QA Th N~ihicir f a;h, -Th rra- .P ta~mhnr 'RO 1 qCP 2 OI' - i ne iVcniganu any - i nuus:uay, oepttnue v ,N AONzO L NATIONORLD Solda ers : Korean; massacr'e p did occur uring war- The Associated Press It was a story no one wanted to hear: Early in the Korean War, villagers said, American soldiers machine-gunned hundreds of helpless civilians under a railroad bridge in the South Korean countryside. When the families spoke out, seeking redress, they met only rejection and denial, from the U.S. military and their own govern- ment in Seoul. Now a dozen ex-GIs have spo- ken, too, and support their story with haunting memories from a "forgotten" war. American veterans of the Korean War say that in late July 1950, in the conflict's first des- perate weeks, U.S. troops killed a large num- ber of South Korean refugees, many of them women and children, trapped beneath a bridge at a hamlet called No Gun Ri. In interviews with The Associated Press, ex-GIs speak of 100 or 200 or "hundreds" dead. The Koreans, whose claim for compen- sation was rejected last year, say 300 were killed at the bridge and 100 in a preceding air attack. American soldiers, in their third day at the warfront, feared North Korean infiltrators among the fleeing South Korean peasants, vet- erans told the AP The ex-GIs described other refugee killings as well in the war's first weeks, when U.S. commanders ordered their troops to shoot civilians, citizens of an allied nation, as a defense against disguised enemy soldiers, according to once-classified documents found by the AP in U.S. military archives. Six veterans of the 1st Cavalry Division said they fired on the civilians at No Gun Ri, and six others said they witnessed the mass killing. "We just annihilated them," said ex-machine gunner Norman Tinkler of Glasco, Kan. After five decades, none gave a complete, detailed account. But the ex-GIs agreed on such elements as time and place, and on the preponderance of women, children and old men among the victims. Some said they were fired on from among the refugees beneath the bridge. Others said they don't remember hostile fire. One said they later found a few disguised North Korean soldiers among the dead. But others disputed this. Some soldiers refused to shoot what one described as "civilians just trying to hide." The 30 Korean claimants said what hap- pened July 26-29, 1950, was an unprovoked, three-day carnage. "The American soldiers played with our lives like boys playing with flies," said Chun Choon-ja, a 12-year-old girl at the time of the massacre. The reported death toll would make No Gun Ri one of only two known cases of large-scale killings of noncombatants by -U.S. ground troops in this century's major wars, military law experts note. The other was Vietnam's My Lai massacre, in 1968, in which more than 500 Vietnamese may have died. From the start of the 1950-53 conflict, North Korean atrocities were widely reported - the killing of civilians and summary execu- tions of prisoners. The story of No Gun Ri has remained undisclosed for a half-century. The Pentagon, told generally of the AP's findings, said it had found no substantiation for the allegations in the official record. The AP's research also found no official Army account of the events. Some elements of the No Gun Ri episode are unclear: What chain of officers gave open- fire orders? Did GIs see gunfire from the refugees or their own ricochets? How many soldiers refused to fire? How high in the ranks did knowledge of the events extend? The troops dug in at No Gun Ri, 100 miles southeast of Seoul, South Korea's capital, were members of the 7th Cavalry, a regiment of the 1st Cavalry Division. The refugees who encountered them had been rousted by U.S. soldiers from nearby villages as the invading army of communist North Korea approached, the Korean claimants said. AP PHOTO Maj. Gen. William Kean (center) not wearing a helmet, commander of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division ...e. rainates ne.ar..--.e&L-s..o m- i..s in uM Inn r i .se .,7,1 IC confers with subo rdinates near the front lines in South Korea on Aug. o, 1to. Exection is to top Choose a career as an Edward Jones Investment Representative. If you're motivated, persistent and enjoy working independently, consider a career as an Edward Jones Investment Representative. With more than 4,700 offices in 50 states, Edward Jones is one of the fastest-growing financial services firms in the nation. We are looking for individuals to open additional branch offices coast to coast. 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"It hasn't with death peaked yet ... 150 is probably where capital pur things may max out over the next three again Texa to four years." tions. Executions last Friday in Delaware "What s and North Carolina raised the year's of is thatl total to 76, the most since 1954, when death pena 81 people were put to death in U.S. 12 folks (o prisons. If the year-end toll reaches Holmes d 100, as Dieter said could happen, it County, would be the first time since 105 peo- Houston. ple were executed in 1951. Holmes' There were 68 executions last year, tence in 1 74 in 1997. almost alw send ountries have abolished the nalty, including Cana* France and Germany. nternational said it received 1,067 executions in China more than 100 in the c Republic of Congo and nThe organization said it iconfirmed reports of hun- xecutions in Iraq. n of the 38 American states penalty laws have imposed iishment this year, and o*$ is is first with 25 execu- ometimes people lose sight prosecutors don't give the lty - it takes a unanimous n a jury) to do it," said John istrict attorney in Harris Texas, which includes ' office seeks a death sen- 2 to 20 cases a year avs succeeds. ve a good sense for knowing 's a death-worthy prosecu- aid. "We don't seek it cal- unadvisedly ... These people ing death on generally have rds." States have executed 576 convicted kills since the Supreme Court ended in 1976 a four-year nationwide ban on capital punishment. Currently, about 3,565 people are on death rows across the nation. "We hav whether it tion," he s lously or u we're seek awful reco