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Paik Sun-yup, Lightning Rod General in South Korea, Dies at 99 | |
(1 day later) | |
SEOUL, South Korea — Paik Sun-yup, South Korea’s first four-star general, who was lionized as a Korean War hero by the South Korean and United States militaries but dismissed by many in his country as a traitor, died here on Friday. He was 99. | SEOUL, South Korea — Paik Sun-yup, South Korea’s first four-star general, who was lionized as a Korean War hero by the South Korean and United States militaries but dismissed by many in his country as a traitor, died here on Friday. He was 99. |
The South Korean Army announced his death. | |
Though widely credited for leading his troops in a pivotal battle of the Korean War, Mr. Paik was a divisive figure in his home country. In 2009, a South Korean presidential committee put him on a list of “pro-Japanese and anti-nation” figures who had collaborated with Japanese colonizers during their rule of the Korean Peninsula. | |
Whether to treat Mr. Paik as a hero or a traitor has underscored differences in how South Korea and the United States have read modern Korean history. | |
Whenever they arrived in South Korea, top U.S. military officers had made a point of inviting Mr. Paik to be an honored guest. And on Saturday, Gen. Robert B. Abrams, the American commander in South Korea, again paid tribute to him, saying in a statement, “General Paik is a hero and national treasure who will be truly missed.” | |
Many South Koreans do not share that sentiment. | |
In a poll conducted last month, 54 percent of the respondents said that the remains of pro-Japanese collaborators interred in national cemeteries should be moved elsewhere. The survey was taken as a debate raged over whether Mr. Paik’s family should be given the option of burying him in a national cemetery. Thousands of Korean War veterans have been buried there. | |
After consulting with his family, the South Korean Army said Mr. Paik would be buried in a national cemetery south of Seoul on Wednesday in a funeral arranged by the Army. Defense Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo said Mr. Paik had “helped defend freedom and peace in South Korea.” | |
The governing liberal Democratic Party has not commented on Mr. Paik’s death. But some of its lawmakers have opposed burying him in a national cemetery and have called for disinterring the bodies of 11 pro-Japanese collaborators already interred there and making their families bury them elsewhere. Most of the 11 were buried there for their roles in the Korean War. | |
The main conservative opposition party, the United Future Party, however, praised Mr. Paik. “He has been a living hero of the Korean War, a living legend,” said Kim Eun-hye, a party spokeswoman. Conservative leaders who emphasize the importance of the United States alliance have regarded Mr. Paik as a personification of those bilateral ties, forged during the war. | |
Paik Sun-yup was born on Nov. 23, 1920, in Gangseo, in what is now North Korea. Korea was a colony of Japan from 1910 to 1945. | |
In 1941 he joined the army of Manchukuo, a puppet state that imperial Japan had established in Manchuria, and served in a unit known for hunting down Korean guerrillas fighting for independence, though Mr. Paik said he had never engaged in battles with them. | |
He was a first lieutenant when Japan was defeated in World War II and Korea was liberated. After the country was divided into the pro-American South and the Communist North, Mr. Paik was among the Koreans in Japan’s colonial military who were recruited when the United States was helping to build a military for the South. | |
He was a division commander when North Korea invaded the South in 1950, starting the three-year Korean War. The invaders quickly pushed the South’s ragtag army into the southeastern corner of South Korea, behind what was known as the Pusan Perimeter. | |
Mr. Paik led his division in the Battle of Tabu-dong, which helped block North Korean troops from breaching the Pusan Perimeter. South Korean troops fought as part of the American-led United Nations forces, which later drove the North Koreans back to the North and their capital. | |
“The day we entered Pyongyang was the best day of my life,” Mr. Paik recalled. | |
He was made Army chief of staff during the war and South Korea’s first four-star general at age 33. The war ended in a stalemate that continues under a 67-year-old truce. | |
After retiring from the military in 1960, Mr. Paik was South Korea’s ambassador to Taiwan and France, among other diplomatic postings. He was transportation minister from 1969 to 1971. | |
He is survived by his wife, No In-suk; two sons, Paik Nam-hyeok and Paik Nam-hong; and two daughters, Paik Nam-hee and Paik Nam-su. | |
In 2010, the South Korean military tried to make Mr. Paik its first honorary five-star general, but the plan was scuttled after it drew a backlash from the public and Korean War veterans. | |
“If Paik Sun-yup is called a ‘hero,’ what does that make Korean independence fighters who lost their lives at the hand of his old Manchuria unit?” asked Kim Won-woong, the head of Heritage of Korean Independence, a group recognized by the government for its members’ struggle for independence. | |
“If he really wanted to be treated like ‘a Korean War hero,’ he should at least have expressed repentance and remorse for his pro-Japanese deed,” Mr. Kim added, in an interview published last year. “But he never has.” | |