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North Korea's Underground Bunkers
Hundreds of bunkers are decoys, a defector says, while hundreds more
contain material for a possible invasion.
SEOUL, Nov. 16, 2009-North Korea built hundreds of bunkers at the
demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating it from South Korea even as the
previous Seoul government pursued its policy of opening to the North,
Radio Free Asia (RFA) reports.
A well-informed North Korean defector said in an interview that
Pyongyang had built at least 800 bunkers, including an unknown number of
decoys, to prepare for a possible invasion of South Korea while South
Korean president Roh Moo Hyun was in office.
"Each bunker contains military equipment that can fully arm 1,500 to
2,000 soldiers," the defector told RFA's Korean service, adding that
construction began in 2004-the second year of the Roh government.
"If a soldier carried all his military equipment, which weighs 32 kilos,
and came to the DMZ in full gear, he would already be exhausted before
infiltrating into the South. So they built bunkers at the DMZ and put
all their operations equipment there," he said.
The defector, who once worked as an informant for South Korea's Defense
Intelligence Command (DIC), uses the alias Kim Ju Song.
He declined to give any personal details and asked to have his voice
disguised for broadcast to protect relatives still in North Korea.
He is scheduled to arrive in the United States on Monday and attend a
closed-door session with U.S. legislators in Washington Wednesday.
More than 1,000 bunkers planned
"In the bunkers, there are South Korean military uniforms and name tags,
so that they can disguise themselves as South Korean troops. Also
reserved are...60-mm mortar shells, condensed high explosives, and all
sorts of bullets."
The bunkers are not linked to a series of underground passages built in
the past to attack South Korea, he said. About 70 percent of the roughly
800 bunkers are fakes, he said, decoys "to confuse the South."
"The North was trying to finish constructing bunkers by early 2008 with
the target number of 1,000 to 1,200," Kim said.
Nuclear-armed North Korea possesses one of the world's largest standing
armies, employing some 1.2 million of its 22.7 million citizens in the
military.
The bulk of the forces are deployed along the DMZ and make use of a vast
and complex tunneling network to hide their movement from the South
Korean military in South Korea's capital Seoul-a mere 40 kms (25 miles)
away.
Kim resettled in Seoul in the early 2000s and worked with the DIC from
2004-2007. As director of a trade center run by the military, he was
given the military title sangja, somewhere between lieutenant colonel
and colonel.
Through his work for the DIC, Kim said, he wanted to let people in South
Korea know the North is not giving up "its principal target of unifying
the Korean Peninsula by using armed force."
"Regardless of Seoul's appeasement policy, or whatever the South does
toward the North, Pyongyang hasn't given up its aim of unifying the
Korean Peninsula by military force.
They are sticking to this principle and teaching North Koreans about
it," Kim said.
Trade center with military ties
South Korean intelligence authorities asked Kim to explain the bunkers
in August 2005, he said.
Two months later, he said, "I delivered to the DIC my investigation
results, including the fact that the North began to build the bunkers in
2004 and that their purpose is to reserve military equipment for
attacking the South."
"In August 2006, I enticed a North Korean platoon leader, who was
involved in building the bunkers, into Yanji, China, where three DIC
agents interrogated him for two days. So we got all the information
about the bunkers, such as the bunkers' blueprints and how thick their
walls and covers are."
South Korean intelligence officials declined to comment on Kim's
account.
Kim also described his work in North Korea as director of a
military-affiliated trade center at a city in the North.
"I worked as a trader for a long time, but I worked as director for six
years," he said. "In each province, there are around two trade centers
that are run by the North Korean military."
Trade centers and their employees are given military status "to
intensify the power of control, and to separate the military affiliates
from the society, so that we are not bothered by local leaders. The
purpose is to give special status to the military affiliates and help us
earn more hard currency."
Although he declined to explain why he chose to defect, Kim said he
eventually bribed his way into China, where he spent two months before
his connections there arranged passage to South Korea.
"I have a human network in China that I built while I was in North
Korea. I got some help from them," he said.
"I used to visit China for business. And my Chinese counterparts also
came to North Korea. Those business exchanges helped me build the human
network."
Radio critical
North Korea allowed ships to carry shortwave radios as a safety measure
after a seismic wave struck North Korea's East coast and killed
thousands of fishermen in 2005, Kim said.
Radio channels were fixed to government frequencies, but North Koreans
took advantage of this relative relaxation to begin smuggling in radios
from China and are now selling them on the black market.
Pyongyang remains deeply wary of international broadcasts, he said.
"The North Korean government's biggest concern is international radio
broadcasts like those of Radio Free Asia. Content promoting democracy
and disclosing leaders' corruption as well as North Korea's human rights
situation-the Kim Jong Il regime considers this its biggest threat."
"When people learn these things, they don't believe in the regime
anymore. In this context, I think those broadcasts are fulfilling their
mission fully and serving as a pillar for the spirit of the North Korean
people."
Original reporting and translation by Song-Wu Park in Seoul. Written and
produced in English by Sarah Jackson-Han.
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publishing online news, information, and commentary in nine East Asian
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