South Korea/Deep state
South Korea/Deep state (Deep state) | |
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Formation | 24 July 1948 |
The South Korean Deep state was partially exposed after the Korean National Intelligence Service was engaged in vote rigging and using trolls to try to get Park Geun-hye elected. |
The South Korean Deep state was shaped by the US deep state after the end of World War II.
It was exposed in 2016 when South Korean President Park Geun-hye was shown to have been under the influence of Choi Soon-sil. The Korean economy is dominated by a few large companies.[citation needed]
Contents
History
When World War 2 ended, the southern part of the Korean peninsula, formerly a Japanese colony, passed to US control, while the northern part came under Soviet control. The first South Korean President was the US military administration installed the US educated Syngman Rhee, on 24 July 1948, after winning 92.3% of the votes in a rigged election. Scrambling to find a power base for an administration of its area of influence, the US chose to rely on several reactionary factions. [citation needed]
- One noticeable group was the former collaborators with Japan, especially in the colonial police and members of the Japanese Imperial Forces, who essentially formed the core of the new South Korean police, intelligence services and army.[citation needed]
- Another was the feudal landlords and aristocracy, tainted by collaboration, but still maintaining their wealth and influence.[citation needed]
- A third noticeable group was the refugees from the north of the peninsula, including feudal landlords and their private goon squads, that with US support founded anti-communist groups that to this day have large influence in the South.[citation needed]
- Fourthly, fundamentalist Christian groups such as the Unification movement ('Moonies'), under pastor Sun Myung Moon, have considerable influence.
Korean War
- Full article: Korean War
- Full article: Korean War
The Korean War devastated the country and confirmed the de facto partition which had emerged post World War II. During the war, the security apparatus (military, police, intelligence services) was deeply aligned their US counterparts, creating an integrated system where the US had the final say. The US focused considerable effort on this, as Korean was seen as a frontier in the cold war. The dominance of US Deep state, though hidden, remained tight, as it was in Japan.
Syngman Rhee evicted[When?] the CIA wholesale from his country due to an "unfortunate incident" at Yong-do island, where CIA commandos had - allegedly mistakenly - shot at Rhee's yacht, without injury. Not until 1959 was the CIA officially welcomed back into South Korea.
1960s
Public demonstrations from April 11 to 26, 1960, led to Syngman Rhee's resignation. A soldier Park Chung-hee became South Korean President in 1961, a job he held until his assassination in 1979.
1970s
The 1970s saw rigged elections with majorities for Park Chung-hee. In 1979 the group's director of the KCIA assassinated his boss, the South Korean president Park Chung-hee.
1980s
1990s
21st Century
The Untouchable Chaebols of South Korea - Open Secrets - Vice |
2000s
Former Korean President, Roh Moo-hyun reportedly killed himself in 2009 by jumping off a cliff near his house, resulting in fatal head injuries.
2010s
In 2016 it emerged that the President Park Geun-hye had been sharing classified documents with Choi Soon-sil since at least 2013. This lead to her been regarded as a puppet leader. Massive peaceful demonstrations ensued in Seoul. She hung on for months but eventually resigned.
The Korean National Intelligence Service was engaged in election rigging using trolls to try to get her elected, and that "The Chosun Papers (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for puppeteering Park."[1]
2020s
The South Korean government followed the SDS official narrative about COVID-19 and Koreans proved highly susceptible to pro-COVID-19 jab messaging.