
Situation Report from the Ground: The Election has started in South Korea and Freedom Is as Stake

South Korea is teetering on the abyss. One of America’s closest allies has been subject to a long term Chinese Communist Party Operation to conduct Elite Capture. According to former National Assembly member Mr. Min Kyungwook, who also spent over 23 years as one of South Korea’s leading broadcast news personalities, “This election is so important and could be the last free and fair election in South Korea”. Min shared with that there has been a significantly growing presence of Chinese citizens in South Korean society who have been buying real estate, opening businesses and even exchanges of training and inter-action with Chinese police forces under an agreement signed by former President Moon Jae-in. Secret Chinese Police Stations have become a phenom in South Korea, just like America. Mr. Min also said if you polled 100 South Korean’s in Seoul, 70 would select America as South Korea’s best friend, but unfortunately, some institutions and the elite have succumbed to Chinese Influence Operations.
What is needed according to Mr. Min and many others is a statement of support from President Trump on the need for free and fair elections in South Korea. In addition, the U.S. Congress should take a look, with a subpoena, at the Democrat Party Candidate Lee Jae-myung who is firmly interested in removing U.S. Troops and aligning South Korea with China. If Lee Jae-myung wins, South Korea will have a President who will be forbidden from traveling outside Korea because he violated United Nations and U.S. sanctions by sending $8 million to North Korea. Two of his subordinates have already been found guilty in the case, with Lee’s trial postponed until after the June 3 Election Day.
Another thing that is needed is a U.S. Ambassador needs to be named immediately. With a right minded Ambassador, who is action oriented, even if Mr. Lee is elected, he can be held directly accountable and have a constant voice in his ear on the benefits of remaining aligned with the U.S. and the cost of moving South Korea to the Red Chinese camp. General Flynn said, “If no one of substance in the USG pays attention to what the CCP is doing, will it even matter? The upcoming ROK elections are already seeing signs of fraud. A fraudulent outcome will benefit the CCP. “ Early voting began on May 29, and by early evening the National Election Commission, the centralized body that runs the entire election process in South Korea issued an apology for chaos on the first day.
Ambassador Morse Tan from the first Trump Administration, is leading an International Election Monitoring Team in South Korea. He released a statement that said,
“The National Election Integrity Association (NEIA) and its International Election Monitoring Team (IEMT) conducted an on-site visit to an early voting center in Seoul on the first day of early voting ahead of the Republic of Korea’s presidential election scheduled for June 3, 2025.
This statement is based on an analysis of verified facts, including reports from major domestic news outlets, documented submissions from civil election watchdog groups, and direct observations and interviews conducted by the monitoring team on site.
1. Severe Violation of Procedural Integrity
Under the South Korean Public Official Election Act, early voting ballots are required to bear a physical seal from the presiding election official. However, at the site visited, this procedure had been replaced with machine-printed seals. This substitution undermines the ability to verify ballot authenticity and constitutes a clear departure from the legal standard, amounting to a serious procedural violation.
2. Significant Discrepancies in Voter Count
In multiple regions, independent citizen monitors using manual tally counters reported significant discrepancies between the number of voters they personally counted and the official voter turnout figures released by the National Election Commission (NEC). The magnitude of these discrepancies goes far beyond plausible human error, raising serious doubts about the objectivity and reliability of early voting turnout data.
3. Verified Cases of Ballot Leakage Prior to Marking
Video evidence and media reports confirm that in at least one location, unmarked ballots were seen being carried outside the polling station by voters. This incident reveals a critical breakdown in ballot custody and oversight, representing a serious failure of election management and control protocols.
4. Physically Improbable Voter Throughput
At certain early voting locations, the total number of voters recorded exceeds what is physically possible given the operating hours and realistic voter processing capacity. Such anomalies suggest that digital tally systems may not accurately reflect the number of actual voters. This warrants a fundamental and independent forensic investigation. The early voting process has revealed severe deficiencies in procedural consistency, numerical reliability, and transparency of on-site election administration. These are not mere administrative oversights—they point to structural issues that may fundamentally compromise the legitimacy and public acceptance of the election results.
Of particular concern is the growing lack of confidence in the integrity of published early voting turnout figures, which now appears to be substantiated by both quantitative discrepancies and operational irregularities. These issues fail to meet the standards expected by international election monitoring protocols. Accordingly, we believe a full-scale re-evaluation of the current early voting system, along with an independent audit, is urgently needed. The IEMT will prepare a comprehensive election monitoring report covering these and other key findings throughout the election period.
This report will be formally submitted to the Government of the Republic of Korea, the Government of the United States, the United Nations, and relevant international organizations. We strongly urge the National Election Commission of Korea to acknowledge the gravity of the problems identified during early voting and to implement immediate, meaningful corrective measures.
This is not a demand on behalf of any political party or candidate, but rather a principled call to restore public trust in South Korean democracy and uphold its international reputation.”
All viewpoints are personal and do not reflect the viewpoints of any organization
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