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Korean Veterans Seek Honor, Recognition
Stars and Stripes | By T.D. Flack | September 11, 2006
KYODONG ISLAND, South Korea — A small group of elderly South Korean men has gathered on this island annually for the past five years to do something they claim their own country won’t do: honor their service during the Korean War.

Members of the Federation of Partisan Forces Korea say that neither South Korea nor the United States will recognize them for their bravery in fighting communist North Koreans and Chinese during the Korean War.

When Korea was divided at the end of World War II and the communist Kim Il Sung took charge of the north, many anti-communists fled the country to islands in the waters off the west coast. Armed with ancient weapons and small boats, they waged guerrilla warfare against the communists.

When the Korean War began, the 8th U.S. Army organized them into the 8240th Army Unit. At its peak, nearly 40,000 men fought with the 8240th. Only about 4,000 remain alive today.

The only U.S. entity that shows them gratitude today, members say, is the U.S. Special Operations Command Korea. It’s a relationship that goes back to 1953, when some of the first U.S. soldiers to earn the green beret worked with the partisan forces on the peninsula.

On Sept. 12, members of the Special Forces community — including the 39th Special Forces Detachment and the Special Forces Association Chapter 13 — joined the partisan veterans for a memorial service on a small bluff just 3,000 yards from the North Korean coast.

Federation president Park Sang-joon, 82, thanked the Americans for making the three-hour trip from Seoul to help honor “those who sacrificed themselves during the war.”

And Col. Simeon G. Trombitas, SOCKOR commander, said the U.S. troops found themselves humbled to be “in the presence of such warriors and patriots.”

Dozens of the veterans clad in a hodgepodge of camouflage uniforms, ribbons hanging from their chests, sat in single-file rows for the ceremony.

Trombitas called them “tigers” in their youth. And “in their hearts, they’re still tigers,” he said.

Following the ceremony, Park stood on the shoreline and pointed to his family’s home in North Korea. He said he has no idea whether any of his loved ones are alive.

After the war, the U.S. military gave control of the partisan forces to South Korea. South Korea transferred the men into their military but immediately discharged them.

Park said members of his organization fought for U.S. and South Korean recognition, but their efforts have so far slipped through the cracks.

The U.S. Department of Defense recently turned down a request for recognition, stating the 8240th belonged to South Korea, federation members said. And the South Korean Ministry of Defense claims the 8240th was a U.S. 8th Army unit.

Park explained that his members aren’t looking for any sort of compensation.

“We want honor,” he said.

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Copyright 2012 Stars and Stripes. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.

 
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