USA Soccer Players Know Korea Better Than Trump Does

4/1/2016

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May 31, 2002: USA soccer team visits DMZ from Seoul, South Korea

Donald Trump has been yammering about making South Korea pay for American services.

I doubt he knows anything about South Korea, other than he may have a property there.

In 2002, I accompanied the American soccer team’s visit to the DMZ between South and North Korea, while the team was preparing for the World Cup.

The federation was kind enough to allow journalists covering the team to come along, on a separate bus.

We all walked from a staging area toward the buildings at the border. Officials had told us to dress conservatively — no shorts — and not to wave or smile at people on the other side. They impressed on us that this was serious business.

We had been told of the time in 1976 when North Korean soldiers attacked with axes, killing two American soldiers who were pruning a tree.

Since then, security had been even higher. Soldiers from both Koreas stood a few feet apart, glaring at each other. They worked short shifts, to remain at peak alert.

Behind the South Koreans on the front line were American soldiers, in great shape, well-spoken, the best and the brightest. These were not hired hands, to be withdrawn over a labor dispute. These were warriors, guarding what President Clinton once called “the most dangerous place on earth.”

When we walked back to the buses, we were made aware of barracks where soldiers from South Korea and the United States were waiting, literally seconds from possible combat. These were not hired hands. These were partners, protecting a flourishing democracy, in effect standing guard for much of Asia and the world.

I remember DaMarcus Beasley, one of the most observant of American players, shaking his head and letting us know he had come with no idea what went on there. But now he did.

Everybody heading back to the buses seemed reflective. Some younger Korean journalists told us their parents and teachers had not impressed them about the danger a few miles north.

Anybody with normal learning ability would have come away with the sober awareness of serious forces grinding together. The American presence at the border was not some hotel deal to be re-negotiated, in Trumpian fashion.