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U.S., SOUTH KOREA
ISSUE JOINT NO GUN RI REPORT
UPDATE:
The U.S.
and South Korea issue a joint report concluding U.S. soldiers opened
fire on Korean civilians 50 years ago.
(1/11/01)
REALAUDIO:
Secretary of Defense William Cohen leads a Pentagon briefing on the
No Gun Ri report. (1/11/01)
DOCUMENT:
"Statement of Mutual Understanding" between the U.S. and South
Korea regarding No Gun Ri.
EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY of the U.S. Army's No Gun Ri report (requires the free
Adobe
Acrobat Reader). Full report
from the Army's Web site.
TRANSCRIPT:
Cohen's statement on the No Gun Ri report. (1/11/01)
CLINTON EXPRESSES
REGRET OVER NO GUN RI DEATHS
Read
the full text of President Clinton's statement on the incident at
No Gun Ri. (1/11/01)
U.S. REPORT:
TROOPS PANICKED AT NO GUN RI
A
still-unpublished report says troops panicked
and fired on civilians during the Korean War, but were not ordered
to do so, The Washington Post reports. (12/6/00)
FOLLOWING ORDERS?
A
military document shows the U.S. Army asked warplanes to strafe
South Korean refugees during the Korean War, according to CBS. (6/8/00)
INCIDENT AT NO
GUN RI
Media
correspondent Terence Smith reports on the battle
between two news organizations over the story of an alleged slaughter
during the Korean War. (5/31/00) 

MARVIN KALB
The
veteran journalist and Executive Director of Harvard University's Shorenstein
Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy discusses
coverage of No Gun RI (5/00)

Korean
War Project
Harry
S Truman Library and Museum
US
National Archives

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