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Gando Special Force

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Gando Special Force (GSF; Chinese: 間島特設隊; pinyin: Jiāndǎo Tèshèduì; Wade–Giles: Chien1-tao3 T'e4-she4-tui4; Japanese Hepburn romanization: Kantō Tokusetsutai; Korean: 간도 특설대, romanizedGando Teugseoldae) was an independent battalion within the Manchukuo Imperial Army composed primarily of ethnic Koreans,[1] and some experienced foreign mercenaries from Asia tasked with suppressing anti-Japanese, and pro-communist militant groups in the border areas between northern Japanese occupied Korea and Manchukuo. It operated between 1 December 1938 and 1945.

Ex-GSF soldiers/officers are regarded as chinilpa (derogatory term for collaborators with Japan) in modern Korea for their role in suppressing groups advocating Korean independence.

History

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The Jiandao region of Kirin province in Manchuria, known in Korean as “Gando”, was an area that had been inhabited largely by ethnic Koreans. Before the Japanese occupation of Korea in 1905, many Koreans opposed to the annexation relocated from Korea to Gando and established Korean independence movements. Many of these movements later came under the control of the Chinese Communist Party via the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army.

From 1907, the Japanese government claimed jurisdiction over all ethnic Koreans regardless of physical location, and friction increased with the government of Qing dynasty China over control of the Gando area, cumulating in the Gando Convention of 1909. After the Manchurian Incident, and the establishment of Japanese control over all of Manchuria in 1931, another wave of Korean immigration occurred, this time with Japanese encouragement, to help cement Japanese claims on the territory.

With the establishment of Manchukuo in 1932, the situation in Gando was very unstable, with the local population rent into pro-Japanese and anti-Japanese/anti-Manchukuo factions, many of which resorted to guerrilla warfare, like the Korean Revolutionary Army. The Japanese army brutally slaughtered and committed massive rape against Yanbian Koreans in the Gando Massacre in October 1920-April 1921.[2][3][4][5][6] In an effort to subjugate the region, the Japanese recruited pro-Japanese Korean volunteers into a special warfare force and had trained by the Manchukuo Imperial Army primarily in counterinsurgency tactics.[7]

A number of ethnic Koreans saw better opportunities for advancement via the Manchukuo military academies than would have been impossible in the Imperial Japanese Army, and joined the new force. These included future South Korean general Paik Sun-yup.[8] Historian Philip Jowett noted that during the Japanese occupation of Manchuria, the Gando Special Force "earned a reputation for brutality and was reported to have laid waste to large areas which came under its rule." Jowett further added that the Chinese in the area hated the Korean soldiers so much that "any men of the unit who were captured by either the Nationalists or Communists [during the war] would have received short shrift." The Gando special force lost around 400 men every year to both battle casualties and desertion, while they recruited 700 new recruits annually, meaning they expanded by a net 300 soldiers every year.[9]

After the surrender of Japan, many members of the Gando Special Force were incorporated into the new Republic of Korea Army by the United States Army, for their training, and intimate knowledge of the terrain of the northern part of the Korean peninsula, and the tactics of the Korean People's Army. Some later rose to high positions within the government of the Republic of Korea.

Han Chinese later brutally massacred Yanbian Koreans from 1967-1970 during the Cultural revolution, accusing them of being collaborator remnants of Gando Spcial Force. During the Cultural Revolution, ethnic Koreans were killed and persecuted in Yanbian.[10] Many non-Han Chinese residents of Yanbian were suspected to be disloyal to the Chinese state, and subsequently beaten, killed, publicly humiliated, fired, exiled or imprisoned. One Yanbian Korean professor who was attacked was accused of being a spy for Japan and a collaborator remnant.[11] During the Cultural Revolution, many Korean cadres including Zhu Dehai were prosecuted as capitalist roaders, local nationalists or counterrevolutionists. Many faculty members of Yanbian University were also prosecuted. The number of Yanbian University's faculty and staff decreased to 23.7% of that in 1966. The Korean language was labeled as part of the Four Olds, texts in Korean were burned.[12] According to Julia Lovell, "[e]vents took a horrific turn in the frontier town of Yanbian, where freight trains trundled from China into the DPRK, draped with the corpses of Koreans killed in the pitched battles of the Cultural Revolution, and daubed with threatening graffiti: 'This will be your fate also, you tiny revisionists!'"[13][14][15][16]

The Chinese Communists also used Korean Communists in the Lee Hong-guang detachment to help brutally massacre Japanese soldiers and Japanese settler civilians in the Tonghua incident in February 1946. Both Han Chinese and Communist Koreans took part in the killings in Tonghua.

References

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  1. ^ "Death of controversial four-star general stokes S. Korea's ideological divide".
  2. ^ 경신참변 [Gyeongsin Massacre] (in Korean). Academy of Korean Studies. Retrieved 3 March 2018. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |website= ignored (help)
  3. ^ Eckhardt Fuchs, Tokushi Kasahara, Sven Saaler (4 December 2017). A New Modern History of East Asia. V&R unipress GmbH. p. 196. ISBN 978-3737007085. Retrieved 3 March 2018. The Japanese forces then carried out the Gando Massacre, in which they indiscriminately attacked Koreans living in Eastern Manchuria and other regions, killing over 5,000 and burning down more than 3,500 homes.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Suh, Jae-Jung (7 December 2012). Origins of North Korea's Juche: Colonialism, War, and Development. Lexington Books. p. 50. ISBN 978-0739176597. Retrieved 3 March 2018. Within a few months, the Japanese contingent in Jiandao massacred thousands of Koreans in their merciless mopping-up campaign. They concentrated their attacks on Korean villages with well-built Communist organizations and where anti-Japanese sentiment was most intense.
  5. ^ "간도 참변" (in Korean). Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  6. ^ "한국 독립군" (in Korean). Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  7. ^ "Korea Under the Rising Sun". 29 September 2016.
  8. ^ "Korean War Hero Paik Sun-yup Dies Aged 99".
  9. ^ Philip S. Jowett (2004). Rays of the Rising Sun. West Midlands: Helion & Company Limited. p. 34.
  10. ^ Lovell, Julia (3 September 2019). Maoism: A Global History. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-0-525-65605-0. Events took a horrific turn in the frontier town of Yanbian, where freight trains trundled from China into the DPRK, draped with the corpses of Koreans killed in the pitched battles of the Cultural Revolution, and daubed with threatening graffiti: 'This will be your fate also, you tiny revisionists!'
  11. ^ Armstrong, Charles K. (22 August 2013). The Koreas. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-16131-5.
  12. ^ Qingxia, Dai; Yan, Dong (March 2001). "The Historical Evolution of Bilingual Education for China's Ethnic Minorities". Chinese Education & Society. 34 (2): 7–53. doi:10.2753/CED1061-193234027. ISSN 1061-1932. Ethnic languages were repudiated as one of the "four olds" and large numbers of books and documents pertaining to ethnic languages were burned.
  13. ^ Lovell, Julia (3 September 2019). Maoism: A Global History. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 114–115. ISBN 978-0-525-65605-0. Events took a horrific turn in the frontier town of Yanbian, where freight trains trundled from China into the DPRK, draped with the corpses of Koreans killed in the pitched battles of the Cultural Revolution, and daubed with threatening graffiti: 'This will be your fate also, you tiny revisionists!'
  14. ^ Shen, Zhihua; Xia, Yafeng (2020). A Misunderstood Friendship: Mao Zedong, Kim Il-sung, and Sino-North Korean Relations, 1949-1976: Revised Edition (revised ed.). Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231553674. Korea revisionist spies " were arrested in Yanbian.54 In October 1967 , East German diplomats reported that the " bodies of Korean casualties were displayed on a freight train traveling from the Chinese border town of Sinŭiju into the
  15. ^ Schäfer, Bernd (2004). North Korean "adventurism " and China's Long Shadow, 1966 - 1972. Working paper (Cold War International History Project). Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. p. 10. from the Chinese border town of Sinuiju into the DPRK , along with graffiti such as " Look , this will be also your fate , you tiny
  16. ^ Jager, Sheila Miyoshi (2013). Brothers at War: The Unending Conflict in Korea (illustrated ed.). W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393240665. from the Chinese border town of Sinŭiju into the DRPK , along with graffiti such as ' Look , this will be also your fate , you tiny revisionists
  • Jowett, Philip (2005). Rays of the Rising Sun, Volume 1: Japan's Asian Allies 1931-45, China and Manchukuo. Helion and Company Ltd. ISBN 1-874622-21-3.