US soldier in North Korea not the first to flee to the secretive state
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[July 19, 2023]
By Ed Davies
(Reuters) -The U.S. military identified a soldier who made an
unauthorised crossing into North Korea on Tuesday as Private Travis T.
King and said he was facing disciplinary action before he fled during a
tour of the heavily fortified border area.
He is believed to be in custody in the North, but his exact motive and
other details remain unclear.
Attempts by U.S. soldiers stationed in South Korea to desert or defect
to the communist state are rare, but here are some cases that have
occurred since the 1950-1953 Korean War ended with an armistice rather
than a peace treaty:
- Joseph T. White shot off the lock on a gate leading into the
demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the Koreas while a U.S. soldier
stationed in South Korea in 1982, before surrendering to North Korean
troops, according to an account published by the Korea Times.
The North claimed he had defected, though Pyongyang refused a request by
the United Nations Command to meet him. A U.S. military spokesman later
said an investigation indicated that White crossed into North Korea of
his own free will. In a video released by the North, White denounced the
United States and praised North Korea and its then leader Kim Il-Sung.
White's parents later received a handwritten letter believed to be from
their son, in which he said he was working as a teacher and happy in the
North, the Washington Post reported. White drowned in a swimming
accident in the North in 1985, according to a media report, citing
information received by his parents.
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A traffic sign is seen on the Grand
Unification Bridge which leads to the truce village Panmunjom, just
south of the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas, in Paju,
July 19, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
- Charles Robert Jenkins walked into North Korea when on patrol on
the DMZ in 1965. He later expressed regret for fleeing and explained
at his court marital that his motive was to avoid hazardous duty in
South Korea and combat in Vietnam. Jenkins said he had drunk 10
beers before the incident.
During his near four decades in the North, he taught English and
also portrayed a U.S. spy in a propaganda film. Jenkins married
Hitomi Soga, a Japanese woman abducted by Pyongyang. Soga was
allowed to return to Japan in 2002 and Jenkins joined her with their
two daughters in 2004. Jenkins died in 2017.
- James Joseph Dresnok was a 21-year old U.S. army private stationed
in South Korea in 1962 when he fled to the North. Facing a court
martial for skipping duty, Dresnok describes in a film about his
life how he bolted across the DMZ, through a minefield. Dresnok and
three fellow American military defectors including Jenkins, Jerry
Wayne Parrish and Larry Allen Abshier lived in relative isolation
for years before becoming stars of North Korean cinema by depicting
evil Americans in propaganda movies promoted by then leader Kim
Jong-Il. Reports, citing Dresnok's sons, say he died in Pyongyang in
2016.
(Reporting by Ed Davies in Sydney; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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