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marinemom
09-11-04, 06:31 AM
Alleged U.S. Deserter Jenkins Surrenders

By ERIC TALMADGE

CAMP ZAMA, Japan (AP) - Frail but determined, Charles Jenkins surrendered to the United States on Saturday, nearly 40 years after the Army sergeant allegedly defected to North Korea and became a potent propaganda symbol for the isolated communist state.

Jenkins' surrender ends a bizarre, twisting saga that saw him vanish from his Army unit and resurface in propaganda films as various devilish _ and inevitably American _ characters. He taught English to spies and married a Japanese woman who had been abducted by North Korean agents in the 1970s to teach the same spies _ and won her freedom in 2002.

The story has captivated Japan, where sympathy for Jenkins' wife, Hitomi Soga, and other Japanese kidnapped by the North over the years is extremely high. Soga and their two children were by Jenkins' side when he stood at attention at Camp Zama and saluted.

"Sir, I'm Sgt. Jenkins and I'm reporting," he told military police at the gate of this base just south of Tokyo.

"You are now under the control of the U.S. Army," Lt. Col. Paul Nigara responded.

Jenkins' decision was also likely to please the Bush Administration, which had ruled out a pardon over fears doing so would send the wrong message with U.S. troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. But in a concession to Japan, it had backed off demanding custody as he received treatment in a Tokyo hospital for complications related to abdominal surgery he had in the North.

Jenkins, 64, goes back on active duty and will now get a uniform, an ID card, and a haircut. Like any other soldier, he will be given his Army salary and probably live in base housing with his family while his case makes its way through the justice system.

"He'll be treated with dignity and fairness," said Army spokesman Maj. John Amberg.

Jenkins is charged with defecting to the North, where he lived for 39 years, and faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted. U.S. authorities say they have letters he wrote that show he intended to defect.

No date has yet been determined for his court martial, which could take five or six days.

The Rich Square, N.C. native is widely expected to strike a plea bargain to avoid prison. He has met several times with an Army-appointed attorney to prepare his case. The attorney also accompanied Jenkins here Saturday.

"I expect we have a lot more to face in the days to come," Soga said as she left a Tokyo hotel. "But we hope that the four of us can live together as soon as possible."

Jenkins' family members in North Carolina have argued that he was kidnapped by North Korean agents and taken there against his will.

"Hopefully we can get the truth," Jenkins' nephew, James Hyman, said from his home in Dallas, N.C. He said he believed his uncle would plead guilty to the charge related to his appearance in propaganda films in the plea bargain.

"I'm not ashamed of what my uncle might have done, because I don't believe he did anything wrong," Hyman said.

Jenkins' fate has become the focus of intense interest in Japan because of Soga, who was one of more than a dozen Japanese citizens abducted by North Korean agents in the 1970s and 80s and taken to North Korea.

She and Jenkins met soon after she arrived in the communist state in 1978. Soga was allowed to return to Japan after a historic Japan-North Korea summit in Pyongyang in 2002, but Jenkins and the couple's daughters remained in the North until this summer.

Tokyo arranged a reunion of the family in Jakarta, Indonesia, in July, and then persuaded Jenkins to come to Japan for medical treatment. He has not publicly addressed the charges against him.

Sgt. Smitty
09-12-04, 11:20 AM
Put his butt in the brig like they do the rest of the damned deserters........he doesn't deserve any kind of special treatment regardless of his age or health. Why the hell should he get his rank and uniforms back and have the same privileges as someone who didn't desert? What the hell is wrong with this system anyway?

Toby M
09-12-04, 04:14 PM
I'm surprised they didn't give him his back pay as well...

ivalis
09-12-04, 09:13 PM
what's wrong with the system that allows a 15 yr old to enlist???

hrscowboy
09-12-04, 10:30 PM
Its called The Army be the best you can be......

yellowwing
09-13-04, 04:01 PM
"Like any other soldier, he will be given his Army salary and probably live in base housing with his family while his case makes its way through the justice system." - Oh, they have got to be kidding! Was JAG just too busy when they brought him in?

"He taught English to spies...", even up here in pacifist Canada, we have Korean Wars Vets that want a piece of him.

ivalis
09-13-04, 05:45 PM
There was a 15 yr old Marine killed in Nam. The army doesn't have a patent on screwing up.

Lock-n-Load
09-13-04, 07:59 PM
:marine: Imagine, a US Army Lt Colonel returned this yellowbelly/turncoat's salute...run his lame/azz up and disc him from the highest yardarm...whether the Japs love or hate this yellow doggie.!!:marine:

hrscowboy
09-13-04, 08:03 PM
The army has always had a patent for screwing up dont even go there with that. there was plenty of hills in nam the army maintained which they thought they did and lost to the enemy and the marines had to take them back. we medi-vac alot of army vets to tin-shaw (95th evac)

Lock-n-Load
09-14-04, 05:40 AM
:marine:The same trend happened alot during the 3 yrs shoot 'em up in Korea, which you alluded to 'cowboy...every Marine outfit, especially MLR units never wanted the US Army on their flanks...every time the 1st Marine Div FMF was dislocated to a new area, the US Army, along with ROK troops [not the KMCs] always gave territory back to the Goony/birds...nitely Gook infiltrators knew the lackluster/weak sisters on the MLR...Semper Fi :marine: