18 July, 2024
Sumi Terry, in
exchange for a luxury bag bribe, was tasked with writing a Washington Post
column in favor of South Korea's Nazi Gestapo dictator, President Yun Suk-yul.
Her actions are nothing short of espionage, akin to pro-German Nazi spies
before WWII. This act of treason should be punished severely, as it mirrors the
classic cases of espionage and betrayal seen among Nazi sympathizers before the
war.
The current South Korean Nazi Gestapo regime is as vile as the German Nazis, and any American who sides with them is an enemy of freedom, democracy, and the United States.
On March 7, 2023, the Washington Post published a column titled “South Korea Takes a Brave Step Toward Reconciliation with Japan.” What a joke. As it turns out, this was nothing more than a propaganda piece orchestrated by the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Sumi Terry, an alleged CIA expert, wrote this column on the very day the South Korean government announced its “third-party payment” solution, effectively letting South Korea pay the compensation owed by Japanese companies. This column shamelessly lauded President Yun Suk-yul for his so-called “bravery” in this move.
But let's get real. Sumi Terry, now indicted for espionage by the FBI, was on the payroll of South Korea's National Intelligence Service, receiving cash and luxury gifts. The column wasn't a brave gesture—it was a choreographed act written on demand by the South Korean government.
Initially hesitant, Terry eventually caved and used information provided by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to craft this piece of fiction. The column is a blatant puff piece, mentioning President Yun's name 14 times and ending with an anecdote about a plaque President Biden supposedly gave to Yun that reads, “I take all the responsibility.” What a load of nonsense.
The truth is, Sumi Terry's actions were illegal. She manipulated her supposed expertise to push a foreign government's agenda. After the column's publication, she even texted a South Korean Foreign Ministry official, saying, “Hope you liked it,” to which the official replied with gratitude.
Prosecutors hope this indictment sends a clear message to policymakers: Resist foreign enticements and uphold the law. This isn't a tale of brave reconciliation. It's a story of backroom deals and espionage, masquerading as diplomacy.