U.S. soldier who deserted to North Korea
in 1965 dies aged 77
Send a link to a friend
[December 12, 2017]
By Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - A U.S. soldier who
deserted to North Korea more than half a century ago, but who was
eventually allowed to leave the secretive state, has died in Japan aged
77.
One of the Cold War's strangest dramas began in 1965 when Charles Robert
Jenkins, then a 24-year-old army sergeant nicknamed "Scooter" from tiny
Rich Square in North Carolina, disappeared one January night while on
patrol near the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas.
At an emotional court martial in Japan in 2004, Jenkins - who had never
gone to high school - said he deserted to avoid hazardous duty in South
Korea and escape combat in Vietnam.
"It was Christmas time, it was also cold and dark. I started to drink
alcohol. I never had drunk so much alcohol," he said in a thick Southern
accent, choking back sobs.

He drank 10 beers, took his men on patrol and told them to wait while he
checked the road below. He then walked towards North Korea, holding a
rifle with a white t-shirt tied around it. He said he had planned to go
to Russia and turn himself in, and had not expected North Korea to keep
him.
While in North Korea, where he taught English to soldiers and portrayed
an evil U.S. spy in a propaganda film, Jenkins met and married Hitomi
Soga, a Japanese woman 20 years his junior who had been kidnapped by
North Korea to help train spies.
Fear for his safety and the family he built with Soga made it impossible
to refuse any demands made on him, Jenkins said.
[to top of second column]
|

Former U.S. Army sergeant Charles Robert Jenkins, who deserted to
North Korea decades ago, faces reporters at a town hall of his
Japanese wife Hitomi Soga's hometown Sado on the Japan Sea coast
December 7, 2004. REUTERS/Eriko Sugita/File photo

"You don't say no to North Korea. You say one thing bad about Kim
Il-sung and then you dig your own hole, because you're gone,"
Jenkins told his court martial, referring to the founder of the
secretive state.
Soga was allowed to return to Japan in 2002 and Jenkins followed
with their two North Korean-born daughters in 2004.
After serving a token 30-day sentence for desertion, Jenkins moved
with his family to Sado, Soga's rural hometown, late in 2004. He
subsequently worked in a gift shop and wrote a book about his
experiences in North Korea.
A Sado town official confirmed his death, but could give no further
details.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Michael Perry)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |