Honey Traps Exposed — Testimonies by Hiroshi Furuta and Sonfa O on Korean and Chinese Intelligence Operations
Two leading scholars reveal in a WiLL magazine feature that they were targeted by honey traps operated by Korean intelligence agents. This article confirms the author’s long-held conviction that such traps form the foundation of Chinese and Korean influence operations.
2017-02-26
At times, there are phenomena that seem to go beyond mere coincidence.
Such things are commonplace in the fictional worlds of films and novels, but rarely in reality.
Yesterday, I was reading the newly released issue of the monthly magazine WiLL on the train bound for Kyoto.
In it, there was a special dialogue feature titled “The Poisonous Assassination State Next Door,” between Professor Hiroshi Furuta of the University of Tsukuba, one of Japan’s foremost scholars on the Korean Peninsula, and Professor Sonfa O of Takushoku University.
I was surprised to learn that Professor Furuta’s wife is a resident Korean in Japan, but precisely because he stands in complete opposition to people like Oda Makoto, who occupied a similar position, I once again confirmed the correctness of his writings—that is, that he continues to write the truth.
What astonished me most was that what I had inferred with one hundred percent confidence—that all operations carried out by China and Korea, especially those directed at civilians, begin with honey traps regardless of the target’s gender—was now proven to be one hundred percent correct.
The strangeness of Alexis Dudden, who studied at Yonsei University, the former chief editor who died suddenly under mysterious circumstances the moment he entered Beijing from South Korea, and the journalists involved in the fabrication of the “comfort women” reports, as well as those who are now writing bizarre editorials—all of them, for some reason one after another studied at Yonsei University affiliated with the Asahi Shimbun—this had naturally led to such an inference.
As I have already written, what turned that inference into certainty was the moment when I observed two young Korean female tourists sitting opposite me on the subway the other day.
In the above-mentioned special feature, both Professor Furuta and Professor Sonfa O speak of their experiences in which the person who approached them bore the title of Korean Embassy staff but was in fact an agent of the National Intelligence Service, Korea’s CIA.
In Professor Furuta’s case, the person began by later revealing their true identity.
In Professor Sonfa O’s case, the situation was dangerous enough that, before agreeing to meet, she thoroughly investigated the true identity of the person.
In this feature, both of them reveal that they were subjected to—indeed, invited into—honey traps.
On Goo, yesterday’s number-one search term was in French, and it concerned my own commentary in which I had written that information warfare always begins, first and foremost, with honey traps.
