-Caveat Lector-

>From Christian Science Monitor

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1998


S. Korea hit by a wave of military mishaps

� US still 'comfortable' with key ally. But did South Korean soldiers tell
secrets to North?

Michael Baker
Special to The Christian Science Monitor

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA

Despite the modern bustle of South Korea, ringing with Christmas carols and
jammed with holiday shoppers in these festive days, America's Army
considers it a "war zone."

The sacrifices made by US troops defending South Korea - some 36,000 US
personnel are stationed there - are most acute during the holiday season,
when soldiers think of families not allowed to accompany them on this
"hardship tour."

Efforts to defuse the political tension on this peninsula are under way.
Next month's "four party" peace talks represent another attempt by the US,
China, and the two Koreas to wrap up Korea's half-century conflict.

<Picture>GETTING IT RIGHT: South Korean soldiers practiced a beach landing
southeast of Seoul last month during annual joint exercises with the US
military.
(AHN YOUNG-JOON /AP)
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Complications still surface. Last Friday, in the wee hours, South Korea
sank a North Korean spy boat during a chase. The small win buoyed spirits
in South Korea's military, and perhaps reassured the US.

But a month of blunders and new allegations about cross-border contacts
between soldiers have South Korea's armed forces in the headlines and under
fire.

Since mid-November, 11 servicemen have been crushed by tanks, been killed
in explosions, or have committed suicide. Another two killed each other in
a fight. In Inchon, a major city west of Seoul, an antiaircraft missile
accidentally launched, self-destructed in midair, and rained debris on
civilians and cars.

The military blames faulty wiring for the accidental launch. But as with
the flare bomb that landed on an elderly woman's house, and the officers
who fiddled with a 90-mm shell in their lounge until it exploded, outsiders
have blamed military incompetence. A month earlier, five South Korean boats
ran aground while pursuing a North Korean spy ship.

Most damaging, perhaps, are allegations that South Korean soldiers have
been accepting gifts from North Korean soldiers - and perhaps divulging
information - during illegal meetings in Panmunjom, the diplomatic village
straddling Korea's demilitarized zone. A certain Sergeant Kim met North
Koreans 30 times between July and December 1997, allegedly receiving
contraband goods including cigarettes. Another soldier got a Rolex watch.

In February, Kim's commanding officer died in suspicious circumstances.
When news of the contacts emerged this month, the National Assembly
reopened the investigation, suspecting the senior officer was murdered. An
earlier inquiry unconvincingly concluded it was suicide.

"Can we trust the military?" asked an editorial in The Korea Herald.

The defense minister and others have been reprimanded, and a few relieved
of command. But the string of incidents has aroused concerns about South
Korea's military that are reminiscent of 1996. Then, during South Korea's
most recent large-scale operation, 60,000 troops combed the countryside for
25 North Korean commandos who had fled their grounded submarine.

Discipline problems hampered the search. The government essentially sent
"[university] students in uniform to hunt North Korean special forces,"
notes Michael Breen, a North Korea expert based in Sussex, England.

Every able-bodied South Korean male must dedicate two years and two months
to the armed services, and eight years in the reserves. But many
middle-class recruits detest conscription, feeling it is a waste of their
time.

Some university students complain that South Korea's military is
unprofessional. One reservist recounted that at refresher training this
summer it was raining, so they watched videos all day.

Many envy America's volunteer army, and hope someday South Korea can have a
professional army. "In Korea, being a soldier is not a good job," says one
ex-soldier. It wasn't always so. In the 1950s, graduates of the Korean
Military Academy took top jobs, including the presidency. Until the
mid-1970s, the military was the leading edge of technology, education, and
administration, attracting the best and brightest.

But society and business have since overtaken the military. Vietnam was the
last war South Korea fought in, and its military has bureaucratized. These
days it can't easily retain quality personnel in lower ranks. And
commanding officers are often not fully respected by conscripts, who often
have better educations.

Top American officials acknowledge some shortcomings but say they feel they
would be comfortable fighting side by side again with South Korea. "We
train 'joint and combined' every day, and our training equates to a very
high readiness," says US Army spokeswoman Lee Ferguson. The US has
supported South Korea since fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, in which
South Koreans proved to be among the toughest and most reliable fighters.

Yang Sung Jin, recently discharged as a sergeant, says things aren't as bad
as they seem. Six weeks of boot camp is "no joke," and South Korean
soldiers are "pretty professional," he says. There is "no [quality
difference] between US and South Korean soldiers," says Mr. Yang.

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All rights reserved.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
>From Agence France Presse

Tuesday December 22, 12:13 PM

Monks oust rivals from prosperous temple in South Korea

SEOUL, Dec 22 (AFP) - Dozens of monks have ousted rivals from a prosperous
temple and taken control of its management in a drawn-out row between
competing factions of South Korean Buddhism, witnesses said Tuesday.

Some 50 monks from the Purification and Reform Committee (PRC) occupied
Tonghwa Temple in the southeastern city of Taegu late Monday after forcing
rivals from the Constitution Safeguards Committee (CSC) to leave the
compound.

"We were deprived of our temple by a group of scoundrels," Songdok, the
temple's head monk, told journalists.

"We are going to resort to every possible means, including physical as well
as legal means, to take it back," he said.

The episode raised concern that Tonghwa Temple, one of the most important
places of pilgrimage for South Korea's 10 million Buddhists, would give way
to the further scenes of battling monks.

The occupation added fuel to the row between the two rival factions, which
have been bickering for months over rights to name the heads of hundreds of
Buddhist temples across the country and manage their budgets.

"However lofty the factions' names and causes may sound, their fighting is
all about money," a long-time observer said.

The centre stage of the wrangling has been Chogye Temple in downtown Seoul,
the headquarters of South Korean Buddhism, where hundreds of rival monks
clashed repeatedly, leaving dozens injured.

Chogye Temple has been occupied by the Purification and Reform Committee
(PRC) for more than a month in a bid to prevent an election of the chief
administrator of the headquarters, which PRC apparently is concerned would
be dominated by the CSC.

CSC has won a court battle, obtaining a court order for PRC members to
leave Chogye Temple.

But PRC has mobilized handicapped Buddhist followers, who set up human
barricades by linking themselves with iron chains at the temple's gates to
fend off executors seeking to carry out the court order.

The executors have asked police to help them force their way into the
temple early Wednesday to dislodge the occupants, a request reluctantly
accepted by the police.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R

The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes
but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust

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