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South Korean Politicians Blame U.S. for Taliban Hostages

Korean officials seek direct negotiations with kidnappers.

Pleas for U.S. cooperation in freeing South Korea's hostages have turned to accusations of blame. Korean politicians denounced the U.S.'s handling of the crisis at a meeting of the ruling Yeollin Uri party on Wednesday.

"The root cause of the hostage crisis lies in our dispatch of troops to Afghanistan. While the Koreans are suffering, the U.S. stands firm on the principles," said National Assembly Rep. Park Chan-suk, according to Chosun Ilbo newspaper. "It's irresponsible, and it's a betrayal of one of its allies."

Rep. Kim Hyuk-kyu cautioned that U.S. inaction might lead to a change in South Korea's relationship with the U.S. "It's hard to predict what changes the Korean people will experience in their sentiment if the U.S. sticks only to principles and contributes to further damage," Hyuk-kyu said.

However, South Korea's administration spoke against the accusations.

"If you believe that the U.S. holds all the keys, that's far from the truth, nor is it helpful in solving problems," said presidential spokesman Cheon Ho-seon, according to Chosun Ilbo.

On Thursday, the Associated Press reported that U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte assured South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-soon that no military action would be taken to free the hostages. However, Richard Boucher, assistant U.S. secretary of state for South and Central Asia, said military force was still an option.

"All pressures need to be applied to the Taliban to get them to release these hostages," Boucher told the Associated Press. "There are things that we say, things that others say, things that are done and said within Afghan society, as well as potential military pressures."

False reports of a military rescue were released Wednesday by several news services, but were quickly retracted. The reports are thought to have stemmed from the Afghan army's warning that a routine military operation, unrelated to the Korean hostages, would be taking place in the area, the Associated Press reported.

On Thursday, South Korean officials left for the States in another attempt to gain U.S. government cooperation in negotiating the hostages' release. Meanwhile, the kidnappers have agreed to meet with South Korean officials, though a location has not yet been determined, due to safety risks for both parties.

Related Elsewhere:

Our coverage of the hostage situation includes "After Taliban Kills Two Hostages, South Korea Pleads for Compromise" (Aug. 2), "Afghanistan Kidnappers Kill Hostage as South Korea Debates Mission Work" (July 26), and "Taliban Kidnaps South Korean Christians" (July 20).

Christianity Today's March 2006 cover story examined the explosion of South Korean missions.

See our earlier coverage of Afghanistan and South Korea.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 4 comments

CJL

August 08, 2007  7:20am

So let me get this straight...there are captured Korean missionaries being held by the Taliban. Check. The Korean government is trying to get them back. Check. The US has a policy of no negotiating with terrorist in order to keep to discourage them from doing it. Check. Now the Koreans are blaming the US for the lack of the Taliban not releasing their people? Huh? Whatever happened to blaming the evil ones, namely the Taliban? Can the Koreans not negotiate for their own people? Are they not a soveriegn government? Is the Korean government ignorant when they say that the cause of this hostage crisis is our being in Afghanistan? We did not capture the Koreans; the taliban chose to capture the Korean missionaries on their own volition. We did not make them do that. Korea needs to stop pointing fingers at the US and wake up and realize that the Taliban is a terrorist organization bent on causing as much evil as possible. The US is their ally in this fight, not their enemy.

Minnie Berry

August 07, 2007  11:16am

No matter what our government does, death to any of the hostages will be inputed to the U.S. We cannot release Taliban prisoners who will return to the capture, torture and murder of whomever they choose just as those who are holding these hostages. It is not "just principle" to refuse this demand. I wonder about the training given to NGO as well as small missionary groups of short duration, in which a lot of the participants are very young. Were these hostages told in detail about what they would encounter in Afghanistan? How their behaviour in exercising what we Christians take for granted in our freedoms is particularly offensive to Islamists? That no matter where Christians go in the world, we must take care to be mindful of the culture of those in whose country we are guests just as we as guests in another's home try to be aware of the expectations of those whose home it is? That those whose world they enter, may simply kill them because they want to kill?

Jim Coons

August 07, 2007  7:52am

I really wish it were true that George Bush was responsible for everything that is bad on earth and in the hearts of men.

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