From: "Jim Yarker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Action Center
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2001 3:04 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [IAC] Report from North Korea: Testimony on U.S. war crimes

IN NORTH KOREA:
Witnesses testify on U.S. crimes in 1950-53 war

By Brian Becker, Co-Director, International Action Center
Pyongyang, DPRK

Becker is a co-director of the International Action Center
and the co-coordina tor of the upcoming Korea Truth
Commission War Crimes Tribunal that will be held June 23 at
the Interchurch Center, 475 Riverside Drive, in New York. He
was in Korea in May with the Commission.

It was exactly 48 years ago--on May 19,, 1953--that the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff decided to strike this city with
nuclear weapons.

The United States Air Force had already leveled all of North
Korea with three years of carpet bombing. No building or
structure above one story still existed above the 38th
parallel on the Korean Peninsula.

Nearly 3 million North Korean civilians had already perished
from war-related causes by mid-1953. (Encyclopedia
Britannica 1967)

"It is the view of the Joint Chiefs of Staff," Gen. Omar
Bradley wrote to President Dwight Eisenhower on May 19,
1953, "that the necessary air, naval, and ground operations,
including the extensive strategic and tactical use of atomic
bombs, be undertaken, so as to obtain maximum surprise and
maximum impact on the enemy, both militarily and
psychologically." [WW emphasis]

The next day at a meeting of the National Security Council,
Eisenhower approved the plan to dramatically escalate the
Korean War. He even helped select certain target areas for
the nuclear strikes.

Previously declassified top secret documents reveal just how
close the United States came to using nuclear bombs in
Korea--just a few years after it destroyed two Japanese
cities, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in 1945.

These documents are reported in "To Win a Nuclear War--The
Pentagon's Secret War Plans," by Michio Kaku and Daniel
Axelrod, published by South End Press in 1987.

BEHIND THE NUCLEAR STRATEGY

The nuclear option had been raised early in the war. The
main reservation cited by the war planners was the
Pentagon's worry about reducing its nuclear stockpile in
Europe. By 1953, however, the U.S. arsenal had greatly
expanded.

Why did the U.S. brass and president decide to use nuclear
weapons in mid-1953--a military action that would likely
kill hundreds of thousands of civilians?

The military conflict that started on June 25, 1950, had
stalled into a war of attrition. The Korean People's Army
aided by the People's Liberation Army of China had smashed
the advance of the United States/United Nations military
into North Korea in the late autumn of 1950.

The military stalemate dragged on for another 30 months. The
United States could not prevail. The operation seemed
hopelessly bogged down.

The United States had by then given up its dream of
conquering North Korea. Washington wanted an armistice
agreement. The Pentagon was increasingly frustrated with the
delay in negotiations.

Before the United States resorted to massive atomic warfare
in 1953, however, there was a sudden warming in
negotiations. While the Pentagon secretly prepared for
nuclear escalation, the Chinese unexpectedly agreed to a
large prisoner exchange that led to a reduction in tension.

Within a few months an armistice agreement led to a
conclusion of the military conflict. The nuclear holocaust
was narrowly averted.

But U.S. civilian and military leaders had agreed to
extensive use of nuclear weapons against the people of North
Korea. This shows that they lacked even the slightest moral
qualm about carrying out mass murder against civilian
populations.

Moral queasiness was never a factor. From the beginning of
the war the U.S. effort was predicated on a strategy of mass
murder.

Frustrated by the determination of the Korean people and
their Chinese allies, the Pentagon implemented a policy of
deliberate slaughter from the air and on the ground starting
in June 1950.

KOREA TRUTH COMMISSION INVESTIGATING TEAM

A delegation of the Korea Truth Commission that included
Ramsey Clark, former U.S. attorney general, and the Rev.
KiYul Chung toured both North and South Korea May 15-21. The
delegation met with hundreds of survivors of civilian
massacres in both parts of Korea.

The delegation visited and met with survivors of U.S.
atrocities in Sinchon County in North Korea. Sinchon was
considered a communist stronghold when U.S. troops occupied
the town in September 1950.

Before a North Korean and Chinese counter-offensive drove
them out in early December 1950, the occupying troops killed
35,383 people.

That was one of every four of the county's 140,000
inhabitants.

A museum carefully chronicles the U.S. crimes in Sinchon:
5,484 dwellings burned; 618 factories, public buildings and
irrigation facilities destroyed, peasant leaders executed.

In one act of savage revenge, retreating U.S. troops, being
mauled by the KPA and Chinese counter-offensive, murdered
900 civilians in an air-raid shelter. U.S. troops poured
gasoline into the shelter's ventilation hole and ignited it.

The Korea Truth Commission delegation also interviewed
survivors in Wonam-ri in North Korea. They were among the
few who lived through the massacre of 502 women and their
children who were locked in two storehouses that were
similarly torched in December 1950.

During its five-day stay in the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea, the KTC delegation reviewed historical documents,
scientific reports and archival papers and interviewed
eyewitnesses and survivors of U.S. war crimes. In North
Korea they also examined archival material that was
"liberated" from U.S. military offices by the Korean
People's Army in the first days of the war, when the North
Korean army quickly swept through Seoul and most of South
Korea.

These "liberated" documents reveal the extent of the U.S.
military command's control over the South Korean military
between 1945 and 1948. That is the period when over 300,000
communists, socialists and anti-imperialist nationalists
were executed by the Sygman Rhee regime.

NORTH KOREAN SURVIVORS COME FORWARD

The delegation took the testimony of individual North
Koreans, now between the ages of 58 and 76, who gave
personal accounts of the U.S. air war, use of
bacteriological and germ-warfare weapons, and other examples
showing there were civilian victims of unprovoked military
assaults by U.S. troops.

RiOk Hu, a 57-year-old retired teacher, broke into tears
when she recalled how U.S. troops shot off one of her arms
below the elbow when, at age 7, she failed to obey their
command to remain in a hut in her village.

"We had been hiding from the U.S. troops when they came into
our village but after three days we were so hungry my mother
sent me back to look for food," she recounted. When she saw
U.S. troops approaching her as she returned to her home, she
was frightened and ran into a hut. But the soldiers came in
right behind her.

"I was frightened and tried to leave. They yelled at me to
stop but I couldn't understand them. I raised my right hand
to open the door. The soldier fired and blew my arm to
pieces. Instinctively, I grabbed the door with my left hand
and he fired again."


RiOk Hu has lived the next 50 years without arms. She is
scheduled to testify, along with others from North and South
Korea, on June 23 at the War Crimes Tribunal sponsored by
the Korea Truth Commission, taking place at the Interchurch
Center in New York.

GERM WARFARE FROM THE AIR

Other survivors told stories of their families being wiped
out by the systematic three-year-long air war against North
Korea. U.S. pilots routinely complained that there were no
more available targets because the air war against the north
was so extensive.

Chang Kwan Hee, a 62-year-old medical doctor, told how her
family and neighbors had been devastated by disease that she
asserted was the byproduct of germ-warfare weapons dropped
in north Pyung-ahn province. Two of her brothers died from
burns suffered from napalm attacks.

The U.S. military used 20 times as much napalm in Korea as
it had used in World War II.

The KTC delegation made special efforts to investigate the
assertions that the United States used germ and
bacteriological weapons in North Korea. The commission is
re-publishing an extensive collection of documents produced
in the early 1950s by Chinese and Korean scientific
commissions on the use of weapons that carried cholera and
anthrax.

Speaking at a May 19 news conference in the Koryo Hotel in
Pyongyang, Ramsey Clark said, "The crimes committed by the
U.S. against the Korean people included mass executions of
political prisoners in South Korea between September 8,
1945, and the start of the Korean War on June 25, 1950."

Referring to recent revelations that former U.S. Sen. Bob
Kerrey and a Navy SEALS unit he commanded carried out a
massacre of South Vietnamese women and children in 1969,
Clark said, "The Korean people, like the Vietnamese people,
also suffered from countless massacres between 1950 and 1953
by U.S. occupying troops."

SANCTIONS ARE CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY

Clark told the media that continued U.S. economic sanctions
on North Korea constitute a crime against humanity.

Socialist North Korea had been a food exporter until 1989.
Its people enjoyed full employment, free universal health
care, virtually free housing, and free education.

But with the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union and the
demise of its other trading partners in Eastern Europe, the
North Korean economy sharply contracted. At the same time
the country experienced a decade of drought and severe
floods.

Under these difficult conditions, the economic blockade and
sanctions against North Korean have taken a deep toll on the
population. Recent reports by North Korean officials
indicate that infant mortality has skyrocketed. Average life
expectancy plummeted from 73.2 years in 1993 to 66.8 in
1999.

The mortality rate for children under 5 rose during the same
years from 27 deaths per 1,000 to 48.

"Economic sanctions, as we have seen in the last decade in
Iraq and in North Korea, can be even more devastating to the
civilian population than outright war," Clark told the
reporters at the May 19 news conference. "Our tribunal in
New York will hold the U.S. accountable for using food and
medicine as a weapon against North Korea. And we will prove
that the occupation of South Korea by 37,000 U.S. troops to
this day violates the fundamental rights of the Korean
people. No people can be free when a large contingent of
foreign troops occupies their soil."

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