American Traitor Expelled by North Korea Headed Home to Prison

Korea

North Korea taught U.S. Army Private Travis King more of a lesson than he was expecting. The traitor unwisely decided that defecting to the Hermit Kingdom was a better situation than returning home to be disciplined for “assaulting two people and kicking a police car.” Now that he’s been wrung dry by the North Korean military, they handed him back over to be disposed of like trash. His mom is thrilled he’s coming home even though he’s in a whole lot more trouble, now, than he would have been before. At least he’s alive.

North Korea ‘expels” US defector

It didn’t cost Joe Biden a single cent to get U.S. Army Private Travis King back from North Korea. The soldier came to the misinformed conclusion that Kim Jong Un would treat him better than the military brass back home in America.

He hails from Racine, Wisconsin, but will be in Texas for a while. He needs hospital care and they have a special unit there for “debriefing” those in his particular sort of situation.

On Wednesday, September 27, North Korea announced that “they had decided to ‘expel’ U.S. Army Private Travis King.” Unlike Joe Biden, Kim Jong Un takes illegal immigration seriously. It wasn’t hard for King to wetback the North Korean border. There isn’t even a fence. All he had to do was join a tour group to the symbolic paint stripe.

Nobody had a clue he was about to sprint across the line to intentionally get arrested. The North Koreans didn’t have much use for the weak and disgraced American. He wasn’t a hard core criminal but was unruly enough not to be able to cooperate in civilized society. Besides that, he wasn’t high enough up the military ladder to know anything.

If Private King had been working with nuclear warheads or something similar, Kim might have found something useful enough to justify teaching them their language. Instead, they just called in an interrogator who spoke English.

While details of his captivity in North Korea haven’t been disclosed, it’s not hard to imagine that he was tortured enough to learn what he knew. Officials aren’t talking about his specific medical condition but say “King appeared to be in good health and good spirits as he makes his way home.” They also expect him to be in the hospital for a while.

Illegally intruded

The official news outlet in North Korea, KCNA, declared that “the relevant organ of the DPRK decided to expel Travis King, a soldier of the U.S. Army who illegally intruded into the territory of the DPRK, under the law of the Republic.” The report also noted their “investigation” into King “has been finished.

It’s their side of the story that the private “confessed that he illegally intruded into the territory of the DPRK as he harbored ill feeling against inhuman maltreatment and racial discrimination within the U.S. army and was disillusioned about the unequal U.S. society.” He was shocked speechless at the way the communists work.

Swedish negotiators arranged for King to be brought to the border where he was met by “Nicholas Burns, the American ambassador to China, in the city of Dandong, which borders North Korea.

As related by State Department spokesman Matthew Miller, “his plane stopped in Shenyang, China, before continuing on to the U.S., where American officials said he will land at a military base.” He’s “very happy” to be coming back.

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan issued a statement of thanks to “the government of Sweden for its diplomatic role serving as the protecting power for the United States in the DPRK and the government of the People’s Republic of China for its assistance in facilitating the transit of Private King.

King’s mother, Claudine Gates “will be forever grateful to the United States Army and all its interagency partners for a job well done. For the future, the family asks for privacy and Ms. Gates does not intend to give any interviews.” North Korea couldn’t wait to get rid of him and don’t want any more of his kind. They don’t grant “asylum” there.

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