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Experts Doubt Land Mines' Deterrent Value
By Jeremy Kirk, Stars and Stripes
Pacific edition, Wednesday, February 12, 2003
SEOUL - On Imjin River's banks, Chong So-yi was
looking for marsh snails on a sunny spring day last June when an
unlucky step took her left leg.
The 35-year-old woman stepped on a U.S. M14 anti-personnel mine,
one of 1 million such devices the South Korean Defense Ministry
has estimated are buried in and near the Demilitarized Zone.
“I don't blame anyone,” said Chong, who wears a prosthesis
and sees a mental health counselor every week. “I lost my
one leg already, so nothing can get my leg back.”
Mines were sown in woodsy areas in the 1960s, to discourage a North
Korean invasion. The devices are old now, but active mines - buffeted
by summer monsoon rains - occasionally plop into farmers' rice paddies
and civilian-populated areas, according to the Korea Campaign to
Ban Landmines.
Chong's accident occurred in Yongchon-gun northwest of Seoul, an
area still holding many active old mines, said Lee Shi-woo, a KCBL
research associate. Military officials don't have records for some
mined areas, Lee said.
“It is extremely dangerous because nobody knows,” he
said. Residents near the DMZ said U.S. soldiers were observed laying
mines in the 1960s, said U.S. Forces Korea spokeswoman Lee Ferguson.
Currently, she said, no mines are used by U.S. forces.
Last year, a mine in a rice field injured six Koreans.
In 2001, a U.S. soldier at Camp Bonifas suffered a leg injury when
he strayed into a minefield during morning exercise.
KCBL estimates mines have killed 1,000 civilians and up to 3,000
soldiers since the Korean War ended in 1953.
Despite campaigns to eliminate mine use, the United States and
South Korea have millions on reserve in case of a second Korean
War, according to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.
“There are some on the peninsula in the war reserve stock,”
Ferguson said. The mines are a deadly legacy of the conflict between
the Koreas and a continuing sore point for anti-land mine groups.
The military argued in a 1997 briefing that mines are needed to
halt a North Korean drive to Seoul, just 35 miles from the divided
border.
That's among reasons the United States gave for refusing to sign
the 1997 Ottawa Treaty, which seeks to ban using and stockpiling
anti-personnel mines, defense officials have said. The Clinton administration
pledged to join the treaty by 2006.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., has worked for several years with the
Defense Department on alternatives to land mines “with the
goal of them not being used or necessary in Korea,” said Leahy
spokesman David Carle.
Former U.S. military officials and activist groups say the reserve
mines are impractical even on the Korean battlefield. They argue
that mines impede the forward movement of friendly forces.
The Bush administration has studied land mine concerns since June
2001 but has issued no policy changes. The Pentagon recommended
in November 2001 abandoning any commitment to join the Ottawa Treaty,
according to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.
The Bush review involves agencies including the Pentagon, the National
Security Council and the State Department.
“We are very concerned that the Bush administration would
undo that progress,” said Gina Coplon-Newfield, coordinator
for the U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines.
But U.S. military officers also have publicly opposed mines. Six
Army generals and one admiral wrote Bush in May 2001, slamming support
for mines in South Korea.
Anti-personnel mines are “not in any way critical or decisive
in maintaining the peninsula's security,” they wrote.
Retired Lt. Gen. James F. Hollingsworth, who commanded I Corps
in South Korea from 1973 to 1976, said land mines “kill a
lot of your own people.” Further, it hurts offensive moves,
he said.
“If you are in a mechanized armor outfit, that will cause
a significant problem to maneuver,” said Hollingsworth, who
was injured by a mine during World War II and was among those signing
the letter. “I don't want anything to interfere with the capability
to move my forces in combat.”
More than half of the mines earmarked for South Korea aren't even
in South Korea, according to Human Rights Watch, an independent
activist group.
The Army's Materiel Command said 45 percent of the 1.2 million
anti-personnel mines for South Korea are stored in the United States.
About 50 percent are stored in South Korea and would be turned
over to South Korean soldiers during war, while U.S. forces, according
to HRW, would use 5 percent. Not determined: whether a transfer
would violate a 1992 law prohibiting the export or transfer of anti-personnel
mines to any country.
The M14 and M16 mines do not self-destruct and can have long underground
lives.
They are impractical for battle because they have to be placed in
the ground by hand, said Marissa A. Vitagliano, senior research
associate for the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation in Washington,
D.C.
“It would take so many trucks and so many people to transport
those to the front lines,” Vitagliano said.
In South Korea, VVAF has said, the U.S. military has vehicles and
aircraft capable of quickly scattering other kinds of anti-personnel
and anti-tank mines.
Reports have indicated even existing mines in the DMZ - of which
there may be 1 million - would slow a North Korean invasion by only
25 minutes, Coplon-Newfield said.
Almost Half of Mines to "Protect" Korea are Stocked in U.S.
©2003 Stars and Stripes
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