The Maui News - Weekender

Propaganda tool? Bargaining chip? What North Korea may have in mind for Travis King

- By KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — What will North Korea do about the first U.S. soldier in decades to flee into its territory?

Its official media have yet to mention Pvt. Travis King, there’s little precedent for his situation and guesses about the country’s next steps vary widely.

Unauthoriz­ed crossings across the Koreas’ heavily fortified border are extremely rare. The few Americans who crossed into North Korea in the past include soldiers, missionari­es, human rights advocates or those simply curious about one of the world’s most cloistered societies. North Korea has used a varied playbook in its handlings of them.

Defecting soldiers, like Charles Jenkins or James Dresnok in the 1960s, were treated as propaganda assets, showcased in leaflets and films spewing anti-U.S. hatred and praising the North’s regime.

Other Americans were detained, criticized and handed harsh penalties based on confession­s of anti-state activities they later said were coerced. Behind-the-scenes pleas and lengthy backdoor negotiatio­ns followed, and the detainee was freed, often flown home with a high-profile U.S. official who traveled to Pyongyang to secure the release.

None of the previous cases, however, seems relevant as a forecast for King.

The length of his stay will likely depend on whether North Koreans find a way to spin his story for their own propaganda, said Jenny Town, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center in Washington and director of the North Korea-focused 38 North website.

It’s unclear whether the North Korea of today would

treat King similarly to how it did Jenkins and Dresnok, whose crossings were six decades ago. And King might be less ideal as propaganda material. Jenkins walked into North Korea in 1965 to avoid combat duty in Vietnam, making it easier for Pyongyang to paint him as a disillusio­ned U.S. solider who escaped evil imperialis­ts and chose to live in North Korea’s “socialist paradise.” There’s a big difference with King, who had legal problems and faced disciplina­ry action and a possible discharge before he bolted into North Korea.

“If they decide that he’s not a good story, they may just return him so that this doesn’t exacerbate already fragile relations (with the United States),” Town said. “This is largely a wait-and-see as there’s just so little precedent for it.”

But Yang Moo-jin, president of the University of North Korean Studies in South Korea, says it’s highly unlikely North Korea would pass up the propaganda value of a U.S. soldier who voluntaril­y entered the country.

While King’s immediate

value would be propaganda, Pyongyang could also seek opportunit­ies to use him as a bargaining chip to wrest concession­s from Washington, he said.

It’s possible North Korea may demand the United States scale back its military activities with South Korea in exchange for King’s release. The U.S. has increased its deployment of strategic assets like bombers and nuclear-capable submarines since 2022 in a show of force against North Korea’s nuclear threat.

North Korea’s goal would be to create a dilemma for Washington in “choosing between (strengthen­ing) U.S.-South Korean nuclear deterrence strategies and protecting its own citizen,” Yang said. “That would create challenges for South Korea, which has been focusing on strengthen­ing nuclear deterrence strategies with the United States.”

Thae Yong Ho, a former diplomat at the North Korean Embassy in London who defected to South Korea in 2016 and is now a lawmaker, said the North has never released any U.S. soldier who walked into the country voluntaril­y. But it’s also unclear whether North Korea would want to hold King for long, considerin­g considerin­g his low rank and thus likely low level of U.S. military intelligen­ce he could provide and the high costs of managing his life.

“A specialize­d security and surveillan­ce team must be organized (for King), an interprete­r must be arranged, a designated vehicle and driver must be provided, and accommodat­ion must be arranged . ... You also need to indoctrina­te him into the North Korean system, so you will need to organize a team of specialize­d teachers and a curriculum,” Thae wrote on Facebook.

Park Won Gon, a professor at Seoul’s Ewha University, said the current high tensions between Washington and Pyongyang would complicate diplomatic efforts to bring King home.

During cozier times with the United States, North Korea released U.S. detainees rather swiftly and easily.

In 2018, North Korea freed Bruce Byron Lowrance a month after he entered the country illegally through China.

Lowrance’s relatively quick deportatio­n came in the afterglow of a highly orchestrat­ed summit between thenU.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, at which they described vague goals for a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula and vowed to improve ties. Weeks ahead of that summit, North Korea released three American detainees who returned home on a plane with then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

That diplomacy collapsed in 2019, and the current environmen­t seems unfavorabl­e for King’s early release.

 ?? AP photo ?? A group of tourists stand near a border station at Panmunjom in the Demilitari­zed Zone in Paju, South Korea, on Tuesday. Not long after this photo was taken, Travis King, a U.S. soldier, pictured with dark blue shirt and dark cap (fourth left) bolted across the border and became the first known American detained in the North in nearly five years.
AP photo A group of tourists stand near a border station at Panmunjom in the Demilitari­zed Zone in Paju, South Korea, on Tuesday. Not long after this photo was taken, Travis King, a U.S. soldier, pictured with dark blue shirt and dark cap (fourth left) bolted across the border and became the first known American detained in the North in nearly five years.

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