ion Oe Ill Hit | ih _— End war in Korea Four steps for peace | @ Withdraw Canadian armed forces from Korea.| @ Recognize fhe People’s Republic: of China. & i iq Five -- @ Propose fo the UN a ceasefire in Korea and a ees ais Pee fo fe conference of all countries concerned. clude a Pact of Peace. : 3 A new and terrible weapon—the ee has been introduced by the US: va of searing, agonizing deaf. to thous? peor “crime” was that they supported the of of Kim II Sung and not the Teo)” ied burned bodies of Korean civilians burial. Korea bas gf tears pact wa F s panne! F wills American in‘prvention in throughout the world that lies and deceptions of: Atlantic Home” reads the slogan on thi relly—a cry that is heard with 8? <4 a 3 Ss This picture of John Foster Dulles, Republican “adviser” to the ; This map, with dottizd lines and arrows pointing to where landings U.S. State Department, standing in a trench just south/of the under air cover were to be made in support of two main invasion 38th parallel with John I. Muccio, U.S. ambassador to South Korea thrusts into North Korea, was captured when the Korean People’s and high U.S. and South Korean army officers was taken six days | “rm first entered Seoul. before the outbreak of war in Korea. As D. N. Pritt, KC, eminent British lawyer, states in his pamplet ‘What was not disclosed when this picture was widely published | New Licht on Korea. ‘9 sustain the U.S. case in the UN it was _by Canadian and American newspapers at the time was that} the map | necessary to convince public opinion in the Western countries that being studied by Dulles and his party was one outlining imminent North Korea was $1c aggressor. The intrigues and propaganda military onerations, against North Korea prepared jointly by the | campaign engaged in to “prove” this contention Pritt calls “one of Syngman Rhee regime and U.S. military representatives in Seoul. tha biggest confidence tricks of recent times.” Here (from left) three U.S. delegates, Ernest Gross, Warren Austin at Briqsh delegate, Sir Gladwyn Jebt in gloatins over the passage nr of the U.S.-inspired motion branding People’s China as an aggressor p 0) Peonlo's China an2 the New Democracies, disapproved by India, togethe the world’s peoples, the resolution raised new obstacles to peaceful settle of the danger of a third world war closer, for it has *!ready been follow “. .. When prospects of a cease-fire were grow =7. the U.S. pressed i oat should be declared an aggressor in Korea,” writes D. N. Pritt. “+ * | ap ‘= various quarters that the American proposal t» have China aeciared ‘ hope c* peaceful settlement ... finally on Febr lary 1, 1951, the Gene blow to the cause of peace and to its own dwindling vrestige. . - a > What kind of “democracy” in South Korea is beng upheld at a cost to Western countries of thousands Even the United Nations Commission on Korea, composed pi{ was compelled to admit in 1949 that in of lives and billions oi dollars? represenSitives of anti-Soviet and anti-Communist countries, eight months ending April 20 that year, 89,710 peovle in South Korea had been arrested by the Syngman Rhee regime under the “National Peace Protection Act” and tha4 freedom of the press was virtually non-existent. And a delegation from the World Federation of Trade Unions, which at the time included , the British Trades Union Congress, was ‘so horrified by the conditions it found in South Korea during a visit in 1947 thati it lodged a protest with U.S. military authofities before it left. The “organized terror” against which the delegates protested inclu led imprisonment. of thousands of Rhee’s political opponents, many of whom died before firing squ-ds such as that shown above,