Kim Shin-jo, a Failed North Korean Assassin, Dies as a Pastor in the South

Kim Shin-jo, the only captured member of a team of 31 North Korean commandos who came within striking distance of the South Korean presidential palace ​in central Seoul before they were repelled in 1968, died on Wednesday.He was 82.Mr.

Kim’s death ​at a nursing hospital was confirmed on Thursday by his Sungrak Church in Seoul, which cited old age as the cause.In January 1968, Mr.Kim and his colleagues did the unimaginable — slipping undetected through the heavily ​fortified border between North and South Korea and trekking 40 miles into Seoul on a mission to assassinate Park Chung-hee, who was the military​ dictator of South Korea at the time​, and his staff.

They got within hundreds of yards of Mr.Park’s presidential Blue House but were stopped by South Korean forces​ in a fierce gun battle.All the North Korean assassins were gunned down or killed themselves except two.

One of the two was believed to have ​made it back to the North.​ The other was Mr.Kim​, ​who surrendered​ and later reinvented himself into a fiery anti-Communist lecturer and Christian pastor in the capitalist South.“We came to slit President Park Chung-hee’s throat,” Mr.

Kim said​ shortly after his capture.The commandos’ raid into the heart of Seoul on Jan.21, 1968 — and North Korea’s seizure of the American reconnaissance ship USS Pueblo two days later — marked one of the ​peaks of Cold War ​tensions on the divided Korean Peninsula.Stung by the attack, Mr.

Park’s government secretly trained its own assassins to exact revenge against ​the North’s then leader Kim Il-sung, the grandfather of the current leader Kim Jong-un.(The unit was disbanded after the South Korean commandos mutinied in 1971.) ​South Korea also ​created a reservist​ army and introduced military training at ​high schools and universities.

The 13-digit residential ID card​, introduced ​at the time to ​help guard against North Korean spies, remains mandatory�...

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Publisher: The New York Times

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