On January 5, 1968 the north Korean navy captured the US navy spy ship USS Pueblo near the coastal city of Wonsan.
In 2021, the crew of the Pueblo were awarded $2.3 billion in "reparations" from a US district court. How did this happen?👇🧵
The USS Pueblo posed as an environmental research vessel but was a US navy spy ship conducting missions against north Korea & the Soviet Union.
According to a report by congress, one of its missions was to see how north Korea would respond if a US navy spy ship was nearby.
On January 5, 1968 the north Korean navy captured the US navy spy ship USS Pueblo near the coastal city of Wonsan.
After 10 months of negotiation between north Korea and the US, north Korea agreed to release the Pueblo crew in exchange for an apology from the US.
82 of the crew members and the remains of one American were returned to the US on December 23, 1968.
The USS Pueblo is still in north Korea, and is used today as a site of education about national security issues.
Last February, 61 former Navy crew members and 110 family members were awarded $2.3 billion dollars in “reparations” by a US district court against north Korea in a case John Doe A-1 et al. v. Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. thediplomat.com/2021/03/north-…
Typically, sovereign nations have sovereign immunity and cannot be tried by a different nation’s courts.
But the US claims power to try nations that they label as state sponsors of terrorism (currently: Cuba, north Korea, Syria, Iran) under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act.
In this way, US courts have awarded tens of billions of dollars to plaintiffs in cases against “state sponsors of terrorism.” North Korea alone has been tried 7 times in US courts and ordered to pay over $3.7 billion in reparations.
The USS Pueblo crew members and their families qualified to receive $20 million of the $2.3 billion from the US Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund.
The rest of the plaintiffs’ “reparations” can come from seizures of north Korean assets, justified by sanctions.
For instance in 2019, the US seized a north Korean cargo ship, Wise Honest, which federal courts later awarded to the families of Otto Warmbier and Rev. Kim Dong-shik (plaintiffs in similar state sponsored terrorism cases).
The idea of north Korea owing “reparations” to the US but not the other way around is a farce.
US law is a tool of US imperialism; it operates on an assumption of supremacy over other countries, rather than a mutual recognition of sovereignty.
North Korea is garnering international attention for its recent construction boom. Here's a closer look at some of the recently unveiled projects that show the country’s priorities. 1/9
The Hwaseong District in Pyongyang was farmland prior to the beginning of construction in 2022. The project set out to build 50,000 new apartment units over five years, and has now exceeded this goal. Like all housing under North Korean law, every new apartment unit is free. 2/9
The Onpo Resort is a facility offering spas, treatment, and the largest hot springs complex in North Korea to date. The resort reflects North Korea’s Constitution, which guarantees “the right to relaxation” including holidays, paid leave, and health resorts at State expense. 3/9
June 25 marks the "official" start of the Korean War 75 years ago.
In reality, the war began as soon as US troops arrived in Korea in 1945 with the intent to crush our people's anti-imperialist, democratic revolution
Years before 1950, a de facto civil war broke out in US-occupied southern Korea, as progressive forces resisted the imperialist attempt to split apart our homeland and prevent the emergence of socialism and national sovereignty.
Well before 1950, a number of skirmishes along the 38th parallel, the majority initiated by South Korean aggression, had turned the peninsula into a tinderbox.
After June 25, 1950, the first phase of the war was marked by brutal US and South Kroean massacres—in the south.
We do not mourn Jimmy Carter. Today we mourn the 2,000 martyrs of Gwangju, who were slaughtered by the South Korean military regime with the support and knowledge of the Carter Administration.
On May 17, 1980, Col. Chun Doo Hwan of South Korea declared martial law in the face of a rising movement for democracy led by students and workers.
In the city of Gwangju, students rose up in protest. Soldiers at the scene killed a deaf man, Kim Gyeong Cheol—sparking a rebellion
The Gwangju Uprising seized control of the city for 9 days. The people of the city formed committees to govern themselves, organizing food distribution, medical aid, self-defense, and more. Many hoped the US would intervene on their behalf.
On New Year’s Eve, global media reported that Kim Jong Un no longer supports Korean reunification. But this is not true.
A thread 🧵
Kim Jong Un recently announced major changes in north Korea’s stance towards reunification. This marks a huge breakdown in inter-Korean relations after years of US, south Korean, and Japanese aggression.
However, north Korea has NOT abandoned reunification.
In a speech made on Dec 31 at the 9th Plenum of the Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea, Kim Jong Un rejected south Korea’s formula for “reunification by absorption”— the idea south Korea should absorb the north, overthrow its govt, and abolish its socialist system.
As anti-imperialist Koreans, we stand unequivocally with Palestine, its people and its armed resistance against the Zionist occupation. This is neither a two-sided conflict nor a war: it is an occupation and a genocide.
🧵
As Koreans whose homeland is divided, we know imperialism is our common enemy. Following our liberation from Japanese colonialism and the beginning of independent socialist construction in Korea, the US split our country in two and indiscriminately bombed and killed our people.
There is a reason the Nakba and the division of Korea coincided in 1948, backed by the same imperialist interests. Both Korea and Palestine are geographically strategic sites for the US empire’s grip across the world.
Today marks the 73rd anniversary of the “start” of the Korean War. We've curated a list of educational resources that the US & south Korean governments desperately tried to erase from our history. In the face of blatant US propaganda, it is up to us to learn the real history 🧵
The Hidden History of the Korean War by I.F. Stone
In this new book, I.F. Stone challenges the dominant historical narrative about the Korean War and exposes the US' deliberate attempts to prolong the war.
Blowback, Season 3
Brendan James and Noah Kulwin expose US involvement in the Korean War using primary sources, vivid storytelling, and sharp historical analysis. The season also features interviews with Suzy Kim, Tim Shorrock, and Bruce Cummings.