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Sent: Monday,
May 19, 2008 7:33 AM
Subject: . . .
THERE IS NO CIVILIZED HUMAN SOCIETY . . . JUST PLAIN EVIL MURDERERS . . .
Thousands killed by US's Korean ally
AP IMPACT: Thousands killed by the
US AND US's Korean
ally
By CHARLES J. HANLEY and JAE-SOON CHANG (Associated
Press Writers)
From Associated Press
May 18, 2008 3:48 PM EDT
DAEJEON, South Korea - Grave by mass grave, South
Korea is unearthing the skeletons and buried truths of a cold-blooded
slaughter from early in the Korean War, when this nation's U.S.-backed
regime killed untold thousands of leftists and hapless peasants in a summer
of terror in 1950.
With U.S. military
officers sometimes present, and as North Korean invaders pushed down the
peninsula, the southern army and police emptied South Korean prisons, lined
up detainees and shot them in the head, dumping the bodies into hastily dug
trenches. Others were thrown into abandoned mines or into the sea. Women and
children were among those killed. Many victims never faced charges or
trial.
The mass
executions - intended to keep possible southern leftists from reinforcing
the northerners - were carried out over mere weeks and were largely hidden
from history for a half-century. They were "the most tragic and brutal
chapter of the Korean War," said historian Kim Dong-choon, a member of a
2-year-old government commission investigating the killings.
Hundreds of sets of remains have been uncovered so
far, but researchers say they are only a tiny fraction of the deaths. The
commission estimates at least 100,000 people were executed, in a South
Korean population of 20 million.
That estimate is
based on projections from local surveys and is "very conservative," said
Kim. The true toll may be twice that or more, he told The Associated
Press.
In addition,
thousands of South Koreans who allegedly collaborated with the communist
occupation were slain by southern forces later in 1950, and the invaders
staged their own executions of rightists.
Through the postwar decades of South Korean
right-wing dictatorships, victims' fearful families kept silent about that
blood-soaked summer. American military reports of the South Korean slaughter
were stamped "secret" and filed away in Washington. Communist accounts were
dismissed as lies.
Only since the
1990s, and South Korea's democratization, has the truth begun to seep
out.
In 2002, a typhoon's fury uncovered one mass
grave. Another was found by a television news team that broke into a sealed
mine.. Further corroboration comes from a trickle of declassified U.S.
military documents, including U.S. Army photographs of a mass killing
outside this central South Korean city.
Now Kim's Truth and Reconciliation Commission has
added government authority to the work of scattered researchers, family
members and journalists trying to peel away the long-running cover-up. The
commissioners have the help of a handful of remorseful old men.
"Even now, I feel guilty that I pulled the
trigger," said Lee Joon-young, 83, one of the executioners in a secluded
valley near Daejeon in early July 1950.
The retired prison guard told the AP he knew that
many of those shot and buried en masse were ordinary convicts or illiterate
peasants wrongly ensnared in roundups of supposed communist sympathizers.
They didn't deserve to die, he said. They "knew nothing about
communism."
The 17
investigators of the commission's subcommittee on "mass civilian sacrifice,"
led by Kim, have been dealing with petitions from more than 7,000 South
Koreans, involving some 1,200 alleged incidents - not just mass planned
executions, but also 215 cases in which the U.S. military is accused of the
indiscriminate killing of South Korean civilians in 1950-51, usually in air
attacks.
The commission
last year excavated sites at four of an estimated 150 mass graves around the
country, recovering remains of more than 400 people. Working deliberately,
matching documents to eyewitness and survivor testimony, it has officially
confirmed two large-scale executions - at a warehouse in the central South
Korean county of Cheongwon, and at Ulsan on the southeast coast.
In January, then-President Roh Moo-hyun, under
whose liberal leadership the commission was established, formally apologized
for the more than 870 deaths confirmed at Ulsan, calling them "illegal acts
the then-state authority committed."
The commission,
with no power to compel testimony or prosecute, faces daunting tasks both in
verifying events and identifying victims, and in tracing a chain of
responsibility. Under Roh's conservative successor, Lee Myung-bak, whose
party is seen as democratic heir to the old autocratic right wing, the
commission may find less budgetary and political support.
The roots of the summer 1950 bloodbath lie in the
U.S.-Soviet division of Japan's former Korea colony in 1945, which
precipitated north-south turmoil and eventual war.
In the late 1940s, President Syngman Rhee's
U.S.-installed rightist regime crushed leftist political activity in South
Korea, including a guerrilla uprising inspired by the communists ruling the
north. By 1950, southern jails were packed with up to 30,000 political
prisoners.
The southern
government, meanwhile, also created the National Guidance League, a
"re-education" organization for recanting leftists and others suspected of
communist leanings. Historians say officials met membership quotas by
pressuring peasants into signing up with promises of rice rations or other
benefits. By 1950, more than 300,000 people were on the league's rolls,
organizers said.
North Korean
invaders seized Seoul, the southern capital, in late June 1950 and freed
thousands of prisoners, who rallied to the northern cause. Southern
authorities, in full retreat with their U.S. military advisers, ordered
National Guidance League members in areas they controlled to report to the
police, who detained them. Soon after, commission researchers say, the
organized mass executions of people regarded as potential collaborators
began - "bad security risks," as a police official described the detainees
at the time.
The declassified
record of U.S. documents shows an ambivalent American attitude toward the
killings. American diplomats that summer urged restraint on southern
officials - to no obvious effect - but a State Department cable that fall
said overall commander Gen. Douglas MacArthur viewed the executions as a
Korean "internal matter," even though he controlled South Korea's
military.
Ninety miles south
of Seoul, here in the narrow, peaceful valley of Sannae, truckloads of
prisoners were brought in from Daejeon Prison and elsewhere day after day in
July 1950, as the North Koreans bore down on the city.
The American photos, taken by an Army major and
kept classified for a half-century, show the macabre sequence of
events.
White-clad
detainees - bent, submissive, with hands bound - were thrown down prone,
jammed side by side, on the edge of a long trench. South Korean military and
national policemen then stepped up behind, pointed their rifles at the backs
of their heads and fired. The bodies were tipped into the trench.
Trembling policemen - "they hadn't shot anyone
before" - were sometimes off-target, leaving men wounded but alive, Lee
said. He and others were ordered to check for wounded and finish them
off.
Evidence indicates South Korean executioners
killed between 3,000 and 7,000 here, said commissioner Kim. A half-dozen
trenches, each up to 150 yards long and full of bodies, extended over an
area almost a mile long, said Kim Chong-hyun, 70, chairman of a group of
bereaved families campaigning for disclosure and compensation for the
Daejeon killings. His father, accused but never convicted of militant
leftist activity, was one victim.
Another was Yeo
Tae-ku's father, whose wife and mother searched for him afterward.
"Bodies were just piled upon each other," said
Yeo, 59, remembering his mother's description. "Arms would come off when
they turned them over." The desperate women never found him, and the mass
graves were quickly covered over, as were others in isolated spots up and
down this mountainous peninsula, to be officially "forgotten."
When British communist journalist Alan Winnington
entered Daejeon that summer with North Korean troops and visited the site,
writing of "waxy dead hands and feet (that) stick through the soil," his
reports in the Daily Worker were denounced as "fabrication" by the U.S.
Embassy in London. American military accounts focused instead on North
Korean reprisal killings that followed in Daejeon.
But CIA and U.S. military intelligence documents
circulating even before the Winnington report, classified "secret" and since
declassified, told of the executions by the South Koreans. Lt. Col. Bob
Edwards, U.S. Embassy military attache in South Korea, wrote in conveying
the Daejeon photos to Army intelligence in Washington that he believed
nationwide "thousands of political prisoners were executed within (a) few
weeks" by the South Koreans.
Another glimpse of
the carnage appeared in an unofficial U.S. source, an obscure memoir
self-published in 1981 by the late Donald Nichols, a U.S. Air Force
intelligence officer, who told of witnessing "the unforgettable massacre of
approximately 1,800 at Suwon," 20 miles south of Seoul.
Such reports lend credibility to a captured North
Korean document from Aug. 2, 1950, eventually declassified by Washington,
which spoke of mass executions in 12 South Korean cities, including 1,000
killed in Suwon and 4,000 in Daejeon.
That early, incomplete North Korean report
couldn't include those executed in territory still held by the southerners.
Up to 10,000 were killed in the city of Busan alone, a South Korean
lawmaker, Park Chan-hyun, estimated in 1960.
His investigation came during a 12-month
democratic interlude between the overthrow of Rhee and a government takeover
by Maj. Gen. Park Chung-hee's authoritarian military, which quickly arrested
many then probing for the hidden story of 1950.
Kim said his projection of at least 100,000 dead
is based in part on extrapolating from a survey by non-governmental
organizations in one province, Busan's South Gyeongsang, which estimated
25,000 killed there. And initial evidence suggests most of the National
Guidance League's 300,000 members were killed, he said.
Commission investigators agree with the late Lt.
Col. Edwards' note to Washington in 1950, that "orders for execution
undoubtedly came from the top," that is, President Rhee, who died in
1965.
But any
documentary proof of that may have been destroyed, just as the facts of the
mass killings themselves were buried. In 1953, after the war ended in
stalemate, after the deaths of at least 2 million people, half or more of
them civilians, a U.S. Army war crimes report attributed all summary
executions here in Daejeon to the "murderous barbarism" of North
Koreans.
Such myths
survived a half-century, in part because those who knew the truth were cowed
into silence.
"My mother
destroyed all pictures of my father, for fear the family would get an image
as leftists," said Koh Chung-ryol, 57, who is convinced her 29-year-old
father was innocent of wrongdoing when picked up in a broad police sweep
here, to die in Sannae valley.
"My mother tried
hard to get rid of anything about her husband," she said. "She suffered
unspeakable pain."
Even educated
South Koreans remained ignorant of their country's past. As a young
researcher in the late 1980s, Yonsei University's Park Myung-lim, today a
leading Korean War historian, was deeply shaken as he sought out
confidential accounts of those days from ordinary Koreans.
"I cried," he said. "I felt, 'Oh, my goodness. Oh,
Jesus. This was my country? It was true?'"
The Truth and Reconciliation Commission can
recommend but not award compensation for lost and ruined lives, nor can it
bring surviving perpetrators to justice. "Our investigative power is so
meager," commission President Ahn Byung-ook told the AP.
His immediate concern is resources. "The current
government isn't friendly toward us, and so we're concerned that the budget
may be cut next year," he said.
South Korean
conservatives complain the "truth" campaign will only reopen old wounds from
a time when, even at the village level, leftists and rightists carried out
bloody reprisals against each other.
The life of the
commission - with a staff of 240 and annual budget of $19 million - is
guaranteed by law until at least 2010, when it will issue a final,
comprehensive report.
Later this spring
and summer its teams will resume digging at mass grave sites. Thus far, it
has verified 16 incidents of 1950-51 - not just large-scale detainee
killings, but also such events as a South Korean battalion's cold-blooded
killing of 187 men, women and children at Kochang village, supposed
sympathizers with leftist guerrillas.
By exposing the truth of such episodes, "we hope
to heal the trauma and pain of the bereaved families," the commission says.
It also wants to educate people, "not just in Korea, but throughout the
international community," to the reality of that long-ago conflict, to
"prevent such a tragic war from reoccurring in the
future."
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Associated Press investigative
researcher Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this
report.
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