Posted on 10/12/2002 5:08:40 PM PDT by paltz
Former president Jimmy Carters selection October 11 as winner of the Nobel Peace Prize after several previous nominations must be interpreted as a criticism of the present U.S. administration, according to Nobel committee chair Gunnar Berge. He added, They should be sticking more to principles of mediation and international cooperation.
Sounds like good advice for Carter himself, circa 1980. Somehow, the former president had managed to smile and wave his way into elder-statesman status, while his role in the massacre of pro-democracy demonstrators in the Korean city of Kwangju has been all but forgotten.
In May 1980, Kwangju birthed massive student protests against the South Korean military government of Chun Doo Hwan, who'd come to power through a coup. Many other cities had seen such protests, but the students and later citizens of Kwangju had taken them a step further. They not only rallied in the face of truncheons and CS gas, but braved bullets and bayonets. May 18 and 19 saw initial massacres, followed by intense resistance. Protesters plundered armories and police boxes and drove the governments troops out of the city.
As detailed in Kwangju Diary (UCLA Asian Pacific, 1999), a text that I co-translated with Kap Su Seol and that was based on Jae-Eui Lees bestselling first-hand account, the city of Kwangju then began reorganizing its own economy and social life in the crucible of an armed uprising and general strike. Fuel and arms were rationed democratically, half-trained militias defended the city while townspeople prepared communal meals for hundreds in city parks, and nearby factories were plundered for vehicles and material to help spread the revolution.
Even the most radical of the student leaders thought the United States would intervene on their behalf, against the coup. After the fiasco of the Iranian revolution, Jimmy Carter wouldnt dare side against an honest, grassroots movement for democracy. He would mediate, wouldnt he?
Carter was watching, and the Iranian experience was on his mind. But as Chun Doo Hwans paratroopers circled the city of Kwangju and tested its perimeters, a meeting of high-level Carter administration officials, including Warren Christopher and Richard Holbrooke, gave the nod to the coup government to wipe out the rebels. Carters national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski summed it up: In the short term, supportin the longer term, pressure for political evolution.
As for the Kwangju situation, high-level cables granted to journalist Tim Shorrock in 1996 after Freedom of Information requests show that the officials counseled moderation, but have not ruled out the use of force, should the Koreans need to employ it to restore order. And force was used, in the form of a ferocious battle to take back the city. Perhaps as many as 2000 civilians were killed on May 26 and 27, though Chun Doo Hwan claimed there were only 144 civilian casualties. Disagreeing with official numbers (Western journalists in the city saw as many corpses stored in a single gymnasium) was cause for arrest.
As for Carter, a May 1980 report claimed that his administration was shocked at the coup governments brutality and had no knowledge of the deployment of Special Warfare Command units to Kwangju, two claims refuted categorically by Shorrocks investigation. In addition to records showing White House assent to Chun Doo Hwan's offensive, Shorrock also unearthed a number of Defense Intelligence Agency cables recording the movement of Special Warfare troops toward the city.
The Kwangju Uprising sparked South Koreas democratic movement, which eventually brought about civilian rule in the late 1980s. It has been called the most important event in the history of South Korea. However, except for a few small-press booksin 1999, when Kwangju Diary was released, it was the only book in print on the uprisingthe legacy of Kwangju has been ignored in the United States.
History obscured means history forever altered. Carters hands may hold the Nobel Peace Prize, but theyre also stained with the blood of thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators.
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OTN explores South Korea: Kwangju has come to mean 'never again'
... The government admitted to 240 dead at the Kwangju massacre but human rights groups
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Carter should have shared the prize years ago, when Begin and Sadat got it.
If I were Carter, I would turn down the award as insulting to me, to my country and to my president.
Yeah but like the lawyer in Doctor Detroit, he can't be insulted.
Sadat was murdered as a result of the agreement and Mubarak has maintained his distance from all things Israeli since.
Murbarak has enabled Iraq to subvert the embargo and allows his country to be the pipeline for goods going in and out of Iraq.
Please Explain your thinking...
THanks for the post.
Aw, lighten up, Jimmy - you're being waaaay too hard on yourself. It's not like you gave away the Panama Canal or something, is it?
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