[KS] US involvement in 1979 assassination of S. Korean president Park Chung-hee?

Dr. Edward D. Rockstein ed4linda at yahoo.com
Thu May 2 10:38:47 EDT 2013


I don't know about any U.S. involvement in the 1979 assassination or not, but I do know that there are nine types of information exempted from release under FOIA. The first clearly is:  "Those documents properly classified as secret in the interest of national  defense or foreign policy."  [emphasis added]

Dr. Edward D. Rockstein 

ed4linda at yahoo.com   

"All history was a palimpsest, scraped clean and re-inscribed exactly asoften as was necessary."
George Orwell; Nineteen Eighty-Four; 1949.


--- On Thu, 5/2/13, Katsiaficas, George <katsiaficasg at wit.edu> wrote:

From: Katsiaficas, George <katsiaficasg at wit.edu>
Subject: [KS] US involvement in 1979 assassination of S. Korean president Park Chung-hee?
To: "Korean Studies Discussion List" <koreanstudies at koreaweb.ws>
Date: Thursday, May 2, 2013, 9:42 AM



 










On April 29, 2013, a lawsuit was filed against the CIA for refusing to release documents related to US involvement in the 1979 assassination of South Korean President Park Chung-hee as well as US involvement in
 his seizure of power in a 1961 military coup d’etat.  Park ruled South Korea with an iron fist from 1961-1979, until he was assassinated by his own KCIA chief. 





This assassination follows a pattern of US involvement in the overthrow of governments in Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), Brazil (1964), and Chile (1973).

   

More than three years ago, Professor George Katsiaficas of Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston sought all relevant documents in two separate Freedom of Information Act requests. The CIA has stonewalled
 his requests, compelling him to take legal action. 

   

For decades now, a sizeable portion of public opinion in South Korea has believed that the US was behind this assassination after President Park outlived his usefulness to America interests. The assassin, Kim Jae-gyu
 (former director of the Korean CIA), maintained that he was encouraged to kill Park by a former US ambassador. In the midst of the Gwangju Uprising of 1980, Kim was executed before he could make public his knowledge of the events leading up to Park’s assassination. 

   

Later this month, Park Chung-hee’s daughter, Park Gun-hye—now president of South Korea—is expected to arrive in Washington to confer with US president Obama and address a joint session of Congress. 

   

The lawsuit is attached here and can also be accessed at 

http://www.pmpress.org/content/article.php/20130423151755456 

   

For more information, contact attorney Neil Berman at 

109 College Avenue 

Somerville, MA 02144 

(617) 628-1563 

njberman2 at juno.com 

   

or George Katsiaficas 

katsiaficasg at wit.edu 

   






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