Author: GIKorea

2nd Infantry Division Celebrates 7th Anniversary as a Combined Division

From the Stars & Stripes:

Military leaders celebrate the Republic of Korea-U.S. Combined Division’s seventh anniversary at Camp Humphreys, South Korea, Friday, June 3, 2022. (U.S. Army )

The Republic of Korea-U.S. Combined Division, the only division in the Army composed of soldiers from both countries, celebrated its seventh anniversary on Friday with a ceremony at 2nd Infantry Division headquarters. 

The two allies formed the combined army division in 2015 as a deterrent to further conflict in South Korea.

Roughly 12,000 troops are part of the five brigades within the division and they conduct an average of 80 missions each year, including large scale joint military exercises. It also trains with a South Korean mechanized brigade. 

Originally based at Camp Red Cloud, the division moved in 2018 to Camp Humphreys in Pyeongtaek, where 2nd ID, Eighth Army, U.S. Forces Korea and U.N. Command are also headquartered. 

Stars & Stripes

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Tiananmen Homecoming

Picture of the Day: Gas Prices Rise in South Korea

Rising gas prices
Rising gas prices
This photo taken June 5, 2022, at a filling station in Seoul shows gas selling for 2,069 won per liter (US$1.70) and diesel for 2,099 won a liter. Fuel prices have risen for four consecutive weeks. (Yonhap)

USFK Lowers HPCON which Leads to Removal of Almost All COVID Restrictions

COVID conditions continue to improve for U.S. troops in South Korea:

U.S. Forces Korea lowered the health protection condition for its troops on Thursday as COVID-19 infection rates continue to decline across South Korea. (……..) 

No changes were made to USFK’s mask policy. The command did away with its policy on April 25 but allowed garrison commanders the option to require masks in high-traffic areas on their installations. The Brian D. Allgood Army Community Hospital at Camp Humphreys, for example, requires visitors to wear masks. 

USFK personnel are still required to adhere to local social distancing directives outside of military bases. South Korea’s Ministry of Health and Welfare rescinded its outdoor mask mandate in May but still requires them indoors. People in groups of 50 or more, such as a sporting event, are also required to wear masks.

Stars & Stripes

You can read more at the link.

North Korea Launches 8 Short Range Ballistic Missiles

This weekend North Korea decided to attack the fish in the East Sea again:

North Korea on Sunday launched eight short-range ballistic missiles off its eastern coast, according to the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The missiles were fired between 9:08 a.m. and 9:43 a.m. from the Sunan area, where North Korea’s international airport is located, the Joint Chiefs said in a text message to reporters. Further details were not immediately available from the military.

South Korea’s military is prepared for additional missile tests and is “maintaining a full readiness posture” and working closely with U.S. forces, the Joint Chiefs said.

The launches mark the 17th round of missile tests so far this year by North Korea and its first in June.

Stars & Stripes

You can read more at the link.

ROK Drop Open Thread – June 3, 2022

Please leave anything you want to discuss in the comments section.

Tweet of the Day: UNC Officers Visit Yokota Airbase

https://twitter.com/UN_Command/status/1531937355074269184

Picture of the Day: ROK Military Reserve Forces Restart Annual Training

Training program for reserve forces resumes
Training program for reserve forces resumes
Members of the reserve forces engage in a fighting drill at a boot camp in the southeastern city of Daegu on June 2, 2022, as an annual field training program for the country’s reserve forces resumed after being suspended for the two previous years due to the COVID-19 pandemic. South Korea’s reserve forces are made up of people who completed the mandatory military service of about two years over the past eight years. (Yonhap)

ROK Special Forces Officer Accused of Spying for North Korea in Exchange for Nearly $70,000 in Cryptocurrency

Not only is this officer likely going to jail, but the cryptocurrency he received has dropped by more than half its value now:

A North Korean soldier takes photos through the window while U.S. Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is briefed at the Demilitarized Zone in South Korea, Nov. 11, 2012. (D. Myles Cullen/U.S. Army)

A special operations officer in the South Korean army allegedly traded military secrets to a North Korean hacker in exchange for nearly $70,000 in cryptocurrency, according to a South Korean military affidavit.

The army captain, identified in the redacted affidavit only as Kim, his surname, was arrested April 6 and charged with violating the National Security Act, military prosecutors state in the document.

The allegations against Kim are “absolutely shameful,” said a former South Korean special forces officer and former commander of a joint support group.

“In my 19 year-career in the military, this is the first time I’ve heard this kind of news,” Lee Kwan Woo, a former commander in the Eighth Army’s U.S.-South Korea joint support group, told Stars and Stripes by phone Wednesday. “Special forces officers and noncommissioned officers are trained on security — all of those members are trained very seriously to keep security.”

Kim attended South Korea’s school of infantry in 2015, according to military records cited in the affidavit. He then served as a platoon leader for a reconnaissance company in 2016 and five years later became a company commander in the 13th Special Mission Brigade, according to Lee a special operations group specifically trained to capture or kill leaders in North Korea.

In March 2020, an unidentified former classmate approached Kim with an offer of money in exchange for military information for a third party, according to the affidavit. Kim declined the offer, saying such an act is illegal, the affidavit states.

Around six months later, Kim, now in financial straits due to online gambling, accepted his classmates’ offer, the affidavit said. The classmate introduced Kim to Boris, a man who claimed to be an ethnic Korean living in China.

Stars & Stripes

You can read more at the link, but it is not surprising that the North Koreans were targeting someone with a bad gambling habit. It makes me wonder how they knew he had a bad gambling habit? Did they hack into the online gambling websites to monitor who has gambling problems that they might be able to exploit?

Korean Democratic Party Leaders Offer to Resign After Crushing Election Defeat

This is another sign that Korea’s conservative People Power Party continues to be on the rise in the wake of the election of Yoon Suk-yeol:

The main opposition Democratic Party’s interim commitee announces their decision to step down from their posts to take responsibility for the previous day’s local elections in a news conference at the National Assembly in Seoul on June 2, 2022. (Pool photo) (Yonhap)

Leaders of the main opposition Democratic Party (DP) on Thursday offered to quit the interim leadership committee en masse following the party’s crushing defeat in this week’s local elections.

Rep. Yoon Ho-jung and Park Ji-hyun, the DP’s co-interim chiefs, announced that all eight members of the party’s emergency leadership committee will step down to take responsibility for the defeat in Wednesday’s local elections.

The PPP won 12 out of 17 key races for big city mayors and provincial governors, including Seoul, while the DP won only five key races — three in its stronghold of the Jeolla provinces, as well as Gyeonggi and Jeju governorships.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link, but of note in this election is that Lee Jae-myung who ran against President Yoon was elected to a National Assembly seat out of Incheon and former Presidential Candidate who sided with Yoon was elected to a National Assembly seat in Bundang.