ROK Drop

By on August 20th, 2007 at 4:25 pm

DMZ Flashpoints: Remembering the DMZ Axe Murder Incident


LTC Vierra walks across the Bridge of No Return.

This past weekend was the 31st anniversary to the murders of two USFK officers by a deliberate murder plan carried out by the North Koreans. The former commander of the these two murdered officers, LTC Victor Vierra, visited Panmunjom this past weekend to honor the two dead officers. He had some very interesting things to say about the attack:

The North Koreans knew who Bonifas was, Vierra said, and he is convinced the killings were no spur-of-the-moment attack.

“It was a well-executed execution, or murder, of two American soldiers,” Vierra said.

The sacrifice was not in vain, Vierra said. At the time, North Korea had been leaning on ambassadors within the United Nations to pass a resolution calling for withdrawal of the United States from South Korea. Following the murders, that support evaporated.

“They died serving a calling and a purpose that they were bound to execute,” Vierra told the seated gathering near the bridge, and well within earshot of North Korean guards.

Vierra knew Bonifas well, working with him closely and sharing off-duty time with him at The Monastery, the JSA’s club.

Bonifas was packed and ready to go back to his wife and children when he was killed.

Barrett had been at the JSA for only a few weeks when he was killed. Vierra lamented that he didn’t get the chance to know him well, but noted that the 6-foot-plus soldier was well liked by his men. [Stars & Stripes]

Make sure to read the whole things because it is quite an interesting read.


1LT Barrett and CPT Bonifas

For those that don’t know here is a summary of what happened in 1976 that nearly brought the United States and North Korea to the brink of war. Two officers, CPT Arthur Bonifas commander of the security company at the JSA and his executive officer 1LT Mark Barrett on August 18, 1976 led a 5 man Korean Service Corps detail along with a six UNC soldier guard force to trim a tree that was obscuring the view of a guard shack located at the Bridge of No Return.

Here is an account of the incident from the book Hazardous Duty:

At 10:30 that morning, the KSC workers set up two ladders and started pruning branches. Five minutes later, a North Korean truck rolled up and disgorged two North Korean officers and nine enlisted men. The senior Communist officer was First Lieutenant Pak Chol, a veteran JSA guard known to have provoked scuffles with UNC personnel in the past. He asked Captain Kim what work was in progress and was told that the KSC team was only pruning branches. Lieutenant Pak muttered, “That is good.”

In their normally officious manner, the North Koreans began to coach the South Korean workers on the proper method of branch pruning. This was an obvious attempt to usurp the authority of the American officers, so Captain Bonifas told the men to simply get on with their work. Twenty minutes passed, and then, for no reason, Lieutenant Pak marched up to Captain Bonifas and ordered him to halt the trimming.

Bonifas refused, adding that his men would complete their job and leave. Lieutenant Pak shouted that anymore branch trimming would bring “serious trouble.” Captain Bonifas and Lieutenant Barrett had heard such threats before. They ignored the Communists. Still strutting and shouting, Lieutenant Pak sent away for reinforcements. Ten more Communist guards arrived by truck, and six more came trotting up from nearby guard posts. There were now thirty North Koreans surrounding the thirteen UNC soldiers and five KSC workmen. Lieutenant Pak was screaming now that any additional trimming would mean “death.”

The UNC Quick Reaction Force was monitoring the situation by radio and photographing the scene with a telephoto surveillance camera.

Captain Bonifas turned his back on the angry Communist officer to make sure the workers continued the pruning. He did not see Lieutenant Pak remove his watch, wrap it in a handkerchief and stick it into the pocket of his trousers. Nor did he see the other North Korean officer rolling up the sleeves of his jacket. An American NCO strode forward to warn Captain Bonifas.

At that moment, Lieutenant Pak screamed, “Chookyo!” Kill!


North Koreans Attack the Tree Trimming Detail

What proceeded to happen after that is the North Korean soldiers attacked the two American officers with their own axes and mattocks. The two officers were bludgeoned to death and the attack was only stopped when the driver of a two and half ton army vehicle drove at the attackers and over the mutilated body of CPT Bonifas dispersing the attackers. The North Koreans then quickly proceeded to escape across the Bridge of No Return. Overall, two US officers were killed, 4 US soldiers injured, and 4 ROK Army soldiers were injured in the melee.

The North Koreans at the time had been committing a series of aggressive attacks on US and ROK soldiers. The North Koreans were trying to provoke a war by creating a US backlash. In 1976 the US had by then down sized the US commitment of soldiers to defend Korea by withdrawing the 7th Infantry Division leaving only the 2nd Infantry Division which remains today to help protect Korea. Plus the US was just coming out of the humiliating withdrawal from Vietnam that had greatly sapped the morale of the military and the American public. All during this time the North Koreans had undergone a large build up of forces themselves to the point where they had a two to one advantage over the UNC forces.

Kim Il Sung felt he could militarily defeat the UNC Army at this time, but he needed the UNC to attack him first to secure the backing of world opinion. If the US conducted a bombing campaign or any other direct show of force on the North Koreans war would of broke out and Kim Il Sung could blame the Americans for it and legitimize his invasion.

Kim Il Sung got his response from America which demonstrated America’s resolve in protecting Korea’s freedom with Operation Paul Bunyan.

Something substantial had to be done in response to the North Korean aggression but war was something the US did not want to be responsible for starting. However, if the North Koreans wanted war the US was making preparations for it. All the forces in Korea went to the highest state of alert DEFCON-3. Soldiers in the both the US and ROK Armies moved North to their battle positions, extra naval power was brought in, SR-71 flights were increased over North Korea to monitor troop movements, and F-111 bombers capable of dropping nuclear munitions were flown overnight from the United States to Korea. This was the beginning of Operation Paul Bunyan.

This massive show of force by the United States had the desired effect of causing the North Koreans to take a defensive posture. SR-71 reconnaissance photos showed the entire North Korean country preparing for invasion. This had to have a psychological effect on the North Koreans because they had always trained and prepared for an offensive against the South Koreans and now here they were back on their heels.

With the military build up complete something had to be done about that tree. That tree stood as a challenge to all free men. It was decided that the tree must go. Here is more from the book Hazardous Duty:

Every operation needs a name and General Stilwell’s was appropriate: Operation PAUL BUNYAN. The key elements were surprise, speed of execution and withdrawal, and avoidance of direct engagement with North Korean troops. Our forces would include soldiers from the 2nd Infantry Division, as well as ROK Special Forces and Recon troopers of the 1st ROK Division. Altogether, a force of 813 men would be involved. Task Force VIERRA (named for Lieutenant Colonel Victor Vierra, commander of the USASG) would conduct the actual tree cutting. The unit would include sixty American and ROK guards, divided in two platoons, armed with sidearms and pickax handles. The ROK men were Special Forces; each man was a Black Belt in TaeKwonDo. They would guard two eight-man engineer teams who would actually cut down the tree with chain saws. A truck-borne ROK reconnaissance company, armed with M-16 rifles, mortars, and machine guns, would be prominently deployed just outside the JSA: crack South Korean troops defending their own soil. They would be beefed up with American tube-launched optically tracked wire-guided (TOW) anti-tank-missile teams.

Vierra’s troops were backed up by other elements of the division, including a reinforced composite rifle company from the 9th Infantry Regiment, which would be orbiting aboard twenty Huey helicopters a few hundred meters south of the DMZ, supported by twelve AH-1G Cobra gunships. Tank-busting F-4 Phantoms would be prowling at a slightly higher orbit. F-111 medium strategic bombers would orbit still higher, and be clearly visible to North Korean radar.

To complete the demonstration of firepower, three batteries of American 105mm howitzers were to be moved across the Freedom Bridge north of the Imjin River. Another three batteries of ROK heavy artillery would be positioned just south of the river in clear view of North Korean positions. The gunners, Stilwell said, would have “rounds in the tube and hands on the lanyards.”

Operation PAUL BUNYAN was scheduled to begin at exactly 0700, the morning of Saturday, August 21, 1976.

At that precise moment, a massive flight of B-52 bombers from Guam would be moving ominously north up the Yellow Sea on a vector directly to the North Korean capital, Pyongyang. In the Sea of Japan, Task Force 77.4’s aircraft carrier, U.S.S. Midway, would launch forty combat aircraft that would vector north above international waters.

The ROK Army Tae Kwon Do black belts were specifically selected by South Korean president Park Chung Hee himself to deal with any possible North Korean interference in the tree cutting.


UNC Soldiers Trim Tree Near the Bridge of No Return

A total of 13 chainsaws wielded by soldiers from the 2nd Engineer Battalion were used to cut down the tree. The first branch of the tree was cut at 07:18 and the entire tree cutting was complete by 07:45. Saving face is a very important social factor in Asia and after the tree cutting all that remained was the stump to remind the North Koreans of the extreme loss of face that had just received by the US and ROK soldiers.

In fact days later the North Koreans would offer a statement of regret for the incident and a plan was worked out to remove four North Koreans guard points south of the Military Demarcation Line. The massive US and ROK show of force had made the North Koreans back down, make concessions, and lose face. This was definitely not the result Kim Il Sung had expected.

Today where the stump once stood is marked with a plaque and the part of the tree that was cut down was once housed in the 2ID Engineer Brigade headquarters which in 2005 was deactivated and the tree was planned to be either moved to either the Ft. Leonardwood Engineer Museum or the 2ID Museum on Camp Red Cloud.

Though today tensions may not run as high as they were on the DMZ in 1976, however the Panmunjom Axe Murder Incident should still serve as a reminder of the nature of the North Korean regime and the commitment of the United States military and the ROK Army to protect freedom and democracy on the Korean peninsula. The sacrifice by CPT Bonifas and 1LT Barrett is just another example that freedom is in fact not free, especially here in Korea.

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17
  • Mark
    12:53 pm on August 20th, 2007 1

    The whole thing was orchestrated by the Coreans to keep the US in South Korea longer.

    Machinations…they continue to this day.

  • GI Korea
    3:42 am on August 21st, 2007 2

    Glad to see you haven't given up on the ROK Drop yet. Enjoy UFL!

  • Mark
    1:22 pm on August 21st, 2007 3

    How can I give up on ROK Drop? I must maintain my decisive advantige in Korea finder.

  • GI Korea
    2:08 pm on August 21st, 2007 4

    So that is all I'm good for, Korea Finder? ;-)

  • Mark
    3:27 pm on August 21st, 2007 5

    Not only that…one of your old Jetiranger entries sends me a dozen or so visitors per week in search of "drinky girls."

    Just kidding…I like how the Coreans and intelligentsia get b!tch-slapped around here on ROK Drop with facts and evidence, and I don't even have to say anything….

  • CPT KIM
    10:10 pm on August 21st, 2007 6

    KPA LT Park Chol? It is very common North Korean Pseudonym. Even some of KJI family member used the same name when they were traveling overseas.

  • Hugh
    9:14 am on August 23rd, 2007 7

    "Saving face is a very important social factor in Asia and after the tree cutting all that remained was the stump to remind the North Koreans of the extreme loss of face that had just received by the US and ROK soldiers.

    In fact days later the North Koreans would offer a statement of regret for the incident and a plan was worked out to remove four North Koreans guard points south of the Military Demarcation Line. The massive US and ROK show of force had made the North Koreans back down, make concessions, and lose face. This was definitely not the result Kim Il Sung had expected."

    Severe misunderstanding of the 'face' issue. Washington's overly-cautious reaction lost an immense amount of American face, actually.

    By only making a show of reinforcing and not actually doing anything but chopping down a tree, America looked like a paper tiger. Kim Ilsung demonstrated to the region that uniformed Korean soldiers could axe American soldiers to death in broad daylight, on camera, and North Korea would suffer no consequences whatsoever.

    Washington would have been better to use this massive force to strike the juche tower, the big Kim Ilsung statue, the NK legislative building, and the anchored USS Pueblo trophy ship. That would have sent a clear message while still killing very few and providing no international justification for war.

    The ayatollahs in Tehran might have thought twice about taking the American embassy hostage a few years later had this been done. It can be argued that this spectacle of Gerald Ford's/America's impotence (You can axe-murder their soldiers on camera and they still won't bomb you!) emboldened the Iranians to take the embassy.

  • GI Korea
    11:49 pm on August 23rd, 2007 8

    I disagree, Kim Il-sung wanted the US to bomb him thus validating starting a second Korean War. Plus the military was really in no shape to fight another major war after the humiliating defeat in Vietnam. Additionally the US public was probably not ready to fight another major war as well.

    Kim tested the US's resolve and concluded that the US would still defend Korea, but was not willing to start a war with North Korea over it.

    I have to wonder if you are part of the William Perry school of strategic bombing?

  • freedom bridge axe incident - Web - WebCrawler
    9:00 am on March 31st, 2008 9

    [...] DMZ … amizdad.smugmug.com/hack/feed.mg?Type=gallery&Data… [Found on Google] Remembering the DMZ Axe Murders The North Koreans then quickly proceeded to escape across the Bridge of No Return. …. however [...]

  • Terry Sanders
    4:06 am on June 10th, 2008 10

    Just found this site on the net. I was deployed to Tague AB and then Kunsan AB for Operation Paul Bunyan from Kadena AB Okiwana. We all felt that the US should have taken action against North Korea when these murders took place. I was with the 18th Security Police Squadran.

  • GI Korea
    11:20 pm on October 19th, 2008 11

    Scott feel free to send them in. I would like to check them out.

  • Scott Mullen
    4:10 am on October 20th, 2008 12

    Was at the DMZ last week on the USO tour. I have a picture of the monument marker that replaced the tree and pictures of the turn-around area where the incident occured. Let me know if you would like copies, to augment this excellent article.

  • Richard Hayward
    6:18 am on August 24th, 2009 13

    CPT Bonifas was my Company Commander and your and idiot if you think his murder was orchestrated.

  • The 6 Party Talks and The Cheonan | NKNews.org – North Korea News & Information Resource
    8:28 am on May 18th, 2010 14

    [...] at least.   But as frustrating as this is, South Korea and the U.S have no choice, as was the case after the DMZ axe murders of 1976.  With 46 navy personnel killed, there must be a negative [...]

  • Flip Wilson
    5:15 pm on October 14th, 2011 15

    Hello; I was there for the cutting of the tree and involved with the pouring of the cement for the Demarcation line at Panmunjom. Was anyone else there? Just curious, thought we might have something in common or perhaps stories to share. 8Th Army Combat engineers, 802nd and 44th.

  • bob brown
    6:17 pm on October 20th, 2011 16

    was there with marines lima bttry 2/12 out of okinawa camp zukeran we base camped at st barbra just clicks from dmz we played alot of firexs in the dmz that same day

  • Michael Bustamante
    10:33 pm on November 27th, 2011 17

    I am the son of late MSG Manuel C. Bustamante who served in Korea for the Army during the time of this incident. My father has since passed but he mentioned that he was there the day of this incident but he is not written about in any papers or noted anywhere. I suspect his was a special duty. But would love to get confirmation of my fathers involvement.

    Cheers,
    Michael Bustamante

 

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