Charles Robert Jenkins
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Charles Robert Jenkins (born February 18, 1940) is a former United States Army soldier who lived in North Korea from 1965 to 2004 after deserting his unit and crossing the DMZ.
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[edit] Military service and desertion
Jenkins was born in Rich Square, North Carolina. He joined the National Guard in 1955, well below the minimum enlistment age. He joined the regular army in 1958 and was assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division. He served in South Korea from 1960 to 1961, in Europe to 1964, and in South Korea again.
In South Korea, Jenkins was assigned to night patrols. As a result of fears that he would be transferred to combat duty in Vietnam, he grew depressed and anxious, and started drinking alcohol. One night, after reportedly drinking ten beers, he set off on his nightly patrol of the Demilitarized Zone. In the early morning of January 5, 1965, he told his patrol that he was going to investigate a noise. He subsequently crossed into North Korea and surrendered to forces there, in hopes of being sent to Russia and then, through prisoner exchange, eventually returned to America. Shortly thereafter, North Korean propaganda declared that a U.S. sergeant had defected, and broadcast statements alleged made by the defector, reportedly in stilted English. The U.S. Army claimed Jenkins wrote four letters stating his intention to defect (an allegation Jenkins denies), the original copies of which were lost. His relatives maintained throughout his absence that he was abducted.
[edit] Life in North Korea
Information about Jenkins' status was unavailable outside North Korea for many years. Jenkins says he almost immediately regretted his defection. He says that he and three other U.S. servicemen, Larry Abshier, Jerry Parrish and James Dresnok, were quarantined in a one-room house with no running water until 1972, where they were made to study the Juche philosophy of Kim Il-sung. They were forced to memorize large passages of Kim's in Korean, and beaten frequently. He says that at one point in 1966, he found his way to the Soviet embassy in Pyongyang and requested asylum, which was denied. Eventually, Jenkins was placed in separate housing and began teaching English at the Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies. His very thick North Carolina accent interfered with the government's goal of teaching spies English so that they could pass as South Korean, and when the North Koreans realized this, he was fired from that job.
In 1980, Jenkins was introduced to Hitomi Soga, a 21-year-old Japanese nurse who had been abducted by North Korean agents in 1978, along with her mother, during a search for Japanese citizens who could train future spies in Japanese language and culture. Soga's mother was never heard from again, and Soga was "given to" Jenkins. The North Koreans had paired a number of Asians with people of European descent, with the assumption that North Korean spies could pass more effectively as South Korean if they were of Eurasian heritage, which is not uncommon in South Korea, but almost unheard of in North Korea. Soga and Jenkins fell in love, and thirty-eight days after meeting, they were married. They had two daughters, Roberta Mika Jenkins (born 1983) and Brinda Carol Jenkins (born 1985). In 1982, Jenkins appeared in North Korean the propaganda film Nameless Heroes, which provided the first evidence to the Western world that he was alive. The U.S. government did not publicly reveal this information until 1996. As mentioned in the documentary Crossing the Line, according to Dresnok, Jenkins' acting was so bad in Nameless Heroes that, even though he'd been chosen to be the criminal mastermind behind the Korean War, his acting was so bad that his role was cut back severely, and his character was just talked about instead, and then only appeared briefly in one of the series' 20 parts. Furthermore, his English was so incomprehensible that Dresnok dubbed Jenkins' voice in in post-production.
[edit] Confirmation and return
Jenkins drew international interest again in 2002, when North Korean leader Kim Jong-il confirmed that North Korea had abducted Japanese citizens. In an effort at détente, surviving abductees were allowed to travel to Japan, including Jenkins' wife. The visit was intended to last for a week, but the Japanese government refused to allow them to leave, saying they were being coerced to return, and instead negotiated for their families to join them in Japan. Most of the families did ultimately travel to Japan, but Jenkins and his daughters stayed behind out of fear that the North Korean government was testing his loyalty. After assurances of protection from the Japanese government, he traveled with his daughters to Japan by way of Indonesia for medical treatment, arriving in Japan on July 18, 2004. Japan formally requested a pardon for Jenkins, which the U.S. declined to grant. After expressing a desire to put his conscience at rest, Jenkins reported on September 11, 2004 to Camp Zama in Japan. He reported in respectful military form, saluting the receiving military police officer.
On November 3, Jenkins pled guilty to charges of desertion and aiding the enemy, but denied making disloyal or seditious statements—the latter charges were dropped. He was sentenced to 30 days confinement and received a dishonorable discharge. He was released six days early, on November 27, 2004, for good behavior.
Jenkins and his family settled on Sado Island in Japan, which is Soga's home. On June 14, 2005, Jenkins, his wife, and two daughters traveled to the United States to visit his 91-year-old mother in North Carolina, returning later in the month.
There were three other American deserters who remained in North Korea as well: James Joseph Dresnok, who was interviewd for a 2006 British documentary Crossing the Line, Private Larry Allen Abshier, and Specialist Jerry Wayne Parrish. The former two defected in 1962, while the latter defected in 1963. As of 2007, Dresnok is living in North Korea and does not seem to regret his defection.[1][2]. According to North Korean official reports, Abshier and Parrish have since died of natural causes while living in that country.[1]
[edit] Memoirs
Jenkins published a book in Japanese in October 2005, titled To Tell The Truth (Japanese: 告白; Romaji: kokuhaku; ISBN 4-04-791510-6), about his experiences in North Korea. A Korean-language edition was also released in June 2006 by Mulpure Publishing of South Korea. (Korean: 고백, ISBN 8981102341)[3] An English language version, titled The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion, Court-Martial, and Forty-Year Imprisonment in North Korea, co-authored with journalist Jim Frederick (ISBN 978-0520253339), was released for publication by the University of California Press on March 1, 2008.[4][5]
[edit] References
- ^ a b "An American in North Korea," 60 Minutes, CBS Television. Produced by Robert G. Anderson and Casey Morgan. Reported by Bob Simon. First Broadcast on January 28, 2007.
- ^ An American in North Korea, Pledging Allegiance to the Great Leader; New York Times; October 19, 2006
- ^ Card, James (November/December 2006), “Escape from Pyongyang”, Foreign Policy, <http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3604>. Retrieved on 15 March 2008
- ^ “Charles Robert Jenkins with Jim Frederick: The Reluctant Communist”, New titles, University of California Press, <http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/10992.html>. Retrieved on 15 March 2008
- ^ Schoenfeld, Gabriel (2008-03-13), “Bookshelf: To Hell and Back”, The Wall Street Journal: D9, <http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120537252745332373.html?mod=googlenews_wsj>. Retrieved on 15 March 2008
- Eric Talmadge "Deserter Adjusting to Life on Japan Island". Associated Press. January 31, 2005.
- "U.S. Army Deserter to Seek U.S. Passport". Associated Press. February 28, 2005.
[edit] See also
- List of American defectors in the Korean War
- James Joseph Dresnok
- David Hawkins
- Larry Allen Abshier of Urbana, Illinois went missing from his unit in May 1962 at age 19
- Jerry Wayne Parrish of Morganfield, Kentucky deserted in December 1963 at age 19
- Joseph White
[edit] External links
- FEER interview with Jenkins, September 1, 2004
- Asia Times - The strange saga of Charles Robert Jenkins
- BBC News - North Korea's mystery guest
- TIME Asia Magazine - The Long Mistake
- US deserter reunited with mother
- "Last Surviving US defector to North Korea speaks out", from the Korea Times, August 19, 2004
- "Deserter Recalls N. Korean Hell" - Interview of Jenkins by Scott Pelley of CBS's 60 Minutes
- "Kokuhaku: Pictures", "Kokuhaku: Pictures 2" - Photos and translations from Jenkins' book published in Japan.
- MSN 2008 Article

