US
Military Issues Alert After Discovering North Korean Propaganda On
American Bases
23
December, 2017
U.S.
Forces Korea, a sub-unified command of the United States Pacific
Command, has issued a warning to servicemembers on the Korean
Peninsula to stay vigilant for “insider threats” after North
Korean propaganda surfaced on American military bases.
According
to Stripes.com,
the 8th Army reported that a “significant number of North
Korean propaganda leaflets and CDs” were found at Seoul’s
Yongsan Garrison, on Thursday. This prompted military officials to
release a Facebook alert, warning US soldiers to “maintain
situational awareness,” since a number of foreign nationals
have access to US military bases, which they could be viewed as
“potential insider threats.”
“Given
the number of foreign nationals with access to our military
installations via employment, sponsorship and partnership programs,
the potential for insider threats is always a reality,” the alert
said. “It is essential for our personnel to report all [propaganda]
and suspicious individuals to the appropriate authorities to help
mitigate potential threats.”
According to Public
Radio International,
North Korean propaganda is nothing new in the South. Since 2015,
more than 2 million North Korean propaganda leaflets have
been found in Seoul, the capital and regional provinces
near the DMZ. It’s suspected that North Korea’s military
uses primitive balloons with timing devices to float the literature
over the DMZ into the South. In March, a group of hikers found a
trove of North Korean propaganda leaflets on the foothills of Seoul’s
Gwanak Mountain; as shown below:
This
leaflet depicts South Korean leader Park Geun-hy cowering atop
the presidential Blue House.
A
graphic decapitation of then-Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn.
A
missile striking Defense Secretary James Mattis and government
officials.
North
Koreans severely dislike Defense Secretary James Mattis, as he flies
above South Korean officials “Stirring Up Nuclear War.”
According
to Public Radio International, both North and South Koreas have waged
an infowar on one another since the 1950s. "Pictures have also
been shared recently on South Korean social media showing recovered
flyers. Some of those include depictions of President Donald Trump
and refer to him as an “old beast lunatic” — an insult North
Korea has in the past translated as “dotard.”
In the past, both Koreas dropped subversive material into each other’s territory with the intent of inciting insurrection or defection. The tactic has been used ever since the 1950-53 Korean War, when American forces sent millions of anti-Communist flyers into the North, according to the book “Bury The Enemy With Leaflets.”
While
hardly surprising that the information war continues, it is
concerning that North Korean propaganda ended up in a South
Korean US military base even if it will have zero actual impact. What
is more troubling is the question who put it there, and whether North
Korea has spies, moles and potentially saboteurs, inside South Korea
military forces.
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