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Withdrawal of US Nuclear Weapons from Korean Peninsula

As a result of President Bush's unilateral disarmament initiatives in 1991, all U.S. nuclear weapons were withdrawn from South Korea. Yet U.S. authorities have never publicly confirmed the withdrawal from the Peninsula, and rumors have persisted -- particularly in North and South Korea -- that nuclear weapons might still be present.

This excerpt from the US Commander-in-Chief, Pacific (USCINCPAC) Command History for 1991 (Volume I, pages 90-93) provides the first known official confirmation of the fact and timeperiod of the withdrawal.

Not only does it confirm the deployment in South Korea and the withdrawal, it also reveals that the transport of the weapons out of South Korea "had highest priority for transportation assets, with weapon movements to commence before the next meeting of the ROK-U.S. Military Committee and Security Committee (MCM/SCM) scheduled for 20-22 November 1991."

A PDF-version of excerpts from the 1991 PACOM Command history is provided in the right-hand bar.


FOIA Documents

>> Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Command (CINCPAC), Command History for 1991, October 30, 1992, Volume 1 (excerpts only: pp. 90-93).


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  Funding for this project was provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and Ploughshares Fund. For information about the Nuclear Strategy Project contact Hans M. Kristensen (510-295-6125).