SEOUL/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -An American soldier facing disciplinary action fled across the inter-Korean border into North Korea on Tuesday and was believed to be in North Korean custody, U.S. officials said, creating a fresh crisis for Washington in its dealings with the nuclear-armed state. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin expressed concern for the soldier, who the U.S. military in Korea said was on an orientation tour of Joint Security Area between the Koreas and "wilfully and without authorization crossed the Military Demarcation Line into the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)."
Well, that’s certainly a bold move
Right? Good for him.
I’m pretty sure that whatever his charges are, defecting to north Korea was a bad idea.
If he’s lucky he’ll have a standard of living almost as high as federal prison.
Shut up lib
How exactly do you know this? You’ve been there or just reporting what you heard from Western news?
Dang, you’re “pretty sure”? How’d you get so confident?
I am curious why that soldier faced disciplinary action in the first place. US soldiers aren’t exactly famous for good ethics, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he committed acts heinous enough to warrant escape.
By the way, wouldn’t the DPRK just send him back?
Actually I can believe that he’s a victim, because the US army tends to protect their actual criminals and prosecute the whistleblowers.
The DPRK should investigate what he did and sentence him according to their laws.
They’ll probably (rightly) suspect it as an espionage attempt and imprison him for six months or so before eventually deporting him. That’s what they’ve done with westerners in the past.
I don’t think this has happened since like the Korean war, so who knows tho
I would hope with an honest to goodness defection they would not deport him.
I hope so too!
I linked to an article elsewhere in this thread – looks like he got in a fight with a Korean civilian and was disorderly/combative with cops when arrested.
I think he knew that and still made the choice. There’s a handful of US defectors in the DPRK because they were ideologically closer to communism than imperialism, so maybe he’ll fare as well as he hopes.
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Ideology changes over time. Being in the military is often a catalyst for big changes to ideology.
Wow! Federal prison must be one hell of a luxury these days!
I mean, the only parts of Amerika that live better than the pen are the gateds on the coasts, and the former plantations; so I don’t know what you’re going on about there… I categorically refuse to denounce homeboy’s defection unless it comes out he was wanted for like-- sex crimes or smth. In which case, light him up on sight.
This is really underestimating how bad U.S. prisons are, and while god damn America and all, it’s still a country with a high standard of living for most people.
We have to be in touch with the actual material conditions of people, and “only a few places are better than federal custody” just isn’t that.