| Korea
Herald:
The best of the best Korean MacGyvers
The following article is reprinted by permission
of the author, Ben Jhoty, and his editor from the
July 7, 2001, edition of the Korea Herald. In his
e-mail of July 10, 2001, Mr. Jhoty referred to this
www.tukong.com website when he noted that "I
came across the sites you mentioned while researching
the story. That's where I got the information which
was very useful as a number of people interested
in Tukong Moosul here in Korea have since contacted
me and I have directed them to those sites."
Read the latest Korea Herald edition here
The
best of the best Korean MacGyvers
By Ben Jhoty, Staff reporter
On the military chessboard
of the Korean Peninsula, they can be likened to
knights: A potent weapon to be used with wisdom
and foresight, too valuable to be forsaken, whether
countering their opponents' offensives or battling
deep in enemy territory. Faced with a foe that has
taken on almost mythical proportions, these prized
pieces are Korea's Special Forces.
If ever there was a need for elite combat units,
then it is here on the peninsula, where, despite
diplomatic overtures, Cold War tensions persist.
The threat from a fearsome and sometimes hostile
enemy is real and ever present. Who do you think
they call every time a North Korean vessel enters
South Korean waters?
While Hollywood has virtually mythologised the U.S.
Special Forces, Korea's elite units are naturally
less well known, although no less formidable. Special
Forces expert Kim Sun Han, who has been studying
elite national combat units for over 20 years and
written four books including "Rambo and Dumbo
- Covert National Forces of the World" said
Korea's Special Forces were amongst the world's
best.
"In counter-terrorism operation competitions
held since the late 1970s, Korea's Black Berets
have been ranked 1st twice," Kim said. "The
navy and marine units are also highly ranked and
they train and conduct exercises with American and
British units."
Which is just as well for North Korea has the largest
number of special operation forces in the world.
In this context, Kim said South Korean Special Forces
were the most effective countermeasure to thwarting
infiltrations by North Korean commandos as they
are specially trained in enemy tactics.
In structure, Korea's forces resemble their American
counterparts and like the American forces, the field
is rife with acronyms. The navy's elite units include
the UDT - Underwater Demolition Team; SEALS - Sea
and Land Commandos; EOD- Explosive Ordnance Disposal;
and the Maritime Counter-terrorist Team. From the
ROK Marines, there is the Special Reconnaissance
Battalion known as the 'Sharkmen,' while the army's
elite unit is known as the Black Berets.
Like most elite units around the world, the Korean
forces were a product of the Cold War with its emphasis
on reconnaissance and covert intelligence gathering
rather than traditional warfare. "The UDT and
the Black Berets started in the 1950s to counter
infiltrations by North Korean commandos and guerrillas,"
Kim said. "As there has been no all-out war,
they were intended to meet another type of combat,
namely guerilla and unconventional warfare."
The primary mission of the Black Berets, Kim said,
is to infiltrate into enemy hinterlands, fermenting
anti-government sentiment or sabotaging installations
of strategic importance such as missile sites or
airbases, either by recruiting disenchanted locals
or by themselves.
Unlike American forces that have historically been
orientated toward worldwide conflicts, Korea's Special
Forces have had to defend their country. Perhaps
the most famous campaign waged by the Black Berets
was in 1968 when the North's commandos infiltrated
the eastern region of the nation. On this occasion,
the Black Berets rescued hundreds of civilians and
successfully wiped out the fleeing commandos, Kim
said.
More recently in 1995, the navy's Maritime Counter-terrorist
Team entered a North Korean submarine that ran aground
off the east coast, although the fate of the crew
could not be determined. "Nobody knows for
sure if North Korean commandos were inside the sub,"
Kim said. "We don't know if there were any
survivors or if they committed suicide."
While normally limited to operations on the peninsula,
divisions of the forces have also participated in
overseas campaigns including the Vietnam and Gulf
War, with several units currently serving in East
Timor.
Breaking into these revered ranks is initially a
matter of volunteering and is open to enlisted soldiers
and civilians. Prospective recruits undergo a physical
and mental examination followed by six months of
basic training that involves physical conditioning,
mountaineering, enemy weapons handling, basic navigation
skills, evasion, escape and survival skills, swimming,
parachuting and demolition. Of the prospective recruits,
one in three is admitted.
At the present time, the most arduous training is
that of the Navy SEALS. "The Navy course includes
what they call 'hell week,' the fifth week during
which the trainee is put through a series of bone
chilling programs without sleep all week long. The
dropout rate is 50 percent," Kim said.
Special Forces agents earn 10 times the salary that
regular soldiers receive in what Kim likens to "danger
money." The minimum age requirement for the
Black-Berets is 20 and in both the army and navy's
elite units, agents must be under 28. Women have
been admitted since the 1970s with numbers currently
estimated at less than a hundred.
Through their modification of martial arts to meet
the demands of war rather than traditional self-defense,
the Korean forces have become renown for their excellence
in hand to hand combat. "Tukong moosul,"
developed by martial arts experts especially for
the Black Berets, is a form of martial arts based
on taekwondo, but also incorporating other fighting
styles. The marine style is known as "mujok-do,"
which means "no enemy soldier can beat you."
The physical proficiency and mental discipline of
Special Forces agents has intrigued many and Hollywood
stereotypes that dwell on physical prowess and military
cunning are pervasive. According to Kim, however,
the policy of giving priority to physical characteristics
is now redundant. "The era of Rambo is over,"
he said. "The rapidly changing world calls
for them to be armed with higher intelligence, knowledge,
common sense, flexibility and technical expertise.
They need to be more like MacGyver. A jack of all
trades."
In his book "Rambo and Dumbo," Kim asserts
that the Special Forces are not pawns and need to
be used for righteous causes with positive intentions.
"In war, you must be a shadow and you must
follow your leaders," he said. "So Special
Forces have to be utilized intelligently with consideration
and insight, otherwise they are effectively useless,
like a dumbo." |