The intel Airman is about eight months from their time to move from their current base. They've been frantically checking Equal Plus listing for a job they can pick and determine the next three to four years of their life on their own terms. Well, that is what they'll tell their co-workers, but what they are really doing is trying to get out of going to Korea. There is every single intelligence job in Korea, somewhere, most likely Osan Air Base, which is massive and yes, they'll be there one full year. A General once called Osan the "Olympic training grounds for alcoholism". Korea represents the place where one goes for a year of very basic, very mundane, and very been-there-done-that intel. Essentially, nothing has changed since 1953. And, you're usually about a million miles from your old base and family with no chance of them coming to see you. Deployments are one thing, a base that isn't 'good' is another, but most intel Airmen avoid Korea like the plague.
For the single Airman, it's essentially four years of college drinking in one year. Bars, juicy girls, bars, and nothing but greasy food to eat make Korea an oddity when they hear about it. It's mildly scary because those that have been there expound on how "crazy" it is and they feel they won't be able to live up to the hype.
Then there's the married intel Airman. They hate the thought of Korea for so many additional reasons. At the top of list is being extremely far from family, living back in a 50 x 50ft dorm room (with a roommate if your E4 and below), and that damn itching temptation of many, many women everywhere (Korean, Philippine, Russian, and American). By no means am I suggesting everyone cheats, but the 'temptation' is there and it scares some.
Korea can be such a baffling place, there was a legendary book written that few attained, but most had heard of, Keys to the Kingdom. This 42-page manuscript is centered around Osan AB, but can easily be applied to anywhere in Korea. These types of traditions don't exist in other places, therefore only add to the mystery and frigid thoughts of Korea.
Deployments, educational requirements, professional military educations, and dare I say, random injuries all seem to pop-up once they see Korea on their orders. The most infamous last ditch effort the intel Airman has is to turn down the assignment to Korea. Allegedly, Airmen are allowed to turn down an assignment, but if they get picked up for it again, it's a lock. Most intel Airmen will tell others that if they get Korea, they'll just try to get another assignment to anywhere. That and keeping their dream sheet filled with bases they know they'll get allow the Airmen to faithfully believe they'll avoid Korea for another four to five years.
There's an adage around intel circles which states: there are two types of Airmen-those that have been to Korea and those that haven't. Most would like it to stay the latter.



