Charles Robert Jenkins enlisted when he was 15 years old
Charles Robert Jenkins entered the world on February 18, 1940, in Rich Square, North Carolina. His early years were marked by a sports injury and the passing of his father, which contributed to him not completing his education at Rich Square High School.
Lacking a high school diploma, Jenkins found his job prospects restricted. As a result, this led him to enlist in the North Carolina National Guard, serving from 1955 to 1958, which covered the majority of his teenage years.
Joining the US Army
After receiving an honorable discharge, the 18-year-old joined the US Army and was assigned to Fort Hood (today Fort Cavazos) in Texas, where he served as an infantryman with a focus on light weapons.
Not long after, Jenkins volunteered to serve with the 7th Infantry Division in South Korea. He was deployed in August 1960 and finished his tour in September 1961, returning to the United States. He was then reassigned to the 3rd Armored Division and stationed in West Germany, staying there until 1964.
Deserting the US Army
In 1964, Charles Robert Jenkins chose to serve a second tour in South Korea, stationed in the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). On this deployment, he was assigned to the 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division.
On January 5, 1965, Jenkins made a decision that would alter his life forever. With rumors circulating about his regiment’s possible deployment to Vietnam and increasingly aggressive patrols, the sergeant crossed the DMZ into North Korea. He intended to seek asylum through the Soviets, who would then facilitate his return to the United States during a prisoner exchange.
Crossing the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
That fateful night, Jenkins put away 10 beers before going on patrol with his comrades. Around 2:30 AM, he told them he’d heard a noise and went to check it. This was when he made his great escape. As he approached the DMZ, he took the ammunition out of his M14 rifle and tied a white shirt to the top as a sign of peace.
Jenkins then crossed over into North Korea, expecting to see the US again very soon. Instead, he was captured, interrogated and held prisoner for 39 and a half years.
Immediately regretting his decision
It wasn’t long after his capture and detention that Charles Robert Jenkins regretted his decision to defect to North Korea; it was not the experience he’d expected it to be.
In a 2006 interview with British publication The Independent, he called his desertion “the biggest mistake I ever made,” and in his 2008 memoir, The Reluctant Communist: My Desertion, Court-Martial and 40-Year Imprisonment in North Korea, wrote that hadn’t realized the nation was essentially a giant “prison.”
He also explained his mindset at the time, writing, “I was not thinking clearly. But at the time my decisions had a logic to them that made my actions seem almost inevitable.”
Word of Charles Robert Jenkins’ defection spreads
Just under two weeks after crossing the DMZ, Charles Robert Jenkins’ defection was announced on North Korean radio, which stated his decision was “because of disgust with conditions in South Korea and that he believed life was better under the Communists.”
The United States confirmed him to be a deserter based on four letters he’d sent to his mother, one of which read, “Forgive me, for I know what I must do. Tell my family I love them. Love, Charles.”
Charles Robert Jenkins was housed with other defectors
Jenkins was housed with three other American deserters while under the regime’s watchful eye:
- James Dresnok, who defected in August 1962.
- Larry Abshier, who crossed the DMZ in May 1962.
- Jerry Parrish, who deserted his post in 1963.
The conditions the four were held in were horrible; they shared one room and were beaten when they failed to properly memorize the works of Kim Il-Sung. While the group had decided to cross over into North Korea, they hadn’t necessarily planned to remain. In 1966, they attempted to follow Jenkins’ original plan to seek asylum through the Soviet embassy, but they were unsuccessful.
Working for the North Koreans
Years later, the four were declared citizens and given their own homes, jobs and, eventually, wives. This didn’t, however, change their living conditions. Charles Robert Jenkins later wrote he “suffered from enough cold, hunger, beatings and mental torture to frequently make me wish I was dead.”
Even when they were made “citizens,” the group wasn’t trusted by their captors. Their houses were bugged and surrounded by barbed wire to prevent escape. The men were also used in a series of propaganda films, playing evil Americans, and Jenkins taught English classes to North Korean spies and servicemen. His strong Southern accent, however, eventually led to him being dismissed from this role.
Charles Robert Jenkins marries Hitomi Soga
In 1980, Charles Robert Jenkins was introduced to Hitomi Soga, a Japanese nurse who’d been kidnapped a few years prior to serve as a teacher for North Korean spies. Theirs was a forced union, with the ceremony occurring only a few weeks after they were introduced.
Despite having little choice in the arrangement, the two came to care for each other deeply, with Jenkins telling The Independent, “When I met her, my life changed a lot. Me and her together – I knew we could make it in North Korea. And we did.”
In the coming five years, they had two daughters, Mika (1983) and Brinda (1985).
Hitomi Soga attempts to free her husband
Charles Robert Jenkins was finally able to leave North Korea, thanks to Hitomi Soga. When the Japan-North Korea Pyongyang Declaration was signed in 2002, she and four other captives were permitted to visit Japan for 10 days—she never went back. Instead, she collaborated with the Japanese government in an effort to persuade the United States to pardon her husband. Unfortunately, her efforts were unsuccessful.
Had Jenkins followed Soga to Japan, he faced the possibility of capital punishment for his desertion, as the statute of limitations was 40 years—he had been absent for 39 and a half. Thus, he made the difficult choice to stay in North Korea with his daughters.
Charles Robert Jenkins is finally freed
Eventually, North Korea allowed Charles Robert Jenkins to leave, and he reunited with his wife in Indonesia. That made him the only post-Korean War American defector to ever leave the restrictive country. The evidence of his mistreatment was obvious. He was 100 pounds, had lost his appendix and a testicle, and part of his US Army tattoo had been cut off without proper anesthesia.
Although Japan had promised Hitoma Soga, Jenkins and their daughters residency, there was still the matter of his court-martial. Jenkins arrived at Camp Zama, Japan, on September 11, 2004, where Lt. Col. Paul Nigara was awaiting him. Jenkins, by then 64, greeted him with a salute, saying, “Sir, I’m Sergeant Jenkins and I’m reporting.”
Held accountable for his desertion
Jenkins’ trial wasn’t held until November 3, 2004. He pleaded guilty to desertion and aiding the enemy by teaching English. He was initially sentenced to six months confinement, but this was later changed to 30 days. The former Army soldier also forfeited all his back pay, was demoted to the rank of private and received a dishonorable discharge.
Despite the ruling, Charles Robert Jenkins was released on good behavior after 25 days. He was reportedly given pay for the time served. In an interview years later, he said that the sentence was “all a big set-up for the outside world so it looked like justice was done.”
Adapting to civilian life
Once his time was served, Jenkins and his family moved to his wife’s childhood home, with a trip made to North Carolina to see his aging mother. Although he’d escaped North Korea, he lived the rest of his life worried they’d come for him. He recounted his experiences in his aforementioned memoir.
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Jenkins lived out the rest of his life as a major celebrity in Japan, receiving permanent residency in July 2008. In his spare time, he followed his passion for motorcycling and worked at a local museum. On December 11, 2017, at the age of 77, Jenkins passed away. The cause was attributed to cardiovascular disease.
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