http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Korea/MC18Dg01.html

 Mar 18, 2011

Seoul's bungling spies face backlash
By Sunny Lee 


BEIJING - On Tuesday, South Korea's Yonhap News had the headline "S Korean 
rescue team launches search operations in quake-devastated Japan". On the same 
day, the Wall Street Journal web site prominently pitched: "South Korean 
Celebrities Move to Support Japan", featuring actor Bae Yong-joon, a popular 
Korean soap opera star in Japan, especially among middle-aged housewives. The 
New York Times was also busy with Japan's earthquake story. That was good news 
for the Korean government, which was likely heaving a sigh of relief. 

The classic theory - that an external crisis diverts people's attention from 
domestic problems - appears to have been proven again. 

For days, the Lee Myung-bak government had been under a barrage of criticism 
for allegations that agents of the National

 Intelligence Service (NIS), the nation's main spy agency, had secretly entered 
the hotel room of visiting Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's 
delegation, including Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro. The episode sparked 
a national controversy, with bipartisan calls for the resignation of NIS 
director Won Sei-hoon, a crony of Lee. 

Three NIS agents, two males and one female, all dressed in black suits, 
allegedly broke into the Indonesian delegation's hotel room last month in 
downtown Seoul in an attempt to steal classified arms deal information from the 
envoy's laptop computer. Unexpectedly, an Indonesian aide returned to the room 
and encountered the intruders who were in the middle of copying files from the 
computer. The three trespassers didn't harm the Indonesian, but fled 
immediately. 

Jakarta officially asked Seoul to verify the media allegations, which cited 
senior government officials acknowledging the act, anonymously. The spy agency 
remained non-committal. South Korean media outlets for days headlined the spy 
bungle, leading to a closed-door parliamentary hearing and with the attendance 
of NIS head Won. People were outraged too, citing a "national shame" for doing 
unethical things to a visiting foreign delegation. Pundits also jeered at the 
"lack of professionalism" of the nation's top intelligence apparatus. 

National police chief Cho Hyun-oh was reluctant to probe the case, saying there 
wouldn't be any "national benefit" for a police investigation. Under 
intensifying pressure, the police have been compelled to act, however, as the 
NIS easily outranks the police; they are in the odd position of having to give 
the appearance of carrying out an investigation, while also not making the NIS 
seem in the wrong. 

For instance, the faces of the unmasked three agents were filmed by numerous 
closed-circuit TV cameras, which numbered as many as 250 at the five-star Lotte 
Hotel, but police said the footage was blurry, making it hard to identify the 
individuals, a claim disputed by the hotel. 

There were also fingerprints on the laptop computer from which the agents were 
trying to copy the classified information, but the police said it would take a 
"considerable time" to identify suspects because some of the fingerprints were 
from the Indonesian delegation. 

South Korea strictly enforces fingerprinting when issuing resident registration 
cards. So, there would no technical problem identifying any suspect, according 
to South Korean media reports. Hotel employees also saw the fleeing agents, but 
police didn't bother to contact them until five days after the incident. 

Interestingly, in addition to the media and the public, politicians across 
party lines have come forward to criticize the spy caper. Lawmaker Hong 
Joon-pyo, a Supreme Council member at President Lee's Grand National Party 
(GNP), harshly decried the NIS, asking Won to resign. "The NIS, which has been 
criticized for failing to anticipate and adequately cope with North Korea's 
attacks last year on the corvette Cheonan and Yeonpyeong Island, is now drawing 
international jeers," Hong fumed. 

Another GNP legislator, Chung Doo-un, also directly called for Lee to sack Won. 
That's an indirect challenge to Lee, since Won is a crony of Lee. When Lee was 
mayor of Seoul, Won was the vice mayor. It was widely believed that Won, 
without previous intelligence work, got the position as head of the NIS due to 
his personal ties with Lee. "The criterion for choice is how close he is to the 
president," said the local weekly Sisa Journal. The resignation of Won 
therefore would deal a severe blow to Lee, who is already battling charges he 
is a lame-duck. 

Defenders of the NIS fiasco point out that the intelligence service was merely 
"doing its job" for the national interest, even if the target was a visiting 
foreign delegation. The infiltration was likely aimed at gaining an upper hand 
in negotiations over the possible sale of T-50 Golden Eagle, an advanced jet 
trainer that can be upgraded to a fighter-bomber, to Indonesia. 

The Indonesians were said to be also considering a subsonic Russian plane, the 
Yak-130. NIS supporters also say that espionage is "common" even among friendly 
countries, citing how South Korean negotiators for a free-trade agreement with 
the United States, Seoul's staunch ally, were very careful while staying in the 
United States about which hotel they chose. 

Interestingly, in the domestic discourse, the spy bungle has sparked calls for 
the agency to do some "soul-searching". It has a bad reputation of serving as a 
governmental tool to suppress democracy in South Korea's history. In the recent 
history of successive military dictatorships, the powerful agency primarily 
served to oppress dissidents, torture democracy activists and incarcerate 
political rivals. 

The NIS, which used to be called the "Korean CIA", as it was modeled after the 
US Central Intelligence Agency, kidnapped Kim Dae-jung, a democracy dissident 
who later became president, and tried to dump him into the sea with his body 
bound. Kim later won a Nobel Peace Prize. Nonetheless Kim, after he became 
president, also faced accusations that his government was conducting illegal 
wiretapping on political rivals. 

It was fashionable in the agency's past to accuse political opponents and 
democracy activities of being "North Korean sympathizers" and subject them to 
harsh torture. Even lawmakers were no exception if they didn't offer 
"cooperation" to the South's military regimes. 

Lawmaker Kim Seong-gon, for example, had his moustache pulled out one hair at a 
time, according to the investigative Sisa Journal magazine. The beating that 
was handed out to Gil Jae-ho, another lawmaker arrested together with Kim, left 
him disabled for life. Both were tortured at the agency's interrogation center, 
located inside Seoul's central Namsan Mountain. 

The agency also summoned journalists who wrote critical articles about the 
dictatorship government to beat them. The phrase, "I ate noodles at Namsan," 
was used among journalists in reference to the food NIS interrogators handed 
out, according to the Sisa Journal. 

The NIS has also been accused of rigging the stock market, profiting from major 
developments and illegally importing Japanese cars for sale on the domestic 
market, wrote the Sisa Journal. 

Lawmakers have said that in response to the scandal, the NIS has also planted 
misinformation to divert people's attention. 

On March 4, there were reports about imminent visits of Kim Jong-eun, North 
Korea's heir, to China that grabbed wide attention. But lawmaker Choi Jae-sung 
claimed the NIS, attributed as source of the story, was "leaking inaccurate 
North Korean intelligence" in an effort to divert the public's attention from 
the NIS fiasco. "It is very common for the NIS to provide such unconfirmed 
North Korean intelligence," Choi said in a briefing to reporters. 

Sohn Hak-kyu, chairman of the main opposition Democratic Party (DP), urged 
President Lee to "normalize" the spy agency, arguing that it, under Won, made 
the overzealous blunder due to internal competition to please the nation's top 
leader, Lee. "I demand President Lee put all state organizations back to where 
they were and pave the grounds for democracy," Sohn said. Park Jie-won, the 
floor leader of the DP, said the resignation of Won would bring the NIS back to 
its "original mission of serving the people", and not serving the interests of 
those in power. 

One year ago, the South Korean magazine Monthly Chosun ran an article comparing 
Mossad, Israel's main spy agency, with the NIS in terms of their track records 
and professionalism. It concluded that "the NIS is an amateur" in comparison. A 
year later, with the Indonesian spy fiasco, the NIS seems to have confirmed 
this appraisal. 

As a recently democratized country, which has become the world's 14th-largest 
economy, the reform of the spy agency from an amateur organ into a truly 
professional and respectable intelligence agency should include not just better 
skills of espionage and bugging, but also the necessity to serve the people. 

While reporting the NIS fiasco, the South Korean newspaper Pressian described 
the spy organization as "unscrewed", a popular Korean expression that indicates 
morally laxity or ill discipline. Perhaps, it's time that the NIS was 
"screwed". 

Sunny Lee ([email protected] ) is a Seoul-born columnist and 
journalist; he has degrees from the US and China. 

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