6.25 때 인민군 포로로부터 얻은 정보에 의하면 김정숙은 남침전쟁에 반대하다 특경부에 의해 살해당했다는 소문이 있었다고 한다.

특경부(特警部, Special Police Section)는 북한 정권 출범후 6.25 전쟁 기간에 북한에 존재했던 Cominform (Communist Information Bureau, or Information Bureau of the Communist and Workers’ Parties)[1][2]의 감시기관이다. 이러한 기구의 존재는 6.25 때 미군이 인민군 포로를 신문하여 얻은 정보 기록에 나온다. 1948년 9월 북한 정권 수립과 함께 소련군 철수 후 평양의 소련 대사관이 북한 정권을 감독하는 일을 맡으면서 감시기구로 설치한 것으로 보이나 자세한 사항은 알려져 있지 않다.

개요

김일성 본인도 특경부의 감시로부터 자유롭지 않았다고 하므로 소련은 6.25 전쟁 시기에도 북한에서 감시기구를 운영하며 절대적인 영향력을 행사하고 있었던 것으로 보인다. 1951년 1월에 김일성이 한 연설이 문제가 되어 특경부의 지적을 받았다고 한다.

미군의 특경부 관련 포로 신문 기록

PW : Prisoner of War
Hq : Headquarters
aprx : approximately
CCF : Chinese Communist Forces (중공군)
CONFIDENTIAL Security Information

INTERROGATION REPORT NO KG 1122 (Cont'd)
should be viewed with the utmost reserve, pending further confirmation.)

Identification:
The Spccial Police Section (特警部) was asserted to be the surveillance agency of the COMINFORM (Communist International Information Bureau, the successor to the Third Communist International) in N KOREA (sic).

Background: PW first heard that the Special Police Section (SPS) was in P'YONGYANG in 1949 (from Maj KIM) but it apparently did not become very active until the start of the Korean War. The SPS's earlier history is unknown.

P'YONGYANG Hq: SPS Hq in P'YONGYANG was housed, as of May 51, in aprx 15 underground tunnels dug into the foot of a hill located at aprx 39°02'14" - 125°45'34" (coordinate readings taken from JANIS 75, Plan 42). Entrances to tunnels faced E, toward the TAEDONG River, Tunnel entrances were 30 - 40 m apart and extended along the foot of the hill for aprx 450 m. Tunnels led horizontally straight into the hill, ranging in horizontal depth from 30 to 60 m, and were aprx 3 m high and 6 - 10 m wide, with concrete lined walls and ceilings and wooden floors, A passageway ran along one side of the entire length of the tunnel, the other side being partitioned by wooden planks into a row of offices, detention cells, interrogation booths, etc. Tunnels were equipped with electric lights, telephones, power-driven air circulators and emergency generators.

Organization and Personnel:
According to Maj KIM, there were about 80 men in the P'YONGYANG Hq. KIM also talked as if the SPS had branch offices in all parts of N KOREA but all knew nothing specific about such offices. SPS agents in P'YONGYANG were of various nationalities - - SOVIET, Korean, Hungarian, Czech, Chinese and possibly others. Soviet personnel seemed to be directing most of the agency's activities, while the field agents were mainly Koreans. There was no particular uniform for SPS agents, who wore whatever civilian clothing or NKA, or other uniforms were necessary for their purposes. Maj KIM said that agents normally carried concealed weapons.

PW did not know whether the SPS had any connection with such Soviet agencies as the MGB, MVD or the Soviet Army's Main Administration of Counter-Intelligence. PW had never heard of these agencies nor had he seen any men at the SPS who wore the black uniform of the MGB or the green-trimmed hats and epaulets of the MVD.

However, PW's statement that the SPS was the surveillance arm of the COMINFORM was borne out, in his opinion, by statements to this effect by Maj KIM and a number of NKA officers who knew about the agency and the numerous nationalities represented among SPS men.

Authority and Operations: The SPS was concerned with political surveillance of any and all persons in N KOREA. It watched for any signs of political deviation and for failure to carry out assigned tasks. In actual practice, it concentrated on higher-ranking civil and military officials. Minor cases were turned over to the NKA or NKG civil authorities.

According to Maj KIM, it could, in theory at least, arrest and execute any person without trial or explanation. PW had not heard of any cases in which persons were actually executed by the SPS. Whether it had any jurisdiction over CCF men was unknown. PW had never heard of any high-ranking CCF men being arrested by the SPS.

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CONFIDENTIAL Security Information
CONFIDENTIAL Security Information

INTERROGATION REPORT NO KG 1122 (Cont'd)
The SPS was said to have undercover agents in the NKA, the NKG, the Soviet Military Advisory Mission and even in the chief N Korean political surveillance agencies, the Local Security Ministry and the NKA Political Security Bureau.

SPS Cases:
The SPS was reputed by some NKA officers to have been instrumental in bringing about action in the following cases of which PW had knowledge:

1. Lt Gen KİM, Il (金日), Vice-Minister of National Defense for Culture, who was removed in Dec 50 for having said that without planes the NKA could not fight UN forces and for generally having taken a defeatist line. KIM was relegated to a position as a minor official in the Ministry of Communications.

2. HO, Song T'aek (許成澤), NKG Labor Minister, who was accused of having failed to carry out orders to organize workers and peasants under NKLP leadership into effective guerrilla units during the retreat of the NKA in the fall of 1950. HO was removed from his position and assigned as a Deputy Political Commissar of the NKA 32d Div.

3. Lt Gen MU, Chong (武亭), Vice-Minister of National Defense for Arty and a Corps CG, who was stripped of his rank for failure to follow orders.

4. Soviet advisors to the NKA were removed in some instances and sent back to the USSR or relegated to unimportant positions for failure to meet their responsibilities.

5. The NKA CinC, KIM, Il Song was not immune from the SPS. After broadcasting a New Year's greeting to the people in Jan 51, KIM was accosted by an SPS agent, a Korean, who warned him in abusive language that parts of his speech were in political error. The source of this story was Lt LEE, In No (李仁露), a Signal Officer in the CinC's office, who allegedly heard the conversation through the walls of the partition between his office and that of KIM, Il Song.

* * * * *

Murder of the Wife of KIM, Il Song
Major, NKA (Signal)

N KOREA
D/O Late 1949 to Mar 50.

(IN: The following account summarizes general talk and rumors in the NKA concerning this case. The alleged conversation between KM, Il Song and an agent or agents of the Special Police Section was described to PW by Lt LEE, In No (李仁露), a GHQ Signal Officer who in turn heard it from a telephone operator in KIM, Il Song's office. While this account must necessarily be viewed with considerable reserve, it nevertheless appears to be of some intelligence value.)
... Mme KIM, Chong Suk (金貞淑), aged 35, the wife of KIM, Il Song, married him in about 1935. She was a member of the same guerrilla force in MANCHURIA in which KIM served. She was a member of the CCP and later of the NKLP. She returned to KOREA in 1945 and became politically active as a member of the Central Committee, General Federation of Women (女性總同盟中央委員會). Mme KIM was a well-built woman, apparently in excellent health and reputed to be a crack rifle and pistol shot.

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CONFIDENTIAL Security Information
CONFIDENTIAL Security Information

INTERROGATION REPORT NO KG 1122 (Cont'd)
During late 1949 and early 1950, she expressed to her husband on several occasions her opposition to the war.for which the NKA was obviously preparing. According to several NKA officers who claimed to be quoting directly what members of the KIM- g household had overheard, Mme KIM told the Premier on one occasion: "The policy of preparation for war which you are dursuing“ will result in war between people of the same face, To resort to war would kill any hope of union. There is no support among the people for such a war. And supposing you fail - - - - what then?"
. mord of Mme KIM.'s feelings reached the COMINFORM's Special Police Section and an agent or agents of this section went to see KIM and allegedly told him: "Your wife has lost the true spirit of the international Communist. She has disclosed important secrets and will continue to be a source of danger to us. For these reasons, should she not be removed?" KIM agreed.
In Mar 50, it was publioly announced that Mme KIM had died suddenly of an illness, the nature of which was not disclosed.

It was the general belief in the NKA that agents of the Special Police Section had murdered the woman. KIM himself was not believed to have had a direct hand in his wife's death. Another rumor was that KIM had killed his wifc because of another woman, a belief held by many, especially after he remarried in May 50 - - - this time the daughter of LEE, Kuk No (2 Minister without Portfolio in the NKG Cabinet,

This rumor died out after the war started and the general belief now. is that Mme KIM had been liquidated for political reasons.

* * * * *



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CONFIDENTIAL Security Information

각주

  1. Cominform Wikipedia
  2. 코민포름 위키백과