Seoul reveals plan to find missing remains of Korean War soldiers

Seoul reveals plan to find missing remains of Korean War soldiers

SEOUL

South Korean President Moon Jae-in declared on June 5 his plan to uncover the missing remains of Korean War soldiers, suggesting that better relations with North Korea will allow for a thorough search of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that currently separates the two sides.

Hundreds of thousands of service members remain unaccounted for since the conflict, which ended in a cease-fire decades ago.

Some 165 of those missing soldiers came from Turkey, which was one of the first nations to join the war on the side of South Korea following North’s attack on June 25, 1950.

The Turkish Brigade ultimately supplied nearly 15,000 troops, and its losses of just over 1,000 soldiers represented the allies’ highest proportion of Korean War fatalities, cementing a “brothers in blood” relationship with South Korea.

Moon’s promise to find the missing war dead came during his Memorial Day address, just days before a planned U.S.-North Korea summit that could lead to a Korean War peace treaty finally being reached.

“When South-North relations improve, we will push for the recovery of the remains in the Demilitarized Zone first of all. We will also be able to retrieve the remains of U.S. and other foreign soldiers who participated in the war,” Moon said in a speech at the National Cemetery in Daejeon, according to local news agency Yonhap.

“We will continue efforts to recover the remains of military and police members who fell during the Korean War until we find the last remaining person,” he added.