I Became Park Jeong-ui’s Nephew - Chapter 326
Only Noblemtl
He became Park Jeong-ui’s nephew. – (326)
⁕ Prohibits discrimination by agencies contracting with the government. If violations are found, funding from the federal government will be cut off.
⁕ Prohibits employers from discriminating on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. It also prohibits employers from discriminating against employees on the basis of the race, color, religion, sex, or national origin of their spouses or related persons.
This is Korea, and the Central Intelligence Agency has been messing with American law.
Are we going to just leave a person who made a racist remark in front of the head of state alone? The head of state said to just let it go, but Deputy Chief Cho Dae-soo went ahead with the job alone.
Rather than handling it directly, it is also a way to borrow America’s sword.
I dug into Jonathan Frank’s case and found a clause that seemed problematic.
The question is whether Jonathan Frank is supported by the US federal government.
There are about 52 federal funds in the United States, and they mainly deal with non-political issues.
Organizations like the Smithsonian Institution of National Museums, the Green Climate Fund (GCF), which was established to respond to climate change, and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), which promotes democratization around the world.
Could Jonathan Frank, a businessman, be included in that category?
However, Deputy Chief Cho Dae-soo found a punishable provision through persistent pursuit.
‘Democratization of the world? No way. I knew it.’
It’s already been 17 years since I joined the Central Intelligence Agency. Where did all that experience go?
Deputy Chief Cho Dae-soo found something.
On the surface, NED advocates ‘democratization of the world’, but in reality, it is closer to an intelligence agency that eliminates people and elements that could interfere with the United States.
NED also supports Aung San Suu Kyi, a nationalist activist fighting the military junta in Southeast Asia, and has uncovered the mass killings that took place in Cambodia. 90% of the production and expenses of the programs they produce are covered by federal government funds.
Then why is the United States running a civic group as a spy agency?
That’s because the CIA is under too much check,
There was even an uproar in the US Congress over increasing the number of congressmen monitoring the CIA from eight to 40, and the CIA’s misdeeds and espionage activities during the Cold War were widely known.
Could the U.S. government expand the scope of the CIA’s activities under these circumstances?
So, they are mobilizing civic groups that receive federal funding from the government, like NED, to conduct intelligence activities.
But what does this have to do with Jonathan Frank?
Third Vice Minister Cho Dae-soo found evidence that Jonathan Frank was not a businessman supporting NED, but a member of the organization.
[On March 2, 1961, a military coup led by General Ne Win took place in Myanmar. He won the support of the Burmese people by declaring that he would arrest ethnic minority leaders. However, the Ne Win regime, which did not know economics, prevented foreign investment, printed money indiscriminately, and smuggled drugs, throwing the country into chaos, and as a result, Myanmar was designated as one of the poorest countries in the world in 1987.]
This is what has happened in Myanmar over the past 20 years.
When the military staged a coup and drove out foreign investors, NED dug into the Myanmar military. The military was smuggling drugs and printing money to cause inflation. How could NED have found out about this?
Here’s something Jonathan Frank has to say about it:
The NED was officially launched in 1983, roughly the same time that the United States began to intervene in Myanmar politics in earnest.
With General Ne Win being impeached and stepping down and democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi gaining attention, doesn’t that seem too stinky to be a coincidence?
In fact, Aung San Suu Kyi received support from the NED, and the person who delivered the funds was Jonathan Frank.
Since it was data from 10 years ago, it could have been overlooked, but this time, as the Central Intelligence Agency was digging into Jonathan Frank, his identity was finally revealed.
‘This guy came into Korean territory? America, are you crossing the line?’
Third Vice Minister Cho Dae-soo intuitively sensed that the United States was monitoring Korea through NED.
No, it is fortunate that there is such a level of surveillance. As can be seen from the situation in Myanmar, the NED directly supported Aung San Suu Kyi in her resistance to the military.
And the people of Henan Province have a history of suppressing democracy movements against Lianxiang, so what if the NED provokes this and causes chaos in the interior?
Fortunately, the South Korean government nibbled the problem in the bud by relocating Lian Shang’s headquarters to Hebei Province, but no one knows what NED will do in the future.
This is the same as the United States declaring war on Korea.
What can’t an intelligence agency that gets 90% of its operating expenses from the US federal government do in the future?
Deputy Chief Cho Dae-soo handed over the relevant information to his superior, and Director Kim Hak-young stood on end.
“Are you sure this information is correct?”
“Yes, I did some background research to help Jonathan Frank, and this is what I found.”
“Well then, those Americans have been so quiet lately.”
Director Kim Hak-young nodded, saying that it was something he had expected.
World hegemony is tilted toward Northeast Asia, but will the United States just step down like this?
I’ve noticed that the CIA is conducting espionage activities targeting Korea, but they’ve been less active recently due to the checks and balances of the U.S. Congress.
But this was just a smokescreen operation by the US, which was disguising the intelligence agency called NED as a civic group and providing $3.3 million in support every year.
At this point, it means we should go to war.
From this time on, the CIA began investigating Jonathan Frank and NED.
***
[America has never discriminated against race. Black people? They are animals, not people. Southeast Asians? They are not human in the slightest. Their skin tone is just weird.]
This is America,
The recording files released to the public turned American society upside down.
The protagonist of this speech is American businessman Jonathan Frank,
It would be a big deal if a simple businessman said something like that, but it turned out that he was actually a NED agent disguised as a businessman.
Jonathan Frank also provided funding to Aung San Suu Kyi and the democratic forces resisting the Myanmar military. The problem is that this man treated Southeast Asians as beings worse than animals.
[Koreans are also somewhat uncivilized, but their skin tone is somewhat acceptable. But Southeast Asians are not. Their skin color itself is strange. I know this well as a businesswoman, but Southeast Asian women wear makeup to look like white people.]
Isn’t it funny that someone with this kind of perception supported democracy in Myanmar?
In addition, all of the operating funds came from the US federal government, and public opinion in the US was outraged.
“NED is not a civic group, it is an intelligence agency that replaces the CIA!!”
“Oh my god!! You funded a fund for a guy like that? Are you out of your mind?!!”
“Disband NED immediately!!”
Related protests also took place in South Korea.
Jonathan Frank is a rude person who talked about ‘skin color’ in front of the Korean leader, and when you look at his background, it’s hard to treat him as an ordinary businessman.
He is just an American spy who came to spy on Korea.
Korean protesters burned the American flag and hurled insults at the United States.
“You’re disguising this guy as a businessman to spy on Korea? And you’re still an ally?!!”
“I never liked America from the beginning!! I will boycott American products from now on!!”
“America, get out of Asia!! From now on, peace in Asia will be our responsibility, Korea!!”
This incident has prompted Korean society to express its intention to intervene in Myanmar and the Indochina Peninsula.
Is the US government really supporting Myanmar’s democracy movement with good intentions?
Or is it to check the emergence of an Asian federation centered around Korea?
What is clear is that the United States has done something that is worthy of misunderstanding.
The U.S. government immediately stepped in to explain.
“It is true that Jonathan Frank provided funds to the Myanmar democracy forces through NED. However, that was 10 years ago, and the principle is that more than 80% of federal government funds are executed even if the government changes. We do not know the details.”
In fact, the US Federal Reserve has 52,
This hardly changes even if the government changes. In 10 years, the government changes twice. Did the US government know how NED’s operating funds were being spent?
Considering that NED was conducting intelligence activities on behalf of the CIA, this is highly likely.
But this is a problem that affects the economies of Korea and the US. The US needs the Korean market of 500 million people, and Korea cannot afford to miss out on the US market of 300 million people.
If we join hands, we can share a market of 800 million people and 400 million middle class people, but it makes sense to cut off communication with each other.
So the US wanted to get rid of Jonathan Frank and wrap things up, and the South Korean leader also did not want things to get worse.
This was just a simple incident, and the leaders of the two countries made it clear that the Korea-US relationship will continue to be maintained.
And as a result of this incident, NED’s funding was reduced by 70%, and it was no longer able to conduct intelligence activities as before.
Meanwhile, the Korean government exerted its influence in Indochina, and the AOPR also worked together with the Korean government to fully intervene in the situation in Myanmar.
***
“It’s finally over!!”
“The tiresome military regime is now over!!”
This is Myanmar, a small town where people are flocking like clouds.
Is Aung San Suu Kyi, the symbol of Myanmar’s democracy movement, here to give a speech?
The people who appeared in front of the public were the so-called ‘Ddaengjung’ who had supported the military.
These are a Buddhist group that has committed all sorts of evil deeds while cooperating with the military regime. If they don’t want to be beaten to death, isn’t it normal for them to hide behind the military?
But they asked for forgiveness in public.
“We, the Buddhist community, have been submitting to the military’s threats and responding in a helpless manner. But not anymore. From now on, we will fight together with the people, and the monks will organize a militia.”
“Wow~!!”
The people of Myanmar were thrilled by the monks’ surrender.
Although it is unpleasant that the junta has committed corruption under the military, it is clear that divisions are occurring within the military.
The democratic forces were also in a position where they were missing one person, and the resistance forces taught the monks how to shoot guns and included them in the militia.
From this point on, the Myanmar militia developed systematically. In the past, militias were spread out everywhere and naturally, they could not carry out group operations.
But the situation changed when South Korea intervened, and the South Korean government provided $75 million to Myanmar resistance organizations.
More than double the amount NED has supported over the past 10 years,
In the past, when resistance forces recruited soldiers in each village, only 10 to 15 people applied, but now 30 people are recruited in each village.
The size of the militia increased from 70,000 to 220,000.
What more explanation is needed when monks also join the militia to receive subsidies?
The militia, whose power has been called up, has been carrying out military operations in various places, and recently, 2,000 Myanmar soldiers were ambushed by the militia and surrendered, throwing down their weapons.
Here, ethnic minorities who were oppressed by the Myanmar military are also participating in the revolution, and the military, whose supply route was cut off, is mobilizing helicopters to deliver supplies.
But that has reached its limit now. Almost all those who can fight have joined the militia, so where will the military get its reinforcements?
The military, sensing defeat, declared surrender on the condition of personal safety, and the democratic forces supported by the South Korean government recaptured Myanmar.
But this was just a signal for democratization in Indochina. While Korea was roaming around Indochina, the US did nothing.
It’s only natural that we lost the NED after the CIA.
We invested heavily in dominating Indochina over the past 10 years, but it ended up being eaten up by Korea.