News this morning.
We learned just a short time ago
that a U.S.
national was detained by North Korea.
It is believed the man is a U.S.
soldier.
That is according
to an American official.
Now, according to the United Nations
command, the man was on tour of a joint
security area
when he crossed the military.
DeMarco mission line right on the border.
We'll get a map at some point
to show you where it is
right on the border
between North and South Korea,
the demilitarized zone.
He crossed the border
into North Korean territory.
It is believed,
when he was taken into custody.
We have team coverage.
We're joined
from the State Department,
from the White House.
We have our military analyst available
first though.
Let's go to CNN's Will Ripley,
who has been to North Korea
so many times.
Will, give us a sense of what happened
Well, it's a very
interesting location, John,
because Panmunjom is basically
a series of buildings that straddle
the border
between North
and South Korea in an area known
as the DMZ, the demilitarized zone.
Half the buildings in the north,
half the buildings in the south.
It's like a tourist attraction.
There are gift
shops on the North Korean side
and the South Korean side.
You can get souvenirs
People go and yes,
they see armed soldiers
and sniper towers.
And there are still mines in the woods.
So it can be a pretty dangerous area.
But a lot of people cross through
without incident.
Every single day
that it's open
and it's open
for much of the year on the
on the South Korean side,
although the pandemic obviously
has thrown a wrench in some of that.
Certainly it does on the North as well.
So this would have been a pretty routine
type of,
you know, tour
showing these service members.
This is what North Korea looks like.
They're standing
very close to North Korea,
but it certainly doesn't happen
or doesn't
frequently happen
that somebody would actually
step out of their group
and actually take that
that walk across the military demarcation
line is the line that President
Trump crossed
when he technically became
the first sitting U.S.
president to cross into North Korean soil
when he was having
some impromptu discussions with Kim
Jong un at the DMZ.
And this if indeed
this is a service member
who has attempted to defect
to North Korea, John,
it actually wouldn't be
the first time
we know of at least six U.S.
servicemen who have defected
to North Korea.
But the last time it happened
was more than 40 years ago, back in 1982.
It's a very different time now.
North Korea is a nuclear armed nation.
They've been conducting lots of launches,
trying to get the attention
of the United States
through their missile testing.
And the Biden administration has not
reached out at all.
But now, John,
interestingly, this American
in North
Korean custody may be an opportunity
for the North Koreans
to engage
that they did not have until this person
apparently decided
to make those steps
across the demarcation
line into North Korea.
Will, just to be clear,
we don't know why he crossed the line,
if indeed he
did, in fact, crossed the line.
But how easy is it?
I mean, when you were on tour there,
how close is the North Korean side
and how big of a step is it to simply
go across like that?
You know, it's funny,
I've actually only done the tour
on the North Korean side.
I've never
I signed up for the South Korean
tour once
and then they canceled the tour.
So I didn't actually get to do it.
So from from the North Korean side,
I can tell you it's a bit of a distance.
You might have to
if you were trying
to get over there in a matter of seconds,
you might have to do a little bit
of a jog to get across.
Maybe it would take
you five or 10 seconds
if you're walking briskly,
but it's not a very long distance.
It's not a very difficult thing to cross.
You can see in the video
there, there's blue buildings.
There's a nice gap in the middle
and somebody could
just walk right through
if that's what they wanted to do.
But very few people do that.
And obviously,
when North Koreans
attempt to do the crossing
sometimes they're even fired
at by other North Korean soldiers.
There have actually been
incidents of bullets flying in this area
with North Korean defectors.
Obviously, we don't believe that
there were any shots fired
in this case of somebody actually
walking from south to north.
But it's pretty rare.
As I said,
a service
member hadn't happened in decades.
All right.
Will Ripley,
stand by for us for a moment.
Priscilla Alvarez at the White House.
What are you hearing
from there this morning?
This is a situation, John,
and the White House is closely monitoring
and trying to wrap their arms around.
As you heard there,
there is limited communication
with North Korea.
So this is a situation in which U.S.
officials are talking to their allies
and really leaning on them
as they try to gather more information
about the circumstances
in which this U.S.
national, which was on this tour,
crossed into North Korea
and is now believed to be detained.
Now, again,
it is a complicated relationship
that the U.S.
has with North Korea
and one in which the U.S.
has tried to reach out in the past
on issues
like denuclearization
and not received a response.
But we do have a sense
a little bit
about what communication they do have
from national security spokesman
John Kirby.
Look,
we have
channels to be able
to communicate with Pyongyang.
We don't have as you know, Kaitlan,
we don't have an embassy there.
We don't have direct
diplomatic relations.
But there are ways to pass
communications back and forth.
So as you heard there,
there are ways for them
to pass communication back and forth.
But without those diplomatic relations,
it makes it
all the more difficult
and makes this a very tenuous situation.
But I will also add,
this has been a White House
that has made this hand Americans
a priority.
President Biden spoke to it
just last week
when he was in Finland
saying that
he would do all he can,
the administration would do
all they can for detained Americans.
I have reached out to the White House
for more comment on this situation.
They have not yet weighed in. John.
Priscilla, any sense of the president
has been notified yet of this incident?
We are asking those questions.
The White House has not confirmed
that's been the case.
But you can imagine in a situation
like this,
when there is a detained American,
the president would be well aware of it.
All right.
Priscilla Alvarez at the White House.
Stand by.
Kylie Atwood now
at the State Department,
obviously relations is
at the diplomatic level with North
Korea, are more or less nonexistent.
What is the view from there this morning?
And because of that, that makes a moment
like this even more challenging,
even more complicated for U.S.
officials?
Right, John,
if you reflect back on the Trump
administration,
there was pretty regular contact
between U.S.
officials and North Korean officials
as they were setting up
those summits between
President Trump and Kim Jong un.
So we know that there are ways
for the U.S.
to send those signals
to send contacts to North Korea.
But our understanding
is that those haven't been hot channels
that have been active
over the course
of the last few years, with U.S.
officials saying
they haven't received
substantive responses
from the North Korean side.
As they have reached out
to engage, saying
that there would be no preconditions,
they wouldn't be asking North Korea
to do anything to partake
in initial conversations.
But the North Koreans
just haven't done so.
And even in this incident,
we're still waiting
to learn more details.
All we know right now
is that according to the U.N.
command,
which preserves the stability
of the Korean peninsula,
this American crossed
over the demarcation line
from South Korea to North Korea
and did so without authorization.
So we're waiting to
learn a little bit more
about what that means.
Was the person aggressively
crossing over,
as we have heard from experts
and I myself
have been to the area,
it's pretty
hard to cross over in an accidental way
because these tours are not done
to be provocateur. Live.
These tours are done to show off
what the United Nations has been able
to do
to maintain stability between South Korea
and North Korea.
So we're waiting to hear a little bit
more about just how this all went down.
But we should note that
there are not before this incident,
any known Americans
who were detained by North Korea
at this time.
The last Americans
who are released from North
Korea were released in 20, 18
three Americans.
And then, of course,
after that,
we saw that there were multiple
summits between President Trump
and Kim
Jong un, which
obviously didn't deliver
any results on denuclearization.
But it was the first time
that we saw such high level engagement
between the two sides.
Kylie Atwood,
let me just ask
and put a fine point on it,
because there is still so much
we don't know.
We do not know at this point
if this US soldier willingly,
decisively walked across the border
on purpose
or whether it was some
kind of accident, correct?
That's right.
All right.
That is very important to know
at this point to determine,
I think, the posture of both countries
as we move
forward over the next several hours.
I want to bring in retired Lieutenant
General Mark Hertling.
You obviously have been
near there, General.
You know what it's like
to be a serviceman on duty
and also on tours there.
Give us your perspective
Yeah, I've been there, John.
In 1999
I was commanding a brigade
of the Second Infantry Division.
We took
a group of soldiers up there
to do exactly what happened here.
It was a tour
to see what we were defending.
The reason those buildings are blue is
this is a U.N. command post.
This is not a U.S.
command post.
There are South Koreans, Canadians,
other forces there.
It's mostly guarded by U.S.
forces, military policemen.
But these are the best of the best.
And the same is true on the other side.
The North Korean soldiers that are
there are all chosen for their height,
their strictness.
They're all over six foot tall.
This you don't mess around
when you go to Panmunjom in this site.
This site is on a post
named Camp Boniface.
Art Boniface was a instructor
and water polo
coach of mine at West Point
who was killed
in an ax cutting incident in 1976.
The post is named after him
when he was killed
by North Korean soldiers.
They take their jobs seriously.
And again,
you just brought up
some very good points
about
what was this person
doing to cross over the border.
Was this accidental?
Was it purposeful?
Was it a defection?
We don't know.
But it's not hard.
If you're on a tour,
you see the demarcation line.
It's a couple of yards in front of you.
Just like President Trump walked up to it
and crossed over it.
But there is
a step that you have to cross over.
You know the difference
because it's painted a different color
on the north in the south side.
So, you know,
depending on what we learn
in the next couple of hours
about what happened,
you know,
I would tend to speculate one way
or another
that this was someone doing something
stupid and going across the border
when they shouldn't have been
because you're warned
before you take the tour,
do not go anywhere near
any of the contentious points
in the area.
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