If He’d Just Thrown His Medals Across the Fence, He’d Be a Senator Today

Sixty Minutes will broadast a long-anticipated interview with traitor  Joe  Dresnok this Sunday, and one thing’s apparent:  he’s eating well enough. From the CBS promo story:

The last American defector still living in North Korea says a billion dollars in gold couldn’t entice him to leave the country he ran to 44 years ago.  In the first communication from Joe Dresnok since he defected in 1962, the former G.I. also says his fellow defector, Charles Jenkins, who was permitted to leave North Korea, lied about him.    Bob Simon’s report will be broadcast on 60 MINUTES Sunday, Jan. 28 (7:00-8:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network.

I believe I speak for most Americans when I  express my gratitude  to North Korea for keeping him, and for carrying out what must be the most severe punishment for desertion in the last seven decades.

Dresnok told his story to two British filmmakers, Dan Gordon and Nick Bonner, who have made a documentary based on it called “Crossing the Line.   Gordon and Bonner, in addition to portions of their interview with Dresnok, also appear on 60 MINUTES.
“I don’t have intentions of leaving, could give a s*&% if you put a billion damn dollars of gold on the table,” Dresnok says about leaving North Korea.  “I feel at home. I really feel at home. I wouldn’t trade it for nothing,” he says.
Dresnok became fed up with his life one summer day four decades ago. His wife had left him and he was in line for a court martial for sneaking off base to visit a Korean woman, so he deserted. “I was finished. There’s only one place to go.  Yes, I was afraid. Am I going to live or die?  And when I stepped into the minefield and I seen [North Korea] with my own eyes, I started sweating,” he recalls.  “I crossed over, looking for my new life,” says Dresnok.

By every account I’ve heard, discipline was much more lax in those days, so it comes as a surprise to me that Dresnok reasonably feared that he’d have been shot at dawn for going AWOL. 

In the North, Dresnok eventually met three other American deserters and all of them participated in propaganda activities, including films that depicted the U.S. as evil.  He accuses one of those Americans, Charles Jenkins, a former Army sergeant, with lying about their time together.  Jenkins was permitted to leave the country two years ago to join his Japanese wife.  He said Dresnok had beaten him on the orders of North Korean authorities in a 60 MINUTES interview.  Says Dresnok: “He’s a liar.  One day he tried to push me around with his so-called rank and there was two blows.  I hit him and he hit the ground.  I think you know Alice in Wonderland.  Well, I just wonder if it’s not Jenkins in Wonderland.

Jenkins’s side of the story, here.  Anyway, it’s apparent that life in North Korea was considerably less pleasant than he might admit in the presence of his minders.

Dresnok didn’t always feel at home; after fours years, he and the others sought asylum in the Soviet embassy. They were turned away.  Faced with no other option, he succumbed to the North Korean indoctrination process, believe Gordon and Bonner.  Dresnok told them, “They might be a different race”¦color, but God damn it, I’m going to sit down and learn their way of life”¦.I did everything I could, learning the language”¦customs”¦greetings”¦life. I got to think like this”¦act like this. I’ve studied their revolutionary history, their lofty virtues about the great leader.

Uh huh.  Slobo Milosebvic and Josef Stalin died peacefully in their sleep, Saddam Hussein died much too easily, and Paris Hilton has yet to stricken from the public eye by some disfiguring but non-life-threatening skin condition.  The injustice of these things may bother you, as they bother me, but in Dresnok, we have an example of a man who has made his own misery in this life.  He is living the life he has earned.

 

Thanks to a friend for sending.

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