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From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Friday, April 21, 2000 8:21 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] U.S. Military Leaders Knew Of Mass Executions In Korea


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U.S. military leaders knew of executions during Korean
War, documents show 
 
 
By SANG-HUN CHOE, Associated Press 

DOKCHON, South Korea (April 20, 2000 9:27 p.m. EDT
http://www.nandotimes.com) - Observed at times by U.S.
Army officers, South Korean soldiers and police
executed more than 2,000 political prisoners without
trial in the early weeks of the Korean War, according
to declassified U.S. military documents and witnesses.


Supreme commander Gen. Douglas MacArthur became aware
of at least one of the mass shootings, according to
documents originally classified "top secret." 

The new information, detailed in reporting by The
Associated Press and a Korean researcher,
substantiates what some historians have long believed:
Large numbers of South Korean leftists arrested by the
right-wing regime were secretly killed as its forces
retreated before the North Korean army in mid-1950,
apparently to keep them from collaborating with the
communist invaders. 

Subsequently, during their brief occupation of the
south, the North Koreans executed many suspected
rightists. Those killings, once discovered, were
widely publicized in the Western press. 

Information about the South Korean government's mass
executions was suppressed for decades under this
country's former military rulers. Relevant South
Korean records were destroyed, researchers believe. 

But victims' families recently began speaking out, and
human bones have been unearthed at mass burial sites. 

Witnesses describe brutal mass shootings. A retired
South Korean admiral told the AP that 200 people,
never put on trial, were taken offshore to be shot and
dumped into the sea. Villagers in the Dokchon area
remembered truckloads of civilians, trussed together,
brought to the hills here and executed by South Korean
military police. 

The AP learned it was a U.S. Army account of those
Dokchon killings that reached MacArthur. Although the
legendary U.S. general also commanded the South Korean
military at the time, he referred this report on its
actions to American diplomats "for consideration" and
"such action as you deem appropriate." 

John Muccio, the U.S. ambassador at the time, later
reported back that he urged President Syngman Rhee and
Defense Minister Shin Sung-mo to end summary
executions deemed illegal and inhumane. 

"I urged Captain Shin to see that the Korean Army,
Police and Youth Groups carry out executions of
captured members of the enemy forces, including
guerrillas, only after due process of law has been
observed and that when carried out they should be in a
humane manner," Muccio wrote in an Aug. 25, 1950,
letter to MacArthur's top subordinate, the U.S. 8th
Army commander Lt. Gen. Walton L. Walker. 

South Korean soldiers had shown "extreme cruelty"
toward the condemned prisoners at Dokchon, a U.S.
military police investigator, Sgt. 1st Class Frank
Pearce, said in a written report to his company
commander on the shootings. 

He and other American witnesses reported that 200 to
300 prisoners, including women and a girl 12 or 13
years old, were killed by South Korean military police
on Aug. 10, 1950, on a mountain near this hamlet 155
miles southeast of Seoul, South Korea's capital. 

A South Korean officer told the Americans the
prisoners were "spies" - not North Korean soldiers or
guerrillas. 

Pearce, who went to the scene after hearing gunfire,
said the Korean soldiers placed 20 prisoners at a time
on the edge of a cliff and shot them in the back of
the head. Because of poor aim, some did not die
immediately. 

"At about three hours after the executions were
completed, some of the condemned persons were still
alive and moaning. The cries could be heard coming
from somewhere in the mass of bodies piled in the
canyon," Pearce wrote in his one-page report. 

Local Korean witnesses today echo Pearce's description
of cruel treatment. Several times in mid-1950,
military trucks loaded with people in white peasant
clothing drove up the winding mountain pass, and
shooting later echoed through the valley, villagers
said. 

"A truck pulled up with seven or eight people. They
were all tied together, so they had difficulty getting
off the truck. The soldiers kicked them and hit their
heads with the butts of their rifles," Bae In-soo, 83,
told the AP. "They dragged the poor people in the
gully and shot them." 

"Whenever we heard the shootings," recalled Bae
Choon-dal, 79, "police came later and press-ganged us
to bury the bodies. We hastily threw some dirt over
the bodies and ran away as quickly as possible. It was
a dreadful time." 

The documents found by the AP consist of two brief
U.S. Army reports on the Dokchon shootings and the
high-level correspondence that resulted. In one note,
Muccio's top aide, Everett Drumright, told the
ambassador he had protested previous such shootings -
in the city of Taejon in early July. 

Those earlier executions are recounted in other
declassified documents, accompanied by photographs,
found by researcher Lee Do-young at the U.S. National
Archives and published in January in the Seoul
newspaper Hankook Ilbo. 

In that material, which was reviewed by the AP, the
U.S. Army attache at the embassy, Lt. Col. Bob E.
Edwards, reported that 1,800 political prisoners were
executed over three days at Taejon, 93 miles south of
Seoul. A U.S. Army major took photos of the killings
with Edwards' camera. The report and photos were sent
to the U.S. Army intelligence staff in Washington. 

Edwards wrote that he believed "thousands of political
prisoners were executed within few weeks after fall of
Seoul to prevent their possible release by advancing
enemy troops. Orders for execution undoubtedly came
from top." 

After the Hankook Ilbo stories, Seoul's Defense
Ministry said it would investigate reports of mass
executions. 

The AP located the declassified documents on Dokchon
while investigating what happened at No Gun Ri, South
Korea, July 26-29, 1950, when witnesses say U.S.
forces killed about 400 South Korean refugees.
American veterans acknowledged to the AP that their
unit killed many civilians there. Both Washington and
Seoul are investigating. 

The AP's No Gun Ri report last September spurred South
Koreans to go public with other painful episodes from
the 1950-53 war, including accounts of mass killings
of fellow citizens by soldiers and police. 

Rhee's government had fought a guerrilla war with
indigenous left-wing elements in the late 1940s. In
mid-1950, it feared leftists would collaborate with
the North Koreans sweeping down the peninsula. Tens of
thousands were arrested, historians say. 

"There was no time for trials for them. Communists
were streaming down. It (summary execution) was a
common practice at that time," said retired Rear Adm.
Nam Sang-hui, 74, now living in New York City. 

Following orders as a navy commander in early July
1950, Nam said, he authorized three ships to carry 200
people out to sea off the eastern port of Pohang,
where they were shot by police and their bodies were
thrown into the sea, weighted with stones. 

"It happened during a critical situation for South
Korea. We should not judge these incidents through the
standards of peacetime," Nam said. 

Relatives say many execution victims had nothing to do
with communism and were not convicted of any crimes. 

"You cannot kill people just because you think they
were unreliable or there is something wrong with their
ideology," said researcher Lee, a U.S.-educated
psychologist who said his father, a government
official, was among 210 people killed by policemen and
soldiers on Aug. 20, 1950, on the southern island of
Cheju. 

Lee said those executed included children, students,
teachers and even rightist youth leaders against whom
local policemen bore grudges. Lee, citing the Taejon
killings, blames U.S. authorities as well. 

"The Americans cannot escape the charge that they
condoned, if not supported, the massacres. After all,
those soldiers killed these people with rifles and
bullets the Americans gave them, while American
officers stood behind their backs taking pictures,"
Lee said. 

Reports of such mass shootings appear to have
circulated routinely among U.S. Army staff officers. 

"The South Korean police have been quite busy in the
Yunchon, Sangju, Hamchang vicinity disposing of South
Korean communists," a secret U.S. intelligence report
said matter-of-factly on Aug. 22, 1950. It said U.S.
officers declined a South Korean invitation to witness
one mass execution. 

Ambassador Muccio's August intervention apparently had
little impact. Scattered news reports of the time,
along with Korean witnesses and U.S. war veterans
today, tell of many instances in which scores of
alleged communist sympathizers or collaborators were
summarily executed by South Korean forces sweeping
back toward Seoul in September 1950. By April 1951,
South Korea's top commander, Lt. Gen. Chung Il-kwon,
felt compelled to order his troops to stop "physically
assaulting civilians" in South Korea. 

The North Koreans also carried out large-scale
killings. One U.S. Army report said they slaughtered
thousands of anti-communist South Koreans, and some
captured American GIs, before their retreat. 

After Rhee's government was toppled in 1960, the South
Korean Parliament began investigating alleged summary
executions during the war, but the inquiry ended
abruptly in 1961 when the military seized power. It
remained a taboo subject through decades of military
rule, until the liberalization of the 1990s. 

Victims' families have petitioned the South Korean
government for investigations of at least 10 alleged
civilian massacres by South Korean police and
soldiers. They led local journalists to two abandoned
mine pits where piles of bones were discovered,
including skeletal remains of children. 

"Our first goal is simple, to let the world know that
this massacre of a gigantic scale really took place,"
said Lee Bok-ryong, 71, who lost his father in the
national purge. 

Investigative researcher Randy Herschaft contributed
to this report. 



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