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Claims of cannibalism, torture and genocide: inside North Korea’s museum chronicling US ‘war atrocities’

Pyongyang says the nuclear arsenal it has spent decades developing is to defend itself from a possible US invasion

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North Korean visitors walk past a painting showing US soldiers preparing to kill North Koreans at the Sinchon Museum of American War Atrocities. Photo: AFP

Every few minutes a new set of visitors arrives at the ‘Revenge-Pledging Place’ at North Korea’s Sinchon Museum, where regime propaganda insists US troops massacred more than 35,000 people during the Korean war.

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A volunteer among the group – they could be from a school, army unit, factory or official organisation – stands up in the concrete amphitheatre, where a mural reads “Let us drive out the Americans and reunify our nation”, to issue a vitriolic denunciation of the US.

Fists clenched in the air, the crowd responds with unison shouts: “Smash! Smash! Smash!”

Opposition to the United States is a fundamental cornerstone of Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, as the North is officially known.

Pyongyang says the nuclear arsenal it has spent decades developing, suffering sanctions and isolation as a result, is to defend itself from a possible US invasion.

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An exhibit showing US soldiers watching a South Korean soldier killing a North Korean man. Photo: AFP
An exhibit showing US soldiers watching a South Korean soldier killing a North Korean man. Photo: AFP
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