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To: maro
Hardly!

Rhee was a political animal for a long time - from 1897 when he was jailed for demonstrating against the Yi, right down to a far more recent time. Certainly he was influential if we can talk about what he was up to more than a centurylater.

You have to evaluate Rhee in terms of the factions ruling China (since his "government in exile" was set up in Shanghai - at some point he was removed from that organization as China fell under the Kou Min Tang, originally an affiliate of the Soviet Union). You must also evaluate Rhee in terms of what was going on in Japan since the ruling Meiji faction held power until the 1930s when the militarists with their Nazi connections took over.

The fact that Rhee seems to have little contact with the militarists in the 1930s doesn't get him off the hook when it comes to Meiji factions that had ruled earlier, and it is to them that I am pointing. In fact, they are the folks who took over Korea, and not everyone opposed them. Their destruction of the titled nobility was probably viewed very positively by the peasantry as well as by the educated intelligentsia.

After 1945 Rhee brought into positions of power men who had been cooperative with the pre-militarist Japanese colonial government. (This gives us two different Japanese puppet governments - one which actually had some ambitions to improve the whole region, and a later one which had as its purpose organizing Korea to support Japanese war needs.)

Standard histories written in the US or by Rhee admirers tend to protect Rhee, Roosevelt and the Progressives.

Joseph Sutton (now deceased and formerly President of Indiana University, and earlier an OSS senior analyst) frequently brought up Rhee in his lectures on American Pacific relationships. He was never complimentary. He didn't like Teddy Roosevelt all that much either.

14 posted on 12/19/2002 5:01:45 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
The fundamental question is why, if he was pro-Japanese, he went into exile in 1909. Not after the 30s, but in 1909. I think you are confusing (deliberately or not) being pro-Japanese in some fashion and being a Japanese puppet. As you must know, over many centuries the two basic political positions in Korea were pro-China and pro-Japan. Many thoughtful and patriotic Koreans were pro-Japanese in the sense that they thought that an alliance with Japan was the best way to develop. And in fact, before Japan went crazy with militarism, Korea benefited in many ways from the occupation, just as Japan benefited in many ways from the MacArthur occupation. You also refer to the "destruction of the titled nobility" by the Japanese. Did this really happen? The Korean royal family was sent to Japan and became Japanese princes. The old aristocracy pretty much stayed in place. Some of them were given Western-style titles, just as the Japanese created Western-style titles for its aristocracy, in order to co-opt them. The relationship between Japan and Korea is very complex, and is marked by both hostility and enmity and also feelings of brotherhood. The Japanese and Koreans are more closely related to each other ethnically than either group is to any other group in the world. The Japanese and Korean languages are related, and a speaker of one can easily learn the other. (That's why the South Koreans ban Japanese TV.) Hirohito's official policy was that the Japanese people and the Korean people were one race. (Kind of like the Romulans and Vulcans.) But in any case, who cares? Rhee is irrelevant in the present world, when it looks like the forces of communism and their friends have won the S. Korean pres election.
15 posted on 12/19/2002 9:36:59 AM PST by maro
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