Page 177 - KCPAC_EBOOK
P. 177

KCPAC Achievements





             21   September 2021: Held and Sponsored KCPAC 2021 in Dallas, TX
                https://www.cpackorea.com/kcpac2021

               • •   About 100 Korean-American voters and 300 conservative supporters in the U.S. were invited and held a discussion on how the U.S. and South
                Korea can unite conservative movements and preserve the values of liberal democracy.

               • •   Laid the foundation for a campaign with support from Korean conservatives to block the "Peace on the Korean Peninsula Act," introduced by
                Democratic members in the U.S. Congress, and supported by the Moon Jae-in administration.




            22   September 2021: Posted an Advertisement Against the End-of-War Declaration on the Korean Peninsula
                 in Times Square, New York, and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ)
                https://www.cpackorea.com/timesquare-2021

               • •   Coinciding with President Moon Jae-in’s attendance at the UN General Assembly, we posted a 36-hour advertisement on the opposition to the
                end-of-war declaration on an electronic billboard in Times Square, New York.

               • •   Also published advertisements against the end-of-war declaration in the Wall Street Journal and local newspapers in New York and Hawaii.
               • •   Korean newspapers in eight cities across the U.S. (Munhwa Ilbo, Chosun Daily, JoongAng Ilbo) published articles criticizing the Moon Jae-in

                administration’s lobbying the U.S. Congress to declare the end of the Korean War.


             23   November 2021: Hosted and Sponsored KCPAC Event in L.A., California

                https://www.cpackorea.com/kcpac-la

               • •   Invited 150 Korean-American voters and hosted an event to bring awareness to the need for the petition against the "Peace on the Korean
                Peninsula Act" across the U.S. and South Korea.


             24   December 2021: Joint Inaugural Ceremony of KCPAC and the Center for Korea-America Freedom & Security
                Policy (KAFSP)
                http://www.hkmd.kr/news/article.html?no=61394
               • •   KCPAC Founder Annie Chan established the Center for Korea America Freedom & Security Policy (KAFSP), saying, “What we need to do for

                the present and future of the Republic of Korea is to correctly establish the conservatism of liberal democracy and national security and develop a
                stronger ROK-U.S. alliance.”

               • •   About 70 public-private and military reserve personnel attended the ceremony and reported the activities of KCPAC and KAFSP.
               • •   KAFSP presented the purpose of the organization which is to create a condition for unification based on lasting peace and liberal democratic order

                on the Korean Peninsula, focusing on three core values: maintaining the liberal democracy of the Republic of Korea, establishing a strong security
                posture, and develop a future-oriented ROK-U.S. alliance.


            25   December 2021: Hosted “The Korean Peninsula Conundrum- True Peace, Security, and Human Rights”

                 Book Launch Event in Washington, D.C. and Seoul
                https://www.cpackorea.com/book-launch-event-dc  /  https://www.cpackorea.com/book-launch-event-seoul

               • •   KCPAC and its media arm One Korea Network published “The Quest for Peace on the Korean Peninsula and the Unrelenting Threats from the
                North: An Analysis of H.R. 3446,” which analyzes the irrationality of H.R. 3446, a bill introduced in the U.S. Congress and being pushed by
                South Korea’s Moon Jae-in administration and pro-North Korean activists, that promotes fake peace, the withdrawal of U.S. troops and hinders
                the ROK-U.S. alliance. 18 prominent American and Korean scholars and experts came together and after months of hard work, the book was
                published in English and Korean respectively.
   172   173   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182