What I heard from a US Army intelligence officer was that it was his
job to go into a village after the communists left, and then he was
still there to see what the South Koreans did. He said that time after
time, it was always the same. Communists or South Korean army, either
one would mis-treat and massacre civilians because they had obviously
collaborated with the enemy. It was also part of the intelligence job to
document the scene and forensic evidence to prove which party did the
killing. Therefore we can take it for granted that there are mountains
of such photographs yet to be unclassified.
Men With Guns, about the same quasi-religious witch hunt hysteria in
Guatemala.
-Bob
--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, MA PA <drymarc2003@...> wrote:
>
> Link to full
article: http://mparent7777-1.livejournal.com/192814.htmlRevealed:
Execution of tens of thousands kept secret by US Army
> May. 18th, 2008 at 4:14 PM
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> Related
> PHOTOS: 1950 Korea Mass Killings(Warning: Graphic)
> Photography by the US Army kept secret!!!
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> Sun May 18, 12:59 PM
ET
> This photograph by the U.S. Army, provided by the U.S. National
Archives in College Park, Md., on Monday, May 5, 2008, is one of a
series of declassified images depicting the summary execution of South
Korean political prisoners by the South Korean military and police at
Daejeon, South Korea, over several days in July 1950. The Truth and
Reconciliation Commission of Korea is investigating this and similar
mass killings in South Korea in 1950-51. A chief investigator estimates
up to 7,000 were killed at Daejeon, and tens of thousands elsewhere.
> (AP Photo/National Archives,
U.S. Army)
>
> Fear, secrecy kept 1950 Korea mass killings hidden
By CHARLES J. HANLEY, AP Special Correspondent Sun May 18, 1:26 PM ET
>
>
> One journalist's bid to report mass murder in South Korea in 1950 was
blocked by his British publisher. Another correspondent was denounced as
a possibly treasonous fabricator when he did report it. In South Korea,
down the generations, fear silenced those who knew.
>
> Fifty-eight years ago, at the outbreak of the Korean War, South Korean
authorities secretively executed, usually without legal process, tens of
thousands of southern leftists and others rightly or wrongly identified
as sympathizers. Today a government Truth and Reconciliation Commission
is working to dig up the facts, and the remains of victims.
>
> How could such a bloodbath have been hidden from history?
> --MORE--
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> Tags: civilians, coverup, deaths, military, photos, south koreaLink
to full article: http://mparent7777-1.livejournal.com/192814.html
>
>
>
> MARC PARENT, mparent7777,
mparent, ccnwon
> CRIMES AND CORRUPTIONS OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER NEWS
> http://mparent7777-1.livejournal.com/
> http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/blog/38
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