main focus of the candlelight vigils which have been going on for over one month.

On the 12th the “Citizens’ Committee on Mad Cow Disease” (광우병 국민대책회의) announced that the 37th candlelight vigil to be held in front of Seoul City Hall on the 13th against the importation of US beef would incorporate a memorial ceremony for Hyo-sun and Mi-seon.

The sixth anniversary of Hyo-sun and Mi-seon’s deaths will easily excite anti-American sentiment among the citizenry, and the Committee will, on the 13th and 14th, intensify its calls for banning the import of US beef.

But with the candlelight vigils having started on May 2nd, over 40 days ago, and with their scope greatly increased because of the 21st anniversary of the June 10th democracy movement, citizens with “vigil fatigue” are not unlikely to start staying home.

Accordingly, some are calling for plans for the future, after the beef situation is resolved, to be drawn up depending on how many come to the candlelight vigils on the 13th, the day of the anniversary, and on the 14th, the day of the funeral for Mr. Lee Byeong-ryeol, who set himself on fire to call for the ouster of the current government.

If the same large number of people attend the vigils on the 13th and 14th as did last weekend, there is a strong probability that the vigils will extend past June and through July, the time of US President George Bush’s planned visit to Korea, but if fewer people come then the spirit of the protests will weaken and drain away.

If the government fails to begin renegotiations of the beef deal by next Friday, the 20th, the Committee says it will join directly with the movement for the ouster or resignation of the government.

The government has announced that it is seeking further negotiations with the US government and is considering limiting the size of protests for the reorganization of the President’s cabinet.

Update: The Chosun Ilbo reports that the father of Hyo-sun and the grandmother of Mi-seon are against the beef issue being connected to their families. Essentially they both say, “thanks for remembering, but please knock it off.”

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South Korean Internet catches "mad cow madness"

By Jon Herskovitz and Rhee So-eui - Analysis

SEOUL (Reuters) - Angry South Korean teenagers, Internet-savvy and armed with gadget-filled mobile phones, have helped turn a new conservative president's triumph into crisis and possibly changed the way the country does politics.

President Lee Myung-bak, hardly in office three months, has been caught badly off-guard by the fury swirling in the world's most wired country, which began with a flurry of gripes about importing "dangerous" U.S. beef and turned into a blizzard of complaints against his brief rule.

"Maybe, we have been experimenting with a new type of politics without even knowing it," said sociology professor Chun Sang-chin, of Sogang University.

"The Internet has appeared to many people as the only platform to achieve democracy," he said.

When Lee won the presidency in December, it was by the biggest margin in a democratic South Korean leadership election.

By the time the anger over beef had mushroomed into the biggest street protests the capital has seen in 20 years, the former construction company boss had became the most unpopular president at the start of their term that the country has seen. His approval rating now is barely scraping 20 percent.

Social and political commentators said allegations that an April deal to import more U.S. beef put society at risk of mad cow disease tore through the Internet and on SMS messages so fast that they became fact before the government or mainstream media had a chance to weigh in.

One early claim, which appeared to win wide credibility in one of the world's most educated societies, was that the homogeneous Korean race had a gene which made it particularly susceptible to the disease.

It was based on the paper of a South Korean scientist who later said his thesis was blown out of proportion.

DIAPER RISK

By the time his rebuttal was published in the largest daily, the debate on the Internet had shifted to new fears, such as how easily Korean babies might catch bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) from diapers made with material from U.S. cattle.

Students, already suspicious of Lee's planned education reforms, were sending each other messages warning of a secret deal to import the supposedly diseased U.S. beef for their school lunches.

"Mad cow madness" wrote one leading daily, the JoongAng Ilbo, of the fear-mongering. But a growing number of Koreans paid little heed.

"People are unhappy with the established media's coverage and have created their own," said Lee Jong-ho, a producer for OhmyTV, part of the OhmyNews and one of several Internet news sites publishing articles, opinion pieces and multimedia material from "citizen journalists".

As the technology has evolved, so has the nature of the Internet debate.

"The Internet has generated what can be called 'lifestyle politics'. These are soft, everyday issues that can quickly become major political topics," said Kang Won-taek, a political science professor at Soongsil University.

One of the most popular sounding boards for the debate over Lee Myung-bak's policies has been the Agora section of leading portal DAUM (http://agora.media.daum.net/ ).

Normally with up to around 40 million pages views a day, the number exploded during the height of this month's protests to more than 200 million a day across a wide range of age groups.

The use of the Internet has given a new impetus to South Korea's long tradition of mass rallies.

Now, the protesters discuss the best sort of video equipment to use -- preferably resistant to hard bumps and bursts from police water canons -- and quickly post video clips and photos while detailing their experiences on blogs.

Observers said the beef debate has seen the merger of online and offline politics.

Protesters shout slogans and also shoot pictures and videos on their top-end mobile phones that are quickly sent out on the Internet. They send SMS messages to friends to meet up at protests and warn them when the police are starting to arrest those who are acting up.

One of the more popular refrains from those on the Internet is how best to use newspapers.

"Bring a copy of one of the big dailies with you to the rally," one comment read. "You can sit on it to keep your pants clean."

(Additional reporting by Jack Kim and Park Ju-min; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Alex Richardson)

Friday, June 13, 2008

GI Myths: The 2002 Armored Vehicle Accident
» by GI Korea

I AM REPRINTING THE ARTICLE IN ITS ENTIRETY. WHAT ELSE THAT CAN BE ADDED TO THE STORY IS THAT BOTH OF THE GIRLS FAMILIES ARE ANGRY THAT THE LEFT STILL USES THEIR DEATHS AS A RALLYING CRY.

ONCE A YEAR US SOLDIERS STILL COME TO ONE OF THE GIRLS PARENTS PLACE AND HELP WITH THE RICE FARM. I HAVE YET TO SEE ANY PHOTOS OF ANY KOREAN NGO HELPING THE FAMILY.

ONCE AGAIN, A STORY PRODUCED THAT WAS A LIE AND A MYTH THAT CONTINUES EVEN IN 2008.

PLEASE LET THESE YOUNG LADIES REST IN PEACE.

Prelude to Tragedy
On the morning of June 13th, 2002 it was just another hard day of training for the soldiers of Bravo Company, 44th Engineer Battalion, who were part of the US military’s premier combat unit in Korea, the Second Infantry Division (2ID). The 2ID is the lone US combat division stationed on the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) and is responsible for maintaining a credible combat deterrent to any possible North Korean aggression. A major part of maintaining a credible combat deterrent is to make sure soldiers are properly trained in both individual and collective soldier skills and that they have confidence in the equipment they use. In order to develop these skills and confidence much of a soldiers’ time while stationed in Korea is comprised of field training exercises that can last for weeks at a time.

The soldiers of Bravo Company were participating in one of the routinely scheduled brigade level exercise that are conducted to evaluate a unit’s combat readiness that is so critical to ensuring a credible combat deterrent is being kept by the Second Infantry Division. Bravo Company had been in the field for two weeks conducting continuous operations and that morning the engineers were under orders to travel to the Twin Bridges Training Area (TBTA) to link up with a mechanized infantry unit in order to participate in an expected training event there. Twin Bridges is one of the most heavily used training areas in the Second Infantry Division and most soldiers in the division are quite familiar with it. The engineers that morning prepared their equipment and began their move down Highway 56 to the training area.


Google Earth image of convoy route to Twin Bridges from accident site.

Much like the soldiers of Bravo Company, Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun, both 13 year-old middle school students, were also beginning a typical day. They had both agreed to meet up and walk to a nearby restaurant in order to attend a friend’s birthday party being held there. As the girls were walking down the road and the engineers moved west down Highway 56, none of them had any idea that the events of this day would become one of the defining moments of the US-ROK alliance that is still causing ripple effects to this day[i].

Tragedy Strikes


Highway 56, like most of the highways in the 2ID area of operations north of Seoul, is a very narrow road with many blind corners and no shoulders. This highway is heavily used by both the American and Korean militaries to access training areas located adjacent to the highway. Bravo Company and other units had been travelling down the road all week due to the major training exercise. The engineers’ were organized themselves in a convoy with the company commander CPT Mason in a HMMWV (High Mobility Multi-Wheeled Vehicle) leading the convoy, followed by a M113 tracked vehicle and then the five largest vehicles in the convoy, M60A1 AVLB (Armored Vehicle Launched Bridge) who were followed by another HMMWV bringing up the rear of the convoy.


The AVLB driver is on the left side of the vehicle. Notice the blind spot caused by the bridge laying aparatus.

All was fine until about 20 minutes into the movement when the convoy reached a particularly narrow portion of the highway that featured a turn that sloped up a hill. As the Bravo Company convoy travelled up the hill another convoy of M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles was moving towards the Bravo Company convoy from the other direction. The engineers would find out later that this convoy of Bradleys were in fact the very ones they were travelling to meet up with. The appearance of this convoy would ultimately lead to a perfect storm of events that would that end with deadly consequences.

The lead HMMWV with CPT Mason in it saw the Bradleys coming down the opposite lane of the highway as well as seeing two young Korean girls walking along the white line on the shoulder of the road. The actions of CPT Mason at this critical moment would come under much scrutiny later on. The commander of the M113, Staff Sergeant (SSG) Murray, was directly behind Mason’s HMMWV and he saw the on coming convoy and the two girls as well. He immediately turned around and signalled to the AVLB behind him with his arms crossed to warn the vehicle commander of the impending danger.


Picture of the accident site. Notice how the road has no shoulder for pedestrians.

The driver of the AVLB Sergeant (SGT) Mark Walker saw the Bradleys coming down the left side of the road, but could not see the two girls walking on the right side of the road due to the shape and design of the AVLB that blocked the driver’s vision to his right. The commander of the AVLB, SGT Fernando Nino who was seated above Walker was overall responsible for directing the movement of the vehicle. He did see someone with a red shirt walking along the side of the road and tried to radio to SGT Walker to stop the vehicle. Due to the noise made by a large tracked vehicle like an AVLB, the vehicle’s driver and commander can only communicate through radio head-sets that are wired to each other in the vehicle. When SGT Nino tried to communicate his warning to Walker, there was a failure with the internal radio and Walker could not hear Nino’s warning because of cross talk on the radio[ii].


Example communications microphone system used by US military.

The AVLB has a width of 3.67 meters and the right lane of the highway they were traveling on was 3.7 meters wide. Walker moved the AVLB slightly to the right in order to give his AVLB more room between him and the on coming convoy of Bradleys. This simple reaction would become something that both men in the AVLB and everybody involved in the convoy that day would regret for the rest of their lives.

Reacting to Tragedy
SSG Murray sitting on top of the M113 in front of the AVLB was unfortunate enough to have a perfect view of the tragedy that had unfolded. As Walker maneuvered the AVLB to the right hand shoulder of the road he had inadvertently struck and ran over Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun who had very nearly made it to the restaurant to attend their friend’s birthday party when tragedy struck. Murray told his driver Specialist (SPC) Joshua Ray to immediately radio CPT Mason in the lead HMMWV. CPT Mason did not respond and SPC Ray increased the speed of the M113 in order to stop the lead HMMWV and report what happened to CPT Mason.

CPT Mason’s HMMWV and SSG Murray’s M113 pulled over in the parking lot of a near by restaurant. A tearful Murray told Mason what he had saw happen. Ray wanted to rush to the scene with a first aid kit, but Murray told him it was no use, he knew nothing could be done to aid the two girls.


School pictures of Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun.

As ambulances and local police arrived on the scene the busy highway became snarled with traffic and the accompanying sounds of angry motorists thinking that the road was blocked by yet another broken down army vehicle, which is not a uncommon sight in the 2ID area, instead of being the scene of a great tragedy that it was.

As the scene continued to grow a woman from the restaurant came out to see what the commotion was all about. When she found out what was happening she was shocked because her daughter had been waiting for two of her friends to come to her birthday party at the restaurant. She went back into the restaurant and the father of one of the girls then rushed out to the scene of the accident. He like everyone else at the scene was devastated by what had happened. There was no Americans or Koreans that day, just people saddened and at a loss of words at the tragedy that unfolded. It is too bad that such a unity in grief and sorrow would not last.

The Initial US Military Response
The day after the tragedy the commander of the Eighth United States Army at the time General Daniel Zanini, which is the higher headquarters for the Second Infantry Division, immediately apologized the day of the incident and vowed to conduct a thorough investigation in conjunction with Korean authorities of what happened[iii]. In the coming days the families of the two victims would be visited by the commander of the 2ID, Major General Russel Honore.


Former 2ID commander General Honore

General Honore would a few years later become more famously known for being the tough, talking General that commanded the military relief operation in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Long before his hurricane fame, General Honore was dealing with a tragedy in Korea that may not have done the physical destruction of a Hurricane Katrina, but threatened to cause far more political destruction than even the fall out after the botched hurricane response.

General Honore apologized, accepted full responsibility for the accident, and offered the families an initial solation payment of one million won (about US $1,000) which is a normal Korean custom in response to such an accident. General Honore also vowed that an agreement would be reached according to Korean law to determine the overall sum of compensation payment to be given to the family since clearly 2ID was at fault for the accident.


2ID soldiers attend candle light vigil in memory of Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun.

Other efforts organized by 2ID in the wake of the accident, was a candle light vigil by the soldiers to express the grief of the division over the accident that was also used as a charity event to raise money for the victim’s families. The soldiers raised $22,000 from this effort that went to the families. Future fundraising drives would total another $30,000 that would be used to build a memorial in memory of the lives of the two girls[iv]. To this day I have never met a Korean yet that knows about these fundraising efforts immediately after the accident by the soldiers of the 2nd Infantry Division.

Korean NGO’s Mobilize
For years Korean non-governmental organizations (NGO’s) have been chipping away at the fabric of the US-ROK alliance by finding issues to demagogue and then using effective media coverage to influence public perceptions about USFK. Many of the leaders of these groups were from the pro-Democracy movement of the 1980’s and many of them have spent time in South Korean jails at various times. These leaders blamed the US for the country’s tacit support of various military dictators that ruled the country in the past. It was illegal in South Korea to openly protest against the United States thus these pro-Democracy activists used the concept of creating NGO’s in order to mask their true anti-US intentions. A perfect example of this is a group named Green Korea, which was formed to advocate for environmental protection in Korea. However, the group very rarely advocates for any environmental causes outside of protesting US military camps for alleged environmental abuses.


Koreans protest outside US military base. Involving children is a common protest tactic.

These groups had been looking for a cause that they could rally the majority of the Korean general public around for years. The causes they had advocated before were effective to a degree but none of them truly mobilized the general public against USFK. This all changed on June 13, 2002. These anti-US groups could not have asked for a better issue to demagogue than the accident on Highway 56. Just days after the accident the anti-US groups were protesting outside of US military installations and demanding that the soldiers involved in the accident be tried in Korean courts.

On June 27, 2002 the anti-US activist groups waged a medium size protest of an estimated 200 people outside the Second Infantry Division headquarters at Camp Red Cloud in the city of Uijongbu. The protesters launched a well-planned assault on the camp in the hopes of creating effective propaganda images of US soldiers beating Korean civilians.

The protest organizers had set up a tent along the camp’s fence line that was supposed to serve as a place for people to sign a petition. However, the tent’s real purpose was to serve as cover for a group of activists who were at the back of the tent cutting a hole in the fence line. Once the hole was cut a pre-selected group of activists flooded through the hole and into Camp Red Cloud. The students marched through the main street of the camp chanting anti-US slogans and holding banners. They marched to the front gate where they confronted the US force protection guards there manning the gate. As the guards confronted the protesters to remove them from the camp the protesters chained themselves together to make the mass of protesters harder to move.

Additionally many of the protesters that had infiltrated into the camp were women. The anti-US group organizers had hoped to capture film of US soldiers striking over reacting and striking the protesters to remove them from the camp. The groups had cameramen positioned on rooftops of high apartments overlooking the camp and with bird’s eye views of the front gate. If any of these cameramen could get footage of a US soldier striking one of these protesters, preferably a female they would have won a massive propaganda victory for their efforts.


Korean protesters through objects over the CRC fence in June 2002.

To further provoke the Camp Red Cloud guards a second group of protesters infiltrated along the heavily forested western fence line of the camp and cut another hole to enter the camp through. Now the camp’s guards faced infiltrators on two fronts. US soldiers rushed to apprehend the protesters and seal the hole in the fence line. It is at this hole that the protest turned particularly violent.

The US soldiers who responded to the hole in the western fence line used shields and baton to stop the flow of protesters into the camp. As they sealed the hole with their shields the protesters continued to try and push themselves through the shields. As they did this, another group of protesters threw rocks and chunks of concrete over the fence at the US soldiers in order to get them to raise their shields to protect themselves thus exposing their bodies to attack from the mob trying to get through the fence. Due to this violent stand off on the western fence line, nine US soldiers had to be hospitalized for serious injuries after the protest.

With the help of the Korean National Police the US force protection personnel were able to remove all the protesters from the camp without the anti-US groups winning a large propaganda victory. However, this didn’t stop the Korean media from sympathizing and sensationalizing what happened at Camp Red Cloud that day.

The Korea Times newspaper on June 27th reported:

“Two reporters affiliated with an Internet news firm have been under arrest since Wednesday evening on charges of trespassing on territory occupied by US military facilities, local police in Uijongbu said yesterday. Police officers are also examining the claims by some witnesses that the two reporters were beaten with clubs and dragged in chains as they were being taken into US military police custody.”

The “reporters” in question are in fact simply administrators of anti-US websites who helped cut down the fences and infiltrated into the camp. Notice how the Korea Times makes no mention that the protesters in fact chained themselves and instead leaves the reader to believe the US military chained and beat the people including these “reporters” who infiltrated into the camp. Unsurprisingly absent from the Korean media reporting of the Camp Red Cloud protest was that nine US soldiers had to be treated in a hospital due to injuries sustained from the anti-US protesters throwing concrete blocks at them.


US soldier injured by Korean protesters is evacuated.

The absurdity of these claims reached a crescendo when on July 8th the Korean Human Right’s Commission demanded to interrogate the US military policemen who arrested the protesters for breaking into the camp. When USFK would not turn over the military policemen the Human Rights Commission fined USFK.

However, overall these groups at the time were receiving very little media and public attention in the days after the accident because Korea was co-hosting the 2002 World Cup with Japan. The World Cup had the full attention of the Korean media and public due to the fact that the Korean team was in the midst of a stunning winning streak that ended in the World Cup semi-finals. The Korean soccer team’s amazing performance had brought nationalism in the country to an all time high that may never be surpassed. The anti-US groups may have failed to draw attention to their cause in June, but by July these groups were well prepared to capitalize on this rise in nationalism that would ultimately change the course of US-ROK relations forever.

Influence of the New Internet Media
In July the anti-US groups began to launch larger and more violent protests against USFK. The most heated protests were outside the two main camps of the Second Infantry Division, the largest installation, Camp Casey in Dongducheon and the division headquarters on Camp Red Cloud in Uijongbu.

In July, the anti-US groups began to launch an effective propaganda campaign on college campuses across the nation in order to swell their ranks during planned protests that month. They were able to do this through not only the common means of word of mouth and flyers, but through the use of internet message boards and text messaging as well. Korea is considered the world’s “most wired” country and internet cafes filled with youths spending hours at a time on the internet can be found in even the smallest towns. Nearly every South Korean walks around with cell phone, even children as young as seven years old can be seen walking and talking on a cell phone. Harnessing modern technology to spread the NGOs’ anti-US message would be easy the part, but creating a message that would mobilize the masses would prove to be the hard part.


Wanted posters distributed for capture of “US killers” involved in the accident.

Simply telling the truth about what happened on that road side that fateful June morning along Highway 56 would not be enough to cause the general public to join the anti-US groups’ cause to expel USFK from Korea. Instead of the truth to mobilize the masses, the NGOs had to create a perception, and the perception they chose to create was one of a great injustice against the Korean people that everyone could identify with. The NGOs launched a propaganda campaign centered around creating an image of evil, non-apologetic American GI’s mercilessly running over two angelic school girls on their way to a birthday party and getting away with it. This image is so powerful because Koreans love their children just like any culture, but it was also equating the US military with the Japanese Imperial Army that colonized the Korean peninsula prior to the country’s liberation after World War II. Due to this sometime extremely brutal colonial period, many Koreans today still hold a very bitter grudge against the Japanese. The fact that the Eighth United States Army headquarters is based out of Yongsan Garrison in Seoul, which used to be the headquarters of the old Imperial Japanese military only helped to feed this perception. It would be an easy leap of logic for someone in Korea to conclude that the Japanese had disrespected and brutalized Korea than and the US military is doing it now.

Additionally Korea is a homogeneous society that instinctively groups together against any slight made against the country by foreigners. A perfect example of this is when American late night comedian Jay Leno made a joke about how Koreans like to eat dogs. This simple joke was taken by many in Korea to be a racist attack against the nation by America and the fall out from this joke lasted for weeks with demands for apologies from the comedian[v]. The NGOs knew the attitudes of the general Korean public very well and they had a strategy to take advantage of the attitudes of their Korean audience. They had already decided on a perception they wanted to create about the accident and how they were going to spread it; the only thing they needed to do was figure out how to present this message so it seemed plausible to the general public.

The NGOs decided by spreading simple disinformation through the Internet about what happened would be the most plausible way to implement their strategy. Stories on internet message boards spread about how the American soldiers had intentionally ran over the two girls[vi]. The most famous story that made its way around all the Korean internet message boards was how the US soldiers in the convoy that day were laughing at the fact that they had ran over the two girls. The laughing so angered KATUSA (Korean Augmentee to the US Army) soldiers serving with the unit that they started a fight with the laughing soldiers. This story is not supported by any of the witnesses that were at the scene that day and additionally no one can produce the KATUSA soldiers that were allegedly involved in the fight. Despite the lack of evidence to support the claim that KATUSA soldiers fought with laughing GIs that day, it is still a common belief among many Koreans that this story is in fact true[vii].

As the misinformation spread, almost over night hundreds of websites dedicated to Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun were set up by Koreans who felt legitimate grief over what happened and demanded justice against the evil, unapologetic GIs who they felt had murdered these two girls.

Response of Major Korean Media Outlets
The initial response of the major Korean news outlets after the accident, had at first been marginal with newspapers publishing short articles about what happened and was largely ignored by the major television broadcasters[viii]. However, by July the major media could join the anti-US feeding frenzy that was already raging on-line because the thousands of foreign visitors and media representatives to Korea who had attended the World Cup had already departed. With the world’s attention away from Korea the major media outlets were poised to take advantage of this tragedy just like the on-line media had in the weeks right after the accident.

One of the common themes in the media was that even though the US military apologized for the accident, the apology was not “sincere”[ix]. After the accident every commanding US general in USFK issued an apology after the accident happened, the US Ambassador apologized[x], an initial solation payment was made to the family, a candle light vigil by US soldiers was held, and a fundraising drive was initiated that raised $22,000 for the girl’s families and another $30,000 for a memorial in their honor. Despite all this, the Korean media declares the US military’s response insincere. Incredibly even President Bush would later go on and apologize for the accident[xi].

Before long the misinformation being put out was not limited to internet message boards and print newspapers, but was on the average Korean’s television screen as well. The networks repeated much of what was already available on-line and is wasn’t too long before the networks produced sensational misinformation of their own making. The most infamous example of misinformation was when the major news network MBC aired footage of someone claiming to be a former Korean Army tank driver who was able to “prove” in an interview that the American soldiers in the AVLB intentionally ran over the girls and then ground guided the vehicle back over the bodies again to make sure they were dead. This interview entered into the common mythology of what happened that even to this day, much like the KATUSA story, many Koreans believe this story to be true.

The print media as well repeated much of what was on-line, but also focused repeatedly on the “one-sided” SOFA Agreement[xii]. The Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) between the US and South Korea lays out the legal framework of how US soldiers handled when crimes are committed in South Korea. Under the SOFA American military personnel in Korea can be charged, tried, and imprisoned under Korean law for crimes committed off duty. For crimes committed on duty these crimes would be handled by US military authorities. Since the accident on Highway 56 happened while SGT Walker and SGT Nino were on duty they do not fall under Korean law.

The Korean newspapers focused their disinformation on claiming repeatedly that no US soldiers have ever been tried in Korean courts because of the “unfair SOFA Agreement”. The newspapers continued to hype how US soldiers were allowed to commit all these crimes against Koreans and then fly back home due to the big, bad SOFA. The facts of the matter is that US soldiers that have committed crimes while off duty have in fact been tried in Korean courts and imprisoned in Korean jails since the 1960s, yet none of this information ever made it into the Korean media. To this day there are people in Korea who think that US soldiers are tried presently in Korean courts due only to the fall out from the 2002 armoured vehicle accident, when in fact they have been tried in Korean courts for decades.

Those newspapers that were at least intellectually honest enough to distinguish between crimes committed on duty and off, tried to use a 1957 decision by the United States military to allow the prosecution of a soldier who had shot and killed a Japanese woman while on duty in Japanese courts. However, what the media would not point out is that the soldier intentionally murdered the Japanese female and was rightfully handed over to the Japanese authorities for prosecution compared to the two USFK soldiers who were involved in a traffic accident.

Such sensationalism by the Korean media over this accident really should not have been unexpected. Korean journalists do not report the news in the sense that people in West expect. Citizens from western countries expect their news outlets to serve as a check and balance on the government and big business and provide factually based news. In Korea the media often reports what the government and big business want reported as well as what British journalist Michael Breen calls, “speculation, trial balloons, rumour, and deliberate distortions”[xiii] in the name of ratings.


Signs went up around Korea banning Americans from entering into restaurants and businesses.

The sensationalism by the Korean media of the armoured vehicle accident was made quite clear when on June 29, 2002 North Korean patrol boats deliberately ambushed a South Korean Naval vessel patrolling the maritime border between the two countries. Six South Korean sailors died in the attack and the South Korean government, NGOs, and media did everything possible to minimize the deliberate murder of six South Korean sailors while continuing to sensationalize the accidental death of the two school girls[xiv]. The hypocrisy is quite stunning but when it comes to the Korean media they could care less about hypocrisy and more about ratings and sensationalism of the Highway 56 traffic accident was bringing in those ratings. There would be plenty more sensationalism to come.

The slander and accusations against USFK continued to fly both on the web and through the television networks. The tragic accident had taken on a life of its own as the major media outlets competed with the new start up internet media sites in their rush to condemn these soldiers for murder. The propaganda against USFK would become so effective that US soldiers were being assaulted and spat upon on the streets of Seoul with waiting Korean news cameramen recording it all for the nation to see[xv]. Signs went up all around Seoul refusing service to Americans in restaurants, hotels, and businesses. Massive rallies were held where demonstrators burned and tore American flags.


US soldiers kidnapped, beaten, and forced to make false statements denouncing the US government on Korean TV.

Probably the most blatant example of anti-US hate was when three US soldiers on a Seoul subway were assaulted by Korean protesters travelling to a rally on university campus. The protesters beat the soldiers and then abducted them from the subway car and began dragging them towards the anti-US demonstration. Korean policemen were able to free two of the soldiers but the third soldier was dragged into the demonstration held at the university’s sports stadium. He was threatened and forced to make coerce statements against the US by the demonstrators and make forced apologies. Despite everything that happened to them, the soldiers were charged with assault by the Korean police[xvi].

It wouldn’t be long before such irrational behaviour and actions would influence the South Korean political climate as well.

Politicizing the Tragedy
In the summer of 2002, Korea was in the middle of a heated presidential election that year. With the NGOs and the major media taking advantage of the accident it was only natural that the politicians running for president would do so as well. Instead of responsible leadership from the Korean government mediating between the media, the public, and USFK to stop the exploitation of this tragedy; the Korean politicians in fact encouraged it and made it even worse. None of the politicians wanted to be accused by their opponents of being a lap dog of the US, so it quickly became a political race to see who could bash the US more.


Former Korean President Roh Moo-hyun

A little known human rights lawyer from the Cholla province of Korea, Roh Moo-hyun began to attract popular attention with his populist anti-American rants and slogans that began to strike a cord with the general Korean people. Roh who had little political experience and did not even graduate from college became a serious contender for the highest office in the country simply because he ran on a platform of being more anti-American than all the other contenders.


Example of narrow roads that remain near military training areas today.

The Korean politicians had more than just political agendas to advance with their demagoguery of the 2002 armored vehicle accident. The politicians also had to deflect blame as well. Much of the infrastructure in the northern Kyongi Province where 2ID is located had not kept up with South Korea’s rapid economic progress. Massive highways, bridges, and tunnels can be found all over South Korea to the south of Seoul however, few of these infrastructure improvements can be found in the 2ID area. Most of the roads in the 2ID are extremely small, not well maintained, and heavily used by both the American and Korean militaries as well as many civilian vehicles and pedestrians. Despite the heavy use of these roads very few of them even have a shoulder for a broken down vehicle to park on or even a sidewalk for civilians to walk on. Accidents involving the US military as well as the Korean military are not uncommon due to the conditions and do lead to fatalities[xvii].

The Court Martial
Probably the most significant and biggest mistake made in the handling of the 2002 armoured vehicle accident was that the USFK commanding General Leon LaPorte decided to court martial both SGT Nino and SGT Walker. Since the accident happened while the two sergeants were on duty they were not subject to Korean law due to the US-ROK Status of Forces Agreement, and thus the investigation of the accident along with any potential charges against them would be handled by the US military. All though the Korean authorities had no jurisdiction over the case, USFK had the Korean police investigate the scene with them and kept the Korean authorities and media fully briefed on what was going on. Five months after the accident the Korean National Police concurred with USFK investigators that the deaths of the two girls was an accident[xviii].

Out of the 30 nations that compose the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Korea ranked as the most dangerous place to drive[xix]. The data gathered from 2003 just one year after the armoured vehicle accident showed that Korea had 137 car accidents per 10,000 vehicles on the road. Additionally for every 100,000 people involved in a traffic accident, 15 people died. Each statistic topped the OECD’s rankings. Probably the most dubious statistic is that Korea ranked first in the OECD in traffic related child deaths. 82 children died every day in Korea with 70 percent of those accident involving children walking alongside a road[xx].


Perfect example of how a narrow road is made even more dangerous due to civilian activity.

As the statistics show, a tragic accident like what happened in June 2002 is not uncommon in Korea and the reasons for these accidents happening has nothing to do with the US military and the Korean police who helped investigate the tragedy realized this. That is why the police concluded with the USFK investigators that this was a tragic accident like many other tragic accidents involving children in Korea; the only difference was that this one involved the US military.

The NGO’s involved in the protests against USFK after the accident could care less about promoting traffic safety in Korea to prevent accidents like what happened in June 2002 from happening anywhere else in Korea. All these groups were interested in was promoting their anti-US agendas. These people have little concern about the welfare of Korean children killed every year on Korean roads and if Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun were killed by a Korean vehicle these groups would be shedding no tears and could care less.

After the results of the initial investigation were released these anti-US groups immediately started declaring it was a cover up. The claims of a cover up in Korea is very easy for the general public to believe because for decades the ruling Korean dictators had often covered up many crimes and scandals caused by the government. Even though democracy has come to Korea the old beliefs of government cover ups, especially involving USFK are easy to believe.

Korean NGOs demanded that USFK hand over the two soldiers to be tried in Korean courts despite their SOFA status. This demand was especially hypocritical considering that due to Article 2 of the Korean Military Court Act, the Korean military has jurisdiction over all crimes committed by their servicemembers whether they were off duty or not[xxi]. The fact that ROK military personnel never stand trial in Korean courts is an inconvenient fact that many Koreans would rather not acknowledge. A USFK servicemember on the other hand is subject to Korean civilian court for any crime committed while off duty. With the differences in jurisdiction between the Korean and American militaries, it makes you wonder that if the Korean civilian judicial system is not good enough for the Korean military than why should it be good enough to try American soldiers in? This is an inconvenient fact that is left unaddressed by the anti-US groups and their media allies. The hypocrisy is stunning, but like I said before hypocrisy is of little significance in Korea.


SGT Nino and Walker during court martial.

Probably the most stunning hypocrisy of the SOFA criticism is the fact that the Korean military has status of forces agreements with every nation that is host to deployed South Korean military personnel. In these SOFAs, the ROK Army has primary jurisdiction of crimes committed by their soldiers both on and off duty. A couple of recent examples of when the ROK military’s SOFA was activated were both in Iraq and involved the deployment of the ROK Army’s Zaytun Division outside the Kurdish capitol city of Irbil. In the first case a South Korean soldier was playing with his rifle when an accidental discharge killed a nearby Kurdish soldier[xxii].

The SOFA was activated and the Korean soldier was handled by a ROK military court martial. In 2006 a Korean soldier driving a military truck was involved in a traffic accident where he caused the death of a 53 year old Kurdish politician. Once again the South Korean military activated their SOFA. This is what Colonel Ha Du-cheol told reporters after the accident, “The traffic accident occurred in the line of duty, so we are seeking ways to compensate the victim’s family.”[xxiii] Sound familiar? It should because it is the same thing the US military did after the 2002 armoured vehicle accident, which these groups were demanding SOFA revisions for. However, when a nearly identical situation happens with a Korean soldier it receives a small passage in the newspaper and no righteous indignation from anyone complaining about an unequal SOFA between Korea and Kurdistan.

The Korean military has never allowed one of their soldiers to be tried in a foreign host nation’s civilian courts, which shouldn’t be surprising considering that Korean soldiers do not even stand trial in civilian courts in their own country. Despite all of these inconvenient facts the anti-US groups and their media allies have the nerve to condemn USFK for an unfair status of forces agreement.

Despite the sheer hypocrisy of the demands, USFK Commander General LaPorte in an attempt to placate these groups and appease Korean public sentiment, ordered the two US soldiers court martialled for negligent homicide in the hope that if all the facts were laid out during the trial; everyone would see that USFK was not conducting a cover up. General LaPorte was new to the job and probably did not understand Korean customs very well. In Korea when a traffic accident happens that involves a fatality a solation payment is made to the family of the deceased. In accordance with Korean customs and in coordination with the Korean Justice Ministry, before the court martial was announced, USFK issued a compensation payment of $147,820 American dollars to each of the victim’s families[xxiv]. In a typical traffic accident in Korea the compensation payment and apologies would have been enough to settle the dispute.

When General LaPorte made the decision to court martial the two sergeants, it only aggravated the situation because court trials in Korea are not perceived like trials in the US are. Korea is not a “rule of law” country and is instead a “rule by law” country[xxv]. So when someone goes on trial in Korea the expectation is that the person is guilty to begin with; the trial is just a determination of how guilty the person really is. This sentiment is best expressed in a Chosun Ilbo editorial that declared: “Although we had not expected much, we had hoped that the US martial court might reach a verdict that showed a little understanding of Korean sentiment. That hope turned out to be misplaced.”[xxvi] As shown by this article what mattered most to the general Korean population was “Korean sentiment” that the soldiers were guilty, not any concerns of an open and fair trial to determine the facts of what happened that day.


50,000 Korean protesters tear up American flags before 2002 Korean presidential election.

By putting the two sergeants on trial General LaPorte had already declared to the general Korean public that the two sergeants were guilty. When the two sergeants were acquitted of all charges it played right into the anti-US group’s claims of a cover up. The acquittals just led to more protests, bad publicity, political demagoguery, and violence against American military personnel stationed in Korea.

Aftermath
Following the court martial, both SGT Walker and SGT Nino were flown back to the United States and both eventually left the Army[xxvii]. Four leaders within the engineering unit involved in the accident were disciplined by the US military. The commander CPT Mason, the first sergeant, platoon sergeant, and platoon leader all received written letters of reprimand from General Honore for not following traffic safety procedures, which effectively ended their careers[xxviii].

In a letter to the editor of the Stars & Stripes SPC Joshua Ray who was the driver of the AVLB in front of the one involved in accident stated that their commander CPT Mason has ignored safety measures by driving the large vehicle on the road where the accident happened as well as not giving soldiers in the unit enough sleep before departing on the convoy[xxix]. The points Ray brings up in the article are not unique to this engineer unit. During this timeframe 2nd Infantry Division trained heavily in the field and conducted “tactical movements” on civilian roads from one training area to the next. As Ray brings up in his article such “tactical movements” in civilian areas would never happen in the United States.

However, in the United States, military units usually do not have to travel through civilian areas to get to a training area because the training areas are often located adjacent to the military base. In Korea long convoys of both wheeled and tracked vehicles have to be conducted on civilian roads to get to training areas, with many of these roads being quite narrow and passing through small towns[xxx]. In the United States a tracked vehicle would never travel on a civilian road for any reason, in Korea it was common.


A 2001 image of one of my unit’s bradleys traveling through a densely populated Korean village.

From my own personal experience I know how dangerous these convoys can be. I have led multiple convoys of Bradleys before during my time in Korea around the time frame and even on the very road in question that the accident happened. Korean civilians in the 2nd Infantry Division area grow up around the large military equipment and have lost respect for how dangerous the equipment can be. It was a common sight back then to see Korean civilians walking on the white line on the side of the road despite heavy armoured vehicles and tanks coming down the road behind them. They would simply continue to walk on the white line with the hands over their ears to muffle the sounds of the passing tanks.

My unit had plenty of close calls with one incident I especially remember when my Bradley was driving through the densely populated city of Pocheon and a lady talking on a cell phone walked in front of my Bradley. I yelled at my driver to stop over the intercom and fortunately he stopped in time to not hit the woman who simply looked up in surprise to see a Bradley coming at her when we were barely able to stop in time from hitting her. How she remained oblivious to a 25 ton hulk of metal driving down Highway 43 is beyond me?

Unlike the SGT Nino and SGT Walker’s AVLB, my internal communications in the Bradley worked. However, it is not uncommon for these radios to go out during a convoy. 25 tons of metal bumping around on a road has the tendency to cause things to shake things out of place. That is why my unit had an SOP of at least every minute saying something over the radio to the driver to ensure communications are still working. There was a time my internal communications went out during a convoy and I started throwing candies from the turret at the open hatch of my driver to get his attention. This was our standard operating procedure to stop because it meant our communications went out and it worked the one time we had to use it.

Pedestrians and communications failures weren’t the only danger on these convoys, impatient civilian drivers were also a source of much concern. A convoy of Bradleys on a civilian road is a long, slow movement. The convoy is usually travelling around 20 miles per hour. Civilian vehicles would try to pass our convoys on blind turns and other areas where they cannot see oncoming traffic. The most dangerous civilian vehicles were the buses because they would try and pass a Bradley and then have an on coming car coming and then the bus would then merge right sometimes forcing Bradleys on to the shoulder of the road to avoid an accident. Many of my peers and I felt that it was only a matter of time before a tragic accident happens and were actually surprised it hadn’t happened already.


Highway 56 Accident Memorial built with funds raised by the soldiers of the 2nd Infantry Division.

Another thing to keep in mind is that the US military was not the only ones to use tracked vehicles on these roads. The Korean Army actually used these roads much more than the US military due to their much larger force footprint in the area. I have personally seen for myself tracked Korean Army vehicles in accidents with civilian vehicles[xxxi]. The dangers of driving on Korean roads in the 2ID area of operations was danger faced by both militaries.

To make matters worse is that many of these roads with heavy civilian traffic and pedestrians in the 2ID area are small and narrow and should not have tracked vehicles on them in the first place. The stretch of road on Highway 56 where the accident occurred is a perfect example of one of these poorly built roads, because there was no shoulder or sidewalk for the girls to walk on to avoid traffic. It is clear that USFK bears responsibility for what happened that day, but the US military shouldn’t be the only ones held accountable for what happened that day.

With such poor road conditions in the 2ID area that were posing a risk to civilians, why had the Korean government not done anything to expand the roads or even add sidewalks along roads with heavy military traffic? This is a question Korean politicians do not want to answer. A simple sidewalk along that road would have saved those two girls lives that day. Because of this fact it was in the interest of the Korean government to deflect any responsibility for what happened solely on the US military.


Site of the accident today. Notice how the government has since widened the road and added a sidewalk.

Also since the accident the Korean government has quietly begun expanding roads and adding sidewalks in the 2ID area in order to prevent future accidents. However, this is all too little to late for Shim Mi-son and Shin Hyo-sun. These two girls tragically became the victims of something that could have been easily prevented. If Korean societal attitudes were different (pedestrians not giving way for military vehicles), if the Korean government expanded roads and sidewalks, if the breakdown in basic safety measures within the unit did not happen, and finally if the internal communications systems of the AVLB worked properly these two girls would be alive today. It is a shame that everyone involved with this accident will have to live with for the rest of their lives.

Another shame from the aftermath of the tragedy is the willful demagoguery and manipulation of this accident by Korean NGOs and politicians to advance their own agendas. The US military had sacrificed over 37,000 lives during the Korean War and had been helping maintain security on the Korean peninsula for over 50 years which was directly responsible for setting conditions for the economic miracle that took place in Korea. Despite all the US military has done for the Republic of Korea, not one person in the Korean government had the moral courage to mediate what happened and instead they all competed to see who can demagogue the accident the most for their own domestic political purposes. With his anti-US platform and the aid of the media, Roh Moo-hyun would prove he was the biggest demagogue of them all, by going on to win a narrow victory in the 2002 presidential election[xxxii]. Incredibly the aftermath of the June 2002 armored vehicle accident had been enough to elect a political nobody to the presidency of South Korea.

Next Posting: Lessons Learned from the Tragedy

Related Posting: Scenes of the Highway 56 Memorial and accident site.

Recommended Reading: USFK Accident & Anti-American Orgy

Note: I am trying to make this posting as accurate as possible a depiction of what really happened on June 13, 2002 in order to disspell the number of Internet rumors and urban myths surrounding this accident. If you were a member of the unit involved in the accident please leave a comment to further clarify exactly what happened that day. Likewise if people have any more information about the Korean and USFK reactions to the accident please feel free to leave a comment as well. Please save any comments for USFK recommendations for the upcoming posting. Thanks.


[i] Joshua Ray, Korean Mediator, http://koreanmediator.blogspot.com/2005/10/june-13-2002-my-personal-account-of.html, accessed 10 July 2007

Joshua Ray was a member of the unit involved in the accident and he recounts the convoy and what happened that day on both his blog and a follow up Stars & Stripes article he wrote.

[ii] Jeon Ick-jin, “Radio Blamed for Accident”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 06 August 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1906943

[iii] “Lee Ho-jeong, “US Vehicle Kills Two Korean Teens”, Joong Ang Ilbo newspaper, 14 June 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1904883

[iv] “USFK Statement on Highway 56 Accident”, US Embassy Korea press release, 27 July 2002, http://seoul.usembassy.gov/july_27_2002.html

[v] Donald Kirk, “America on Thin Ice In Korea”, International Herald Tribune, 01 March 2002, http://www.iht.com/articles/2002/03/01/t1_2.php

[vi] Jennifer Veale, “Just the Facts”, Foreign Policy, January/February 2007, http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3737&page=2

[vii] “USFK Statement on Highway 56 Accident”, US Embassy Korea press release, 27 July 2002, http://seoul.usembassy.gov/july_27_2002.html

[viii] “Lee Ho-jeong, “US Vehicle Kills Two Korean Teens”, Joong Ang Ilbo newspaper, 14 June 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1904883

[ix] “Clear Up US Army Tragedy”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 04 July 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1905664

[x] Lee Chul-jae, “US Ambassador Apologizes for Deaths of Girls in June Accident”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 30 July 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1906700

[xi] Min Seong-jae, “US Envoy Extends Apology from Bush”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 28 November 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1911685

[xii] “Clear Up US Army Tragedy”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 04 July 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1905664

[xiii] Michael Breen, The Koreans, (New York, St. Martin’s Press, 2004), Chapter 1 The Three Miracles

[xiv] “West Sea Battle Survivors Struggle to Build Future”, Chosun Ilbo, 28 June 2006, http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200606/200606280025.html

[xv] Jeremy Kirk, “Two US Soldiers Shoved, Spat On at Seoul Station”, Stars & Stripes, 21 December 2002, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=11652&archive=true

[xvi] “Statement on Three Soldiers’, US Embassy Korea Press Release, 18 September 2002, http://seoul.usembassy.gov/september_18_2002.html

[xvii] “Two Dead as Tank Falls from Rural Bridge”, Joong Ang Ilbo newspaper, 18 February 2003, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1936133

[xviii] David Scofield, “The Mortician’s Tale”, Asia Times, 28 January 2004, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/FA28Dg02.html

[xix] Hwang Hae-rym & T.D. Flack, “Korea Plans Drive for Safer Roads”, Stars & Stripes, January 18, 2006, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=33528&archive=true

[xx] David Steinberg, Korean Attitudes Toward the United States (M.E. Sharpe, 2005), pg 206

[xxi] “USFK Statement on Highway 56 Accident”, US Embassy Korea press release, 27 July 2002, http://seoul.usembassy.gov/july_27_2002.html

[xxii] “Korean Soldier Accidentally Killed Iraqi”, Chosun Ilbo, 13 April 2005, http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200504/200504130032.html

[xxiii] Jung Sung-ki, “Kurd Official Killed in Traffic in Erbil”, The Korea Times, 02 February 2006, http://www.ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc2006/2/kurdlocal98.htm

[xxiv] “South Korea Decides Compensation Sum for Girls Killed by US Armored Vehicle”, People’s Daily, 20 July 2002, http://english.people.com.cn/200207/20/eng20020720_100059.shtml

[xxv] Franklin Fischer, “Lawyer: Americans Can Expect Fair Trial In Korea”, Stars & Stripes, 15 April 2007, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=52677&archive=true

[xxvi] “Not Guilty Verdict”, Chosun Ilbo newspaper, 22 November 2002, http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200211/200211210035.html

[xxvii] Teri Weaver, “Three Years Later, Walker Still Haunted By Deaths of Two Korean Girls”, Stars & Stripes, 01 May 2005, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=27977&archive=true

[xxviii] Jeon Ik-jin & Park Hyun-young, Army Reprimanded Four After Accident that Killed Two Teenagers”, Joong Ang Ilbo, 16 December 2002, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1912434

[xxix] Joshua Ray, “Higher Ups Put Safety Second”, Stars & Stripes, 22 November 2002, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=125&article=14274&archive=true

[xxx] Jeremy Kirk & Choe Song-won, “As Exercise at the DMZ Begins, Area Residents Say Relations with the US Are Better”, Stars & Stripes, 02 October 2003, http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=17194&archive=true

[xxxi] “Two Dead as Tank Falls from Rural Bridge”, Joong Ang Ilbo newspaper, 18 February 2003, http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=1936133

[xxxii] Jennifer Veale, “Seoul Searching”, Foreign Policy, January/February 2007, http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3669

Lee Sae-jin is Not Alone
» by GI Korea

In what has started out as a one man protest against the blatant anti-Americanism of the US beef protests has now gained a few more members to include Han Chan-sik from the Donga Ilbo:

American philosopher John Rawls said reasonable disagreement is a feature defining a free democracy. In other words, it is natural in a democratic society where a variety of ideas and beliefs co-exist that a reasonable opinion inevitably conflicts with other reasonable opinions. Once a party starts showing hostility toward another, all of society turns into a constant and hostile battleground. Anti-U.S. beef candlelight vigil protesters are beginning to show hostility against those who oppose their cause. […]

Only a handful of citizens have defended Lee and Jeong on the Internet. But they have had to write a long prologue to their defense, stressing their neutrality. The protesters who have taken to the streets have smothered opposing voices. Rawls’ solution to reasonable disagreement, which constitutes both the strong and weak points of a democratic society, is to secure democracy by procedures; namely, Rawls said all interested parties should abide by agreed-on procedures to allow all parties better results over the long run. The protesters have given up on procedural legitimacy and rationality. They have occupied the streets day after day. Korea’s political system allows diverse voices to be heard, but in this democratically rich society, democracy itself is being threatened. [Donga Ilbo]

Likewise Kim Dae-joong from the Chosun Ilbo agrees with this sentiment that democracy and freedom of speech in Korea are under threat by this thinly veiled anti-US movement that is trying to silence the Chosun Ilbo as well:

Going a step further, they launched a specific operation by reopening a Daum forum against the Chosun Ilbo. The debate forum Agora and housewives’ group 82cook urged a boycott of a list of businesses that advertise in the daily. The DongA Ilbo and JoongAnd Ilbo are subject to similar assaults. Street signs with directions to the Chosun Ilbo have been damaged by protesters.

Apart from the debate on whether we will or will not import U.S. beef, whether there is a BSE risk or not, and whether cattle aged less or more than 30 months should be labeled, our society is sinking into a swamp of serious distrust and distortion. We lack the basic virtue of a civil society of carefully listening to others’ views, however right one may be. I’d like to tell those citizens who browbeat the one-man protester that it is they who should protest.

An authoritarian government in the past attempted to kill the DongA Ilbo by threatening its advertisers. Now, 30-odd years later, in a democratic country, the threat is resurfacing not from the state but by what is invariably called "people power." This is anachronistic.

It’s a feature of human societies that we can have views on a certain matter that differ from others. In a democratic society, we should be able to express different views. We lived through an era that did not accommodate different views and their expression, and we called it dictatorship. [Chosun Ilbo]

Some other Koreans who have come out against the beef protesters include Kyeongi Province Governor Kim Moon-soo and talk show hostess Jeong Seon-hee who have been viciously attacked into silence by the anti-US forces behind the protests. Despite these vicious attacks more people are showing up to take on the protesters along side Lee Sae-jin:

Meanwhile, thousands of conservative activists supporting the deal staged protests Tuesday in a Seoul plaza where anti-U.S. beef rallies were to take place later.

"It’s time to put out the candles," said Suh Jung-kap, a conservative activist at the site. The protesters "are only interested in overthrowing the Lee Myung-bak government, not the safety of public health."

He said his group members will try to prevent opposing protesters from entering the site, raising the potential of clashes between the two sides. [Star Tribune]

The conservative groups need to ally with the veterans groups to confront the anti-US forces behind the protests. The leftist anti-US groups are very well organized and it is time the conservatives in Korea organize as well to confront them. It has worked before as evident by the successful stand against these leftists when they tried to tear down the MacArthur Statue in Incheon. Guess who was behind the MacArthur protests? None other then North Korean spies. With the teachers and labor unions involved with the anti-US beef protests it doesn’t take much deduction to understand what is helping to guide these protests as well.

It is interesting though, how just a few weeks ago the new Chinese Red Guards were roaming the streets of Seoul beating Korean citizens that didn’t agree with them and now they have been replaced by a new generation of Korean Red Guards that are currently roaming the streets of Seoul doing the same thing.

Thursday, June 12, 2008