Difference between revisions of "South Korea/Deep state"

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|description=The South Korean Deep state
 
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In 2016 it emerged that the President [[Park Geun-hye]] had been sharing classified documents with [[Choi Soon-sil]] since at least 2013. This lead to her been regarded as a [[puppet leader]]. Massive peaceful demonstrations ensued in [[Seoul]]. She hung on for months but eventually resigned.  
 
In 2016 it emerged that the President [[Park Geun-hye]] had been sharing classified documents with [[Choi Soon-sil]] since at least 2013. This lead to her been regarded as a [[puppet leader]]. Massive peaceful demonstrations ensued in [[Seoul]]. She hung on for months but eventually resigned.  
  
[[WhoWhatWhy]] claimed in February 2017 that the [[Korean National Intelligence Service]] was engaged in [[election rigging]] using [[trolls]] to try to get her elected, and that "''[[The Chosun Papers]]'' (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for puppeteering Park."<ref>http://whowhatwhy.org/2017/02/13/privileges-power-comparing-trump-south-koreas-impeached-president/</ref>
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The [[Korean National Intelligence Service]] was engaged in [[election rigging]] using [[trolls]] to try to get her elected, and that "''[[The Chosun Papers]]'' (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for puppeteering Park."<ref>http://whowhatwhy.org/2017/02/13/privileges-power-comparing-trump-south-koreas-impeached-president/</ref>
  
 
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{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 15:52, 20 December 2019

Group.png South Korea/Deep state
(Deep state)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
South Korean Deep state.jpg
Formation24 July 1948
The South Korean Deep state

The South Korean Deep state was exposed in 2016 when South Korean President Park Geun-hye was shown to have been under the influence of Choi Soon-sil.

History

Full article: Stub class article Korean War

The Korean War killed or injured millions of Koreans and devastated the country. It also confirmed the de facto partition which had emerged after the defeat of Japan at the end of World War II and established the position of the US Deep state as firmly in charge (as also did in Japan[citation needed]).

Origins

The first South Korean President was the US educated Syngman Rhee, installed by the US Deep State on 24 July 1948.

Economic corruption

The Korea economy is dominated by a few large companies.[citation needed]

Sudden deaths

Former Korean President, Roh Moo-hyun reportedly killed himself in 2009 by jumping off a cliff near his house, resulting in fatal head injuries.

Exposure

In 2016 it emerged that the President Park Geun-hye had been sharing classified documents with Choi Soon-sil since at least 2013. This lead to her been regarded as a puppet leader. Massive peaceful demonstrations ensued in Seoul. She hung on for months but eventually resigned.

The Korean National Intelligence Service was engaged in election rigging using trolls to try to get her elected, and that "The Chosun Papers (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for puppeteering Park."[1]


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References