The Korean War - Jeremy P Maxwell
The Korean War - Jeremy P Maxwell
The Korean War - Jeremy P Maxwell
JEREMY P. MAXWELL
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ISBN: 978-1-78274-992-9
2. INCHON LANDINGS
3. CHINESE INTERVENTION
5. STALEMATE
APPENDICES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
INTRODUCTION
Long trek southward, 8 January 1951: a seemingly endless file of Korean refugees slogs through
snow outside of Kangnung, blocking withdrawal of ROK I Corps.
C HINA, Russia and Japan all vied for influence in Korea. China and Russia
shared a border with Korea, making incursions into Korea likely when each
looked to flex its imperial might. The more recent attempts came from Japan
towards the end of the nineteenth century, as it looked to assume its
perceived place as the first modern great power in Asia. Using a major
peasant rebellion in Korea against the Chinese, Japan instigated a war with
China in 1894 and defeated it a year later. After another decade of imperial
rivalry, Japan realized that vision when it dealt a resounding defeat to Tsarist
Russian forces in the Russo–Japanese war of 1904–1905. This
simultaneously stunned the world and caught the eye of US President
Theodore Roosevelt, who was fascinated by the fact that a ‘yellow’ country
had defeated a ‘white’ one. This also marked the beginning of the Japanese
protectorate of Korea in 1905, and colony in 1910.
JAPANESE DOMINATION
The Korean people suffered under a Japanese system that sought to replace
their language and change their religion. For the first ten years, Japan ruled
directly through the military, and any Korean dissent was ruthlessly crushed.
After a nationwide protest against Japanese colonialism that began on 1
March 1919, Japanese rule relaxed somewhat, allowing a limited degree of
freedom of expression for Koreans.
While Japanese control did benefit Korea in terms of industrialization and
modernization, the Korean people suffered, especially in wartime
mobilization for World War II. They were forced to work in Japanese
factories and were sent as soldiers to the front. Tens of thousands of young
Korean women were forced to become ‘Comfort Women’, effectively sexual
slaves for Japanese soldiers. The Japanese also pressured Koreans to change
their names to Japanese ones – an edict with which nearly 80 per cent of
Koreans complied. The Koreans had to endure life under the subjugation of
the Japanese until the Allies defeated them at the close of World War II.
The ‘Big Three’ – Soviet premier Joseph Stalin, US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill – meet at the Tehran Conference in 1943 to discuss an
Allied entry to the war on the western front.
In November 1943, the United States, Great Britain and China issued the
Cairo Declaration, setting goals for the postwar order. In it, they pledged to
continue the war against Japan and to eject Japanese forces from all the
territories they had conquered, including the Chinese territories, Korea and
the Pacific Islands. US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) looked to
change the existing practices in Europe and Asia with representative
democracy, aid to the oppressed, free trade and open markets. It was the
foundation of his vision on decolonization in the postwar period.
WHILE JAPANESE CONTROL DID BENEFIT KOREA IN
TERMS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION AND MODERNIZATION,
THE KOREAN PEOPLE SUFFERED.
POSTWAR ORDER
While early discussion signalled a positive outcome for changes in the
postwar period, FDR’s plan did not clearly define how a joint trusteeship in
Korea would work. More importantly, theoretical discussion, while important
in establishing common goals, always depended on a Japanese surrender. At
the Yalta conference in February 1945, FDR and Stalin agreed that the
United States would attack the Japanese mainland while the Soviets would
liberate Korea. The deal centred on the premise that the Soviets would invade
Manchuria (controlled by the Japanese) at the earliest possible date following
the surrender of Germany.
Such a deal came at a price. FDR and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the
Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP), reckoned that Stalin
would demand control of Manchuria, Korea and potentially parts of northern
China. In a secret deal with Stalin, without the knowledge of Churchill or the
Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek, FDR conceded the Kuril Islands, the
southern half of Sakhalin and special privileges in Manchuria for Soviet entry
into the war against Japan. However, alliances are not easy to maintain, and
the US–Soviet relationship was strained in the following months.
In July 1945, US President Harry Truman, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Stalin met in Potsdam to negotiate terms for the end
of World War II. FDR had died three months earlier, and his death presented
foreseeable problems in maintaining Allied relations. FDR had brokered all
of the deals with Great Britain, China and the Soviet Union throughout the
war. His successor would have to jump right in to maintain those
relationships and continue with the plans for postwar order. More important
than any previous agreements between FDR and Stalin, the success of the US
atomic bomb presented complications that strained the relationship between
the US and the Soviet Union.
The remnants of Nagasaki after a plutonium implosion bomb was dropped by a B-29 on 9 August
1945, three days after the atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima.
The Soviet advance through Manchuria was so fast that it was able to
occupy the Korean Peninsula before the Americans could arrive. US leaders
realized that a discussion of joint trusteeship would be pointless if the Soviets
already occupied all of Korea. Their solution was to approach the Soviets
with a proposal to divide the peninsula into American and Soviet occupation
zones, with the goal of creating a unified Korea under joint American and
Soviet guidance. To make the deal, however, the US would have to decide
where to divide the country.
One of those charged with making the decision was Dean Rusk, the future
secretary of state under John F. Kennedy. His colleague, Lt. Gen. John E.
Hull (then Chief of Operations Division), and he chose the 38th Parallel as
the dividing line. Drawing the line there would ensure the US was in control
of two major ports: Inchon and Pusan. Rusk would later claim that ‘the 38th
Parallel was recommended despite it being further north than could be
reached if the Soviets did not agree to the arrangement’.
To the surprise of the US leadership, Stalin agreed to the deal. Stalin had
never had grand designs for Korea. His main concern was the elimination of
Japanese political and economic influence in the region. If Japanese influence
persisted, it would always present a threat to Soviet interests, and Stalin was
focused on regaining the position that the Soviet Union had lost in the Russo–
Japanese War. He was happy to have help from the Americans.
Japanese signatories arrive aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, 2 September 1945, to
participate in surrender ceremonies.
ALLIED OCCUPATION
Korea’s first goal was to present some semblance of a united front in the face
of its occupiers. Its aims mirrored what Stalin had claimed at the Tehran
Conference: that any occupation period should be as short as possible. The
Japanese governor-general, the remaining symbol of Japanese rule in Korea,
frantically sought free passage home and to retain some leverage over the
Korean economic system. He turned power over to Yo Un-hyung (1886–
1947), a well-known nationalist and leftist reformer, to form an interim
government. Yo accepted this responsibility, with the provision that the
Japanese release all political prisoners, on 15 August 1945, the day now
recognized as Liberation Day in Korea.
The decision of Allied leaders to occupy Korea caused Yo and the
Korean people great concern. The vague reference to a system by which
control would eventually be transferred to Korea was not enough to calm the
nerves of a country that had suffered under Japanese occupation. ‘Yo
transformed his emergency Committee for the Preparation of National
Reconstruction into a Korean People’s Republic on 6 September 1945 with
most power in the hands of People’s Committees at the city and county
level.’ (Millett, A.R.: 2005.)
RHEE GOVERNMENT
Two days later, Yo announced a ten-man cabinet, headed by Dr Syngman
Rhee. Key members of the cabinet, including Rhee, remained outside the
country and would return within the following month from their respective
places of exile. During that time, however, the occupying forces of the United
States and the Soviet Union arrived. The US XXIV Corps, led by Lt. Gen.
John R. Hodge, arrived in Seoul on 8 September; the Soviet 25th Army, led
by Col. Gen. Ivan Chistiakov, occupied Pyongyang on 26 August. There
were many differences in the manner in which American and Soviet forces
governed their respective halves of the country. The most glaring one was
that Americans became vulnerable to Korean political pressure, while the
Soviets resisted any ideas that threatened their control.
As indicated earlier, the arrival of the American forces was initially well
received by the South Koreans. They saw their years of bondage nearing an
end. The problem in South Korea arose from the lack of American personnel
who could communicate with local Korean leaders. To correct that problem,
US military leaders kept Japanese people in posts and employed Japanese
translators – a move that severely hindered any good will on the part of the
Korean public.
The Koreans were also not interested in any agreement that would create
a unified nation and a coalition government and sought to thwart it at all
costs. Southern Koreans would not accept any sort of joint US–USSR
trusteeship agreement, and the Northern Koreans could not tolerate a United
Nations trusteeship. ‘Whatever moderate faction existed among Korean
politicians disappeared through violence, repression, and intimidation on both
sides of the 38th Parallel. The differences were simply too personal and too
ideological for compromise.’ (Millett, A.R.: 2005.)
Yi Si-yeong, Vice President of South Korea (1948–51), leads cheers at the close of the UN Day
ceremony in Seoul, 24 October 1950.
SYNGMAN RHEE
SYNGMAN RHEE WAS THE President of the Republic of Korea from
1948 to 1960. Born into a rural family on 26 March 1875, Rhee was
a Christian convert and a zealous nationalist. In 1896, he joined the
Independence Club, which consisted of a group of dedicated young
men who organized protests against the Japanese and Russian
empires. He spent 30 years in the United States, receiving a PhD
from Princeton University and working with the Korean
International Conference on measures to secure Korean
independence.
Rhee returned to Korea after World War II and campaigned for
the immediate independence and unification of the country. In 1948,
he became the leader of the Republic of Korea and quickly purged
the National Assembly members who opposed his dictatorship. He
remained in power until a revolt in April 1960 unseated him. He was
exiled to Hawaii, where he remained until his death in 1965.
Syngman Rhee, President of the Republic of Korea, shakes hands with General Matthew B.
Ridgway, Commander-in-Chief of the United Nations forces.
Koreans cast their votes during the country’s first free elections on 10 May 1948. Two hundred
representatives were elected to the National Assembly and Syngman Rhee was appointed as
chairman.
The situation in North Korea unfolded differently. The Soviets had denied
UN access, but elections within the North continued with a specific purpose.
On 10 July 1948, the North Korean People’s Council adopted a resolution
and decided on 25 August as the date for an election of members of the
Supreme People’s Army Assembly of Korea. The following day, the council
proclaimed its control over the whole of Korea.
On 10 September, Kim Il-sung took office as the Premier of the
Democratic Republic of Korea. By 25 December, the Soviet Union claimed it
had removed all troops from Korea. So in the three years since the occupying
forces had arrived to oust the Japanese there were two definitive Koreas, each
ideologically opposed to the other and each proclaiming control over the
whole country. The first phase of Korean independence ended, ushering in a
new period where competition for control between the two Koreas for overall
dominance ensued.
KIM IL-SUNG
KIM IL-SUNG was the Premier of the Democratic Republic of Korea.
Born Kim Song-ju in Japanese-occupied Korea on 15 April 1912, he
grew up in an environment of anti-Japanese activism. In 1920, his
family went into exile in Manchuria. As a teen, he became interested
in Marxism and began a career with various factions of the Chinese
Communist Party. In 1935, he renamed himself Kim Il-sung. He
worked his way up to a commanding role in charge of anti-Japanese
activities along the Chinese–Korean border. Pushed into Siberia by
the Japanese, the Soviet Army welcomed and trained him.
He fought in World War II for the Soviet Red Army, where he
attained the rank of major. Kim Il-sung returned to Korea on 22
August, seven days after the Soviets accepted the Japanese
surrender in the region north of the 38th Parallel that divided
Korea. The Soviets appointed him head of the Provisional People’s
Committee. Kim immediately established the Korean People’s
Army (KPA), made up of veterans, and began to consolidate power
in Soviet-occupied northern Korea. On 9 September 1945, Kim Il-
sung announced the creation of the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea, with himself as premier. He remained in power until his
death on 8 July 1994.
As it turned out, Kim would not have to wait long for his luck with Stalin
to turn. The Chinese communist forces led by Mao Zedong defeated the
Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) forces in China after a civil war that had been
raging since the end of World War II. On 1 October 1949, Mao declared the
creation of the People’s Republic of China, and Chiang Kai-shek and his
Kuomintang forces fled to the island of Formosa (Taiwan) to regroup and
plan for their efforts to retake the mainland.
The fall of China to communism made matters in Korea more pressing. It
was yet another indication that communism was on the rise. The US,
however, maintained a hands-off policy in relation to Formosa and intended
to fulfil the provisions of the Cairo Declaration that had scheduled Taiwan to
be returned to China. However, Truman hesitated to completely abandon
commitments to Chiang Kai-shek.
In the end, it was Britain’s recognition of the People’s Republic of China,
Truman’s neutrality with respect to the Chinese Civil War, and the US State
Department’s hands-off policy with respect to Taiwan that gave Stalin the
impression that the US wanted to foster a relationship with China. As a result,
Stalin looked to strengthen the ties between the two communist countries.
When that relationship was realized with the Treaty of Friendship Alliance in
February 1950, Stalin invited Kim back to discuss plans for the liberation of
Korea.
While North Korea looked to both China and the Soviet Union for
support in its quest to control the whole of Korea, the North Korean People’s
Army (NKPA) had been under the control of the Soviet Union since its
inception in February 1948. The NKPA was organized under the newly
established Ministry of Defence and trained exclusively by the Soviet Union.
One prisoner captured late in the war claimed that, ‘every training film he had
ever been shown or used was made in the USSR.’ Intelligence reports from
the Far East Command also claimed that Premier Kim Il-sung received
instructions from the Soviet Union for their Ambassador, Gen. Terenty F.
Shtykov, who had commanded the Soviet occupation forces in North Korea
after World War II.
Mao Zedong, leader of the Chinese Communist Party, proclaims the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in the aftermath of his victory against Nationalist forces led by Chang Kai-
shek in 1949.
PRC leaders Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai meet with Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin and Foreign
Minister Andrei Vishinsky in Moscow on 14 February 1950 to sign the Treaty of Friendship,
Alliance and Mutual Assistance, thereby linking to two communist nations.
By the start of the Korean War in June 1950, the NKPA was comprised of
a ground force with eight infantry divisions at full strength, two more infantry
divisions activated at roughly half-strength, a separate infantry regiment, a
motorcycle reconnaissance regiment and an armoured brigade. Many of these
contingents contained hardened veterans who had fought with Chinese
communists and Soviet armies in World War II.
The North was not only developing its forces and making incursions
across the 38th Parallel. The Korean Constabulary that had been formed in
South Korea in January 1946 grew much more slowly than its North Korean
counterpart, but by July of the following year had reached a strength of
15,000. When the Republic was established in August of that year, the
constabulary became the Republic of Korea (ROK) Army. By January 1949,
when the Republic was recognized by the US and the UN, the ranks of the
ROK Army had swollen to more than 60,000 men. The Republic also
maintained a coast guard of 4000 and a police force of 45,000.
When the last US troops left Korea in June 1949, 482 military advisors
designated the Korean Military Advisor Group (KMAG) were left behind to
‘advise the government of the Republic of Korea in the continued
development of its security forces’. (Appleman, R.E.: 1961.) By the time the
war began, ROK forces were 98,000-strong, comprising 65,000 combat
troops and 33,000 headquarters and service troops. While this was an
impressive organization of forces in a short period, it paled in comparison to
the numerically superior and more heavily armed North Korean forces.
INVASION
Between 15 and 24 June 1950, the North Korean forces moved towards the
38th Parallel and were deployed at staging points outlined for an invasion
across the border. They accomplished this as planned, without being detected
by the South Korean forces or KMAG. There had been discussion of an
imminent North Korean attack, but nothing was done beyond planning.
American officers did not think an attack was imminent and, even if it did
occur, they expected the ROK forces to thwart it. ROK forces, however, were
not as confident in their ability to withstand and repulse an attack. By 24
June, the NKPA had approximately 90,000 men supported by 150 T-34
Soviet-supplied tanks waiting to attack.
On 8 July 1950 President Truman appointed Douglas MacArthur as commander of the United
Nations Command in South Korea. Here MacArthur receives the UN flag in an official
presentation.
At 8:45 a.m. on 1 July, Task Force Smith – composed of 540 men (half of
a normal battalion) of the 1st Battalion, 21st Infantry Division – deployed to
Korea. By 8 a.m. of the following day, Smith had landed in Pusan and made
it to Taejong. After meeting with Gen. Church as ordered, Smith took a 130-
km (80-mile) drive north to assess the situation near Osan. From there, he
was ordered to take his men north by train to Pyeongtaek and Ansong.
While awaiting further instructions, an aerial strafing run conducted by
the Royal Australian Air Force fired on the train, blowing up the train and the
ammunition inside. Similar friendly fire incidents occurred at Suwon, where
ROK forces and civilians fell victim to Far East Air Forces that mistook them
for the enemy. On 4 July, the rest of Smith’s divided command, which had
followed by air and sea, arrived in Korea. That same day, a message from
Gen. MacArthur to Gen. Dean stated that United States Force in Korea
(USFIK) had been activated under his command, Gen. Dean assumed control
of USFIK and appointed Gen. Church (KMAG) as Deputy Commander.
At midnight on 4 July, Task Force Smith moved out of Pyeongtaek for
Osan, previously selected as the position where Smith would establish the
delaying action against the enemy. The following morning, the 540-man
force stood against approaching enemy tanks. The first wave of 33 tanks
quickly penetrated through American infantry lines and then pressed through
artillery positions. Ten minutes later, a second wave of North Korean tanks
followed. American artillery damaged some of the tanks, but did not stop
more from coming. Initially frightened, some members of the howitzer crew
started to run, but regrouped once their leadership stepped in to help out.
Task Force Smith had had about an hour of silence after the tanks had
passed, when Smith spotted an advancing column of trucks and ground
troops coming towards them from Suwon. That column was the 16th and
18th Regiments of the North Korean 4th Division, a major force in the North
Korean Army. The small delaying force was no match for the two units
approaching. They shelled the enemy once it was within 914m (3000ft) of
their position, but an estimated 1000-man infantry force rushed in, in an
attempt to envelop the defending forces.
TASK FORCE SMITH
TASK FORCE SMITH WAS the first US Army ground manoeuvre unit
to enter combat in Korea. On 30 June 1950, President Harry S.
Truman authorized Gen. Douglas MacArthur to commit ground
forces under his command to Korea. MacArthur in turn instructed
Lt. Gen. Walton Walker, commander of the Eighth US Army, to
order the 24th Division there. Early on 1 July, the Eighth Army
provided for a makeshift infantry battalion of the 24th Division to
be flown to Korea in the six C-54 transport aircraft available. The
remainder of the division followed by water. The initial force was to
make contact with the enemy and fight a delaying action. Task
Force Smith was named for Lt. Col. Charles B. Smith, commanding
officer, 1st Battalion, 21st Regiment, 24th Infantry Division, whose
540 men were the first to arrive to assist KMAG forces in Korea.
Soldiers from Task Force Smith carry their equipment as they prepare to ship out to
Korea. Consisting of 400 infantry with a supporting artillery battery, they were the first US
troops to fight in the war at the battle of Osan on 5 July 1950.
IN RETREAT
Defeat did not stop at Osan. The 34th Infantry Regiment led by Col. Jay
Loveless had deployed at Pyeongtaek to catch any North Korean forces that
got through Smith’s forces at Osan. Fearing the same fate that befell Smith at
Osan, Loveless ordered his forces to fall back from Pyeongtaek to Chonan,
13km (8 miles) to the south. Meanwhile, a battalion at Ansong fell apart to
the east. Gen. Dean was furious that Pyeongtaek had been abandoned, and
ordered Loveless to go back. By that time, however, it was too late:
Pyeongtaek had been taken by the NKPA. Chonan fell shortly after, and US
forces fled, abandoning their equipment, weapons and fellow soldiers who
had died on the battlefield.
A US bazooka team at Osan prepares for action as the 16th and 18th Regiments of the North
Korean 4th Division advance towards them.
7 July 1950: South Korean evacuees flee south toward Taejon, the first major city south of Seoul,
to escape the invading North Korean forces.
As American and ROK forces continued to retreat, MacArthur decided to
commit the whole of the Eighth US Army (EUSA) to Korea. As commander
of the Eighth Army, Gen. Walker visited Gen. Dean at Taejon. His command
in Korea now consisted of US and remnants of the ROK forces. His
immediate task was to delay the enemy advance. He established a defensive
line along the south bank of the Kum River. To the east, he used the
mountains and the narrow coastal corridor to delay the North Korean
advance. Continued delaying actions were carried out to allow time for
reinforcements to arrive from the US and the UN.
The Kum River was the first defensible river south of the Han River
(border) along the route of the NKPA advance. 24km (15 miles) beyond it lay
Taejon, the first major city south of Seoul along the invasion route. Dean’s
24th Division was ordered to hold the Kum River line to protect Taejon.
Dean’s Division, however, was not able to carry out those orders. The 24th
was soon overrun and the NKPA began attacking Taejon on 20 July. Dean
wished to retreat as his forces became surrounded, but was ordered to hold to
provide time for reinforcements to arrive from Pusan. As the NKPA
surrounded and took Taejon, Dean fled to the surrounding mountains.
Eventually, he became the highest-ranking American prisoner of war.
The US 1st Cavalry Division land ashore on the Pohang beachhead 48km (30 miles) south of the
attacking NKPA forces, in the first major amphibious operation since World War II.
While the 24th was being overrun in Taejon, the enemy 5th Division
moved against Yongdok, a key point where a road led from the mountains to
the coastal road. For the last half of July, UN and ROK forces battled the
NKPA over Yongdok. In the push and pull between the two forces, Yongdok
was taken and retaken several times. In the end, US Navy, artillery, mortar
fire and air strikes facilitated the only UN victory in the region.
The two-week holding campaign at Yongdok had cost the North Korean
5th Division nearly 40 per cent of its strength in casualties. The east coast had
hindered North Korean freedom of movement and aided in the effective
employment of American firepower. That type of situation did not prevail in
the mountains, where the North Korean 12th Division and the ROK 8th
Division fought a bitter five-day battle for control of Andong and the upper
Naktong River crossing.
After the end of July, the 24th Division was in poor shape. Its members
believed their trip to Korea would be a short moppingup exercise, but the
North Korean advance demonstrated that that early estimate was not accurate,
and their sojourn in Korea would be long. On the major road to the west of
Andong, where the North Korean 12th Division was recuperating from the
battles fought in the last half of July, was the town of Sangju. This was the
crossroads for all of the mountain roads in that region of Korea. It sat south
of the Mungyeong Plateau and the dividing watershed between the Han and
Naktong rivers. Moreover, it was the strongest position in the valley of the
Naktong, north of Taegu.
NAKTONG OFFENSIVE
On 31 August 1950, the 6th and 7th Divisions of the NKPA attacked US and
ROK forces in the Naktong Offensive. The NKPA ‘understood that Pusan
was the source of American strength, [and] the enemy resolved to eliminate
the threat.’ (Maxwell, J.P.: 2018.) Their forces had been severely diminished
in the preceding month, and malnourishment took its toll on the remaining
soldiers. They eventually fell to American artillery and air support. The
Eighth Army wanted to go on the offensive, yet they too had suffered many
casualties. The 25th Division had lost nearly 40 per cent of its force. While
replacements started to trickle in, all regiments were still understrength.
Officers arrived in sufficient numbers, even as enlisted replacements
remained substantially below what was needed. During this period, more
black troops had arrived than whites, which led to their assignment to all-
white units of the 25th to bring them up to strength. One of these first
attempts at integration was in the 9th Infantry Regiment – one of the first
contingents to land in July 1950. Col. John G. Hill, commander of the 9th
Infantry Regiment, claimed that circumstances forced him to shift his excess
black soldiers to white battalions. According to Hill, ‘there were no
replacements. We had to use untrained South Korean contingents. We would
have been doing ourselves a disservice to permit [Negro] soldiers to lie
around in rear areas at the expense of the still further weakening of our
[white] rifle companies.’
September 1950. Men of the 9th Infantry Regiment hitch a ride on an M-26 Pershing tank. They
would soon be embroiled in the impending Naktong Offensive planned by the NKPA’s 6th and
7th Divisions.
An integrated unit, 20 November 1950. Fighting with the 2nd Infantry Division north of the
Chongchon River, Sfc. Major Cleveland, weapons squad leader, points out North Korean
positions to his machine gun crew.
A North Korean T-34/85 medium tank. Before the outbreak of the Korean War, Joseph Stalin
equipped the KPA with over 200 tanks, including Soviet T-34s, the mainstay of Soviet armoured
forces throughout World War II.
A US M26 Pershing tank. Used extensively throughout the Korean War, the M26 outmatched the
North Korean T-34/85 in terms of firepower and protection but was challenged by the hilly and
muddy terrain.
A pair of disabled North Korean T-34 tanks lie in waste along the Pusan Perimeter.
At the same time, the North Koreans drove for the centre of Walker’s
line, launching five infantry divisions echeloned in depth, supported by
elements of the 105th Armoured Division. This double-pincer attack
originated around Sangju and sought to envelop Taegu from both the north
and south. Walker considered the southern thrust, through an area dubbed the
‘Naktong Bulge’, the greater threat, as it endangered the vital Taegu–Pusan
rail loop.
The North Korean thrusts, however, were poorly coordinated, allowing
Walker to shift his reserves between the two. He brought the 1st Marine
Brigade and elements of the 27th Infantry Regiment north and attached them
to the 24th Infantry Division. Counter-attacking the NKPA 4th Division on
17 August, the 24th Infantry Division cleared the bulge by the following
night. On 24 August, Walker put the newly arrived 2nd Infantry Division into
the centre of the line and pulled the 24th Infantry Division back into reserve.
ASSAULT ON THE PERIMETER
While the North Koreans were attacking in the centre and south, two NKPA
divisions north of Taegu forced their way across the Naktong and collapsed
the northwest corner of the perimeter. Withdrawing south under intense
pressure, the ROK 1st and 6th divisions fell back into the 1st Cavalry
Division, forcing Walker to evacuate his Eighth Army headquarters from
Taegu to Pusan. Walker shifted the 27th Infantry north and again
counterattacked with the ROK 1st Division.
By 18 August, the Americans and South Koreans had established
defensive positions overlooking a long, flat, narrow valley that became
known as the ‘Bowling Alley’. The following day, Walker committed
elements of the 23rd Infantry Regiment to reinforce the 27th. The battle
dragged on for six more days and nights, as the NKPA 13th Division tried
unsuccessfully to push the Americans back.
As the series of battles was raging along the Naktong, the NKPA
attempted to infiltrate and envelop the northern perimeter with three
divisions. The North Korean objective was to drive down the east coast, from
Yongdok, through P’ohang-dong to Pusan. The northern flank was under the
tactical control of the ROK I Corps, but Walker committed a small task force
of US artillery and armour, and the South Koreans received air and naval
support from the Far East Command.
Naval gunfire compensated for ROK 3rd Division artillery shortcomings,
forcing the NKPA to operate far inland. Regardless, the NKPA managed to
push the South Koreans down the coast to Toksong-ni. The US Navy
evacuated the ROK troops on the night of 16–17 August, putting them back
ashore the following day to establish defensive positions near P’ohangdong,
some 40km (25 miles) further south. The 3rd Division remained in the fight,
but the Pusan Perimeter had collapsed southward to little more than half its
original size.
A GI resting after serving 43 straight days on the front lines in Korea, September 1950. Due to
understrength forces at the start of the war, enlistments were extended and troops spent long
tours on the front until a limited rotation policy was established.
US Marines guard three captured North Koreans near Seoul, autumn 1950.
2
INCHON LANDINGS
US troops descend down ropes to landing crafts for the amphibious landing on Inchon. The
Inchon landing was General MacArthur’s grand plan to turn the tide of the war.
The Pusan Perimeter was vital to the overall success of the war.
MacArthur realized that he could lose the war if General Walton
Walker (commander of the Eighth US Army) could not hold it.
Moreover, he felt that only a major amphibious assault that would
change the strategic balance was needed to accomplish that.
AMPHIBIOUS LANDING
Operation Chromite called for an amphibious landing in September and
proposed three plans. The first called for a landing at Inchon on the west
coast. The second called for a landing at Kunsan on the west coast. The final
plan proposed a landing at Chuminjin-up on the east coast. MacArthur
favoured the plan to land at Inchon. He scheduled the operation for mid-
September, with the 5th Marines and the 2nd Infantry Division landing
behind the enemy amid a simultaneous attack by the Eighth Army.
Unfortunately for him, the North Korean forces continued to press forward
against the defending US and ROK forces.
Since the Eighth Army was providing the main defence of the Pusan
Perimeter, the US 2nd Infantry Division and the 1st Provisional Marine
Brigade were tasked to join them in their efforts. Faced with the threat of his
plans being unrealized, MacArthur decided to commit his only reserve forces
in Japan, the 7th Infantry Division, once it could be brought up to combat
strength.
General Douglas MacArthur (second from left), Commander-in-Chief of Far East and UN
Forces, Army Chief-of-Staff J. Lawton Collins (left), Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Forest
Sherman (second from right), and Admiral Arthur William Radford (right), Commander-in-
Chief of the Pacific Command (CINCPAC), plan the Inchon Landing, August 1950.
OPERATION CHROMITE
THE AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT TOOK place behind North Korean lines at
Inchon, a port city on South Korea’s west coast close to Seoul and
North Korean Army supply lines. Planned by Gen. MacArthur and
carried out by X Corps, its objectives were fourfold: to neutralize
the fortified Wolmi Island, which controlled access to Inchon
Harbour; to land and capture Inchon, 40km (25 miles) west of
Seoul; to seize Kimpo Airfield just south of Seoul; and finally to
capture the city of Seoul. As part of his overall plan, Gen.
MacArthur envisioned that the Eighth US Army would break out of
the Pusan Perimeter at the same time as the Inchon landing and
push the North Korean Army northwards, trapping it between the
two forces.
PLANNING PROBLEMS
Chain-of-command issues were not the only problem. The planning phases of
the Inchon landing were mired with problems from the activation of X Corps.
For starters, when MacArthur received authorization from the Department of
the Army for a landing behind enemy lines, he failed to mention that he had
settled on Inchon as the location. The location of Inchon itself became a
divisive issue between Almond, his Deputy Chief of Staff, members of the
JSPOG who supported the location, and Gen. Lawton Collins (the Army
Chief of Staff) and senior staff of the Navy and Marine Corps. While at this
stage more of a trumpet for the expressed wishes of MacArthur, Almond
found himself frequently at odds with his cohorts, particularly Maj. Gen.
Oliver P. Smith, commander of the 1st Marine Division, which made up one
of the major ground units of X Corps.
The Navy’s concern was the difficult tides that existed at Inchon Harbour,
which reached heights of 9m (30ft). If the ships and landing craft did not
offload personnel and supplies in time, they could be stranded resting atop
the floor of the harbour, sitting ducks to enemy attack. Moreover, the Marines
were tasked with assaulting Wolmido Island, a tiny island reinforced with
enemy artillery that stood in the way of ships en route to the harbour.
Landing at Inchon demanded that Wolmido be taken first.
The tides, current and the winding Flying Fish Channel that lacked
significant depth exposed opposing forces to point-blank fire from its
defenders. Fears remained that only small ships such as destroyers could
traverse the channel; on their arrival, they would be forced to anchor because
the current would otherwise dash them into the mud. Also, if they anchored,
the destroyers automatically gave up their prime advantages of speed and
manoeuvrability and would be vulnerable to the guns atop Wolmido.
US troops rest on a pier after disembarking from a ship somewhere in Korea, August 1950.
Despite the arguments made by the Navy and Marine Corps, who, based
on the scope and purpose of their mandates, had more experience with
amphibious landings, MacArthur continued with his plans. Instead of giving
way to caution, he argued that the very reasons his opponents had proposed
against it made it necessary. Moreover, he reasoned that an assault on Inchon
was necessary because ‘the enemy had neglected his rear and was dangling
on a thin logistical rope that could be cut in the Seoul area, that the enemy
had committed practically all of its forces against the Eighth Army in the
south and had no trained reserves and little power of recuperation.’
Inchon, MacArthur claimed, was strategically necessary to secure the
quick recapture of the South Korean capital of Seoul. Such a manoeuvre, he
posited to his detractors, ‘would hold the imagination of Asia and win
support for the United Nations.’ The more that the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
Lawton Collins pressured MacArthur to change the site of the landing, the
more he dug in. Inchon was the place and Operation Chromite would begin
on 15 September.
When the lead elements of Operation Chromite loaded out from Japan, a
typhoon threatened the port of Kobe, where 50 vessels were assembled. For
three days, MacArthur, X Corps leaders and onlookers from Washington
wondered if Chromite would be able to meet its 11 September date for
disembarkment. Despite damages inflicted by the typhoon on the port of
Kobe, the 1st Marine Division left on 11 September to converge with 7th
Division, which left for Yokohama, and the 5th Marines, which left Pusan.
15 September 1950: US Marines use scaling ladders to carry out their amphibious assault on
Inchon.
Brigadier General Courtney Whitney (left), General Douglas MacArthur (centre), and Major
General Edward Almond (at right, pointing), commander of X Corps, observe the shelling of
Inchon from the USS Mount McKinley.
RECAPTURING SEOUL
With the Inchon landing a success, UN forces had to finish the job by routing
the enemy at Seoul, the South Korean capital that had been abandoned by its
government in the face of the North Korean onslaught. To retake Seoul, UN
forces would have to cross the Han River, a natural barrier standing between
them and defending North Korean Forces. After sending out a reconnaissance
company to assess the possibility of using amphibious LVTs (Landing
Vehicle, Tracked) for the crossing, Company I of the US 5th Marines began
the assault at 6.45 a.m. on 20 September. Meeting little resistance thanks to
the heavy artillery bombardment laid out in preparation for the crossing, the
Marines moved to cut off the Seoul–Kaesong railroad and follow it to Seoul.
When night descended on the first day, the 5th Marines and the 2nd
Battalion, ROK Marines were across the river and had begun setting up a
pontoon ferry at the crossing site. The relatively easy crossing, however,
would not be indicative of the North Korean resolve.
15 September 1950: Landing Ship Tanks (LSTs) unload men and equipment on a beach during
the Inchon landings. Three of the LSTs shown are LST-611, LST-745 and LST-715.
26 September 1950: a US Marine M26 tank follows a line of prisoners-of-war down a village
street after the capture of Seoul.
The following morning, the Marines were met with steadily growing
resistance. Fighting through a company-sized counterattack and through 8km
(5 miles) of terrain along the Han River, they managed to make it all the way
to within 5km (3 miles) of the mail railway station in Seoul. Their success
prompted Gen. MacArthur to return to Tokyo, feeling that the situation was
in hand and that the capture of Seoul would soon be realized. Little did
anyone realize at that point that the 5th Marines would be held at that
position through four days of intense battle, as North Korean forces had
chosen that location – the western approach to Seoul – as its main line of
defence.
While the 5th Marines were fighting for Yongdungpo, the industrial
suburb on the south bank of the Han River, the 7th Marines – the third
regiment of the 1st Marine Division – arrived in Inchon Harbour and began
unloading. With close to 50,000 soldiers, more than 5000 vehicles and over
20,000 tons of cargo ashore in Korea, command for the Inchon operation
transferred from Admiral Arthur Struble, who was commander of the US 7th
Fleet and responsible for the landing, to Gen. Almond, who assumed
command of the Seoul operation as commander of X Corps.
With Yondungpo secure, the 1st Marine Division ordered the operation to
capture Seoul. According to its plan, the 1st Marines would cross the Han at
Yongdungpo and join the 5th Marines north of the river. The 7th Marines
would then move up from Inchon and establish a three-regiment line.
Initially, the capture of Seoul was to be accomplished by a completely
Marine ground force. At the last minute, however, Gen. Almond altered the
plan, indicating that the ROK Marines and the ROK 17th Regiment were also
to be used to secure the city. That move by Almond was one of many
attempts to exert his control over 1st Marine Division commanders.
The Marines made great progress, but the fighting in the western section
of Seoul was intense. At one point on 23 September, Gen. Almond instructed
1st Marine Division commander Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Smith that if progress
were not made, he would change the division boundaries. Doing just that,
Almond called a commanders’ meeting to change the boundaries between the
1st Marine Division and the 7th Infantry Division. He also ordered the 32nd
Regiment, with the help of the ROK 17th Regiment attached, to attack the
Han River into Seoul the next morning. Fighting through the hills that lined
the western entry and the barricades in place remained intense, and only
proved successful with artillery and armoured support.
On 25 September, the Marines were inside Seoul and the 7th Division
held the South Mountain. The fighting on the western edges of the city
remained intense. With the help of the 32nd Division and the ROK 17th
Regiment, the 1st Marine Division entered Seoul on 25 September. In a hasty
declaration, probably to satisfy the wishes of Gen. MacArthur, Gen. Almond
announced the liberation of Seoul. At the time, less than half of Seoul was
secure. While fighting between barricades was still raging with North Korean
forces that had been ordered to stay behind in a last stand, MacArthur issued
UN Command Communiqué No. 9 stating that Seoul had been recaptured.
THE UN COALITION
WHILE THE INCHON LANDING was a necessary step in turning the tide
of the war, it marked the shift from a wholly US-led resistance to a
collaborative UN effort. Founded in 1945, the United Nations was
formed with 51 originating members. At the outbreak of the Korean
War, there were 59 member nations; 48 either sent forces or aid to
Korea or offered to.
Of the member nations, 16 countries sent combat troops to
South Korea, including the United States, Great Britain, Canada,
France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Colombia, Ethiopia, South
Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Turkey, Greece, Thailand,
Philippines and Luxembourg. Four member nations, including
Norway, Denmark, Sweden and India, sent medical units. Italy also
sent its Red Cross, but it was not a member nation.
Seven non-member states sent aid, including the two occupied
countries of Japan and Germany. While Japan was not a member
state, its location made it a vital support base for the war, and it
housed the closest remaining US personnel who could be
transported to Korea. Germany notified the UN headquarters of its
intent to set up a field hospital in South Korea in May 1953 to
support UN soldiers participating in the Korean War; it sent a
medical unit of around 80 staff the following year. It was not
included among the Korean War providers of medical aid, however,
because its medical support activities began after the armistice
treaty was signed on 27 July 1953.
On 27 June 1950, the UN Security Council passed Resolution 83,
obligating member nations to ‘consider sending assistance to the
Republic of Korea as may be necessary to repel the armed attack
and to restore international peace and security in the area’. While
US units (who committed the largest contingent and amount of aid
to the war effort) had been in the country since President Truman
ordered them in the wake of the North Korean invasion, UN ground
forces began to trickle into Korea at the end of August 1950,
starting with Commonwealth 27th Brigade, which aided in the
defence of the Pusan Perimeter and the UN offensive to link in with
the Inchon landings. The nations that followed represented the
largest coalition in modern history to pledge to a common military
and political endeavour. While that demonstration of humanity was
commendable, it brought with it a unique set of problems.
The South Korean military was placed under US/UN control,
whose troops came to be known as the Korean Augmentation to the
United States Army, or KATUSA, soldiers. They were also later
attached to British, Australian, Canadian, French and Belgian units.
Interestingly enough, KATUSAs were augmented with US units
before African-American and white US soldiers served in integrated
units. Moreover, non-US or Korean soldiers were sent as smaller
battalion-size forces without a complete support structure. Because
of this, they could not operate independently and were attached to
US units. Britain, Canada and Turkey were the exception: each sent
a brigade-sized force, comprising roughly 3000–5000 men.
Every UN and non-UN member nation had its own reason for
participating in the Korean War. Despite the varied reasons, the
real success was the vindication of the United Nations itself. And
despite the differences that arose from the sheer number of different
cultures involved, they had come together to fight for a common
cause – a feat that had never been accomplished in relative scale or
magnitude.
Men of the British No. 41 (Royal Marine) Commandos plant demolition charges along
railroad tracks of an enemy supply line, 13km (eight miles) south of Songjin, 10 April 1951.
September 1950: US Marines fight in the streets of Seoul against remaining North Korean forces
controlling pockets of the city.
The breakout and the Inchon landing were initially planned as operations
that would begin simultaneously. Plans for the breakout changed, however, as
Gen. Walker contemplated the realities of success. He planned instead to
attack the day after the Inchon landing, taking advantage of a demoralized
North Korean force. The Eighth US Army would attack northward to meet up
with X Corps forces attacking southward.
After initially wavering on where to break from the Pusan Perimeter – the
Eighth Army was severely undermanned, low on resources and wondered if a
successful breakout could be made – two routes were decided on, both
blocked by the North Korean Army. The main effort would utilize the
highway from the Naktong River opposite Waegwan to Kumchon, and across
the Sobaek Mountain Range to Taejon. If more routes were needed to
complete the breakout, the valley of the Naktong River northwards to the
Sang-ju area could be used.
In preparation for the breakout, the Far East Command reorganized the
Eighth Army based on corps. Initially, the Eight US Army had directly
controlled four infantry divisions and other attached ground forces of
regimental and brigade size. In the build-up for the breakout, the Eighth
Army was provided two corps: I Corps and IX Corps. Walker grouped the
main breakout forces under I Corps. Enemy forces along the entire perimeter
stood at approximately 70,000.
INTEGRATING FORCES
ALTHOUGH TURKEY SENT A brigade-sized force, its participation in
the UN effort has become widely scrutinized. In October 1950, the
5000 men that made up the Turkish Brigade arrived in Korea.
Turkey was not originally welcomed to the UN. Sitting on the
border between Europe and the Middle East, it was not considered
within the scope of what the European Recovery Act in the wake of
World War II was established for.
In the Cold War, providing for a strong Western Europe to
stave off the spread of communism was deemed to be of utmost
importance. Turkey, however, was looking not necessarily to
Westernize, but to loosen the control imposed by traditional Islamic
governing practices, and looked to benefit from the redevelopment
that was taking place after two world wars had ravaged Europe. By
offering to send troops to Korea, it demonstrated a public
commitment to wage war against communism and was accepted as a
member of the United Nations. The Turkish presence among the UN
forces, however, led to unique issues for the US units they were
attached to.
Communication was the largest issue plaguing UN forces. British
Commonwealth Forces were English-speaking, which created no
issues for the US commanders who were leading the UN forces.
Turkish, Greek, Norwegian, Thai, French, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish,
Italian, and several regional languages, however, required
translators, adding another layer of complexity in the planning and
execution of the war. In the case of the Turkish Brigade, food and
bathing also presented problems. As Muslims, they would not eat
pork. They also preferred their own blend of strong coffee. Bathing,
too, became difficult, as their modesty prevented them from
showering in a communal setting.
To solve the problem, canned fish from Japan replaced pork and
shower stalls were implemented so that more than one individual
could shower at a time. These intricacies, while seemingly small,
were a problem with many of the forces involved in the UN. The
Thai forces only ate rice and boiled vegetables, while the Greeks did
not eat corn or carrots and required olive oil for cooking. The
Indians were mainly vegetarians, while the French, Belgians and
Dutch usually ate more bread.
The list of differences was long. Even clothing posed a problem,
as many of the Asian nations were smaller in stature than other
participating nations – a situation that required careful attention.
The US, as the lead nation in the coalition, had to devise a way to
make the logistics work.
The greatest challenge, however, came from integrating ROK
forces with the Eighth US Army. Prior to the breakout from the
Pusan Perimeter and the Inchon landing, ROK units were kept
together at the front and controlled by their own headquarters.
When the Eighth Army was reorganized, ROK forces were attached
to US forces. With the need for soldiers being acute, the KATUSA
program was expanded drastically so that, by the time of the Inchon
landing, more than 19,000 KATUSA soldiers were attached to the
Eighth Army and X Corps.
Ethiopian troops are instructed in a military intelligence class, May 1951. The Kagnew
Infantry Battalion distinguished themselves on the battlefield during combat operations in
the Old Baldy, Pork Chop Hill area.
10 September 1950: British and American troops greet each other on the Nakdong River as the
Eight US Army plans an offensive to break out from the Pusan Perimeter.
The sudden change in the push-and-pull fight that had consumed the
northern position since the beginning of August made it clear that the enemy
was retreating northward. The effects of the Inchon landing were apparent.
The North Korean High Command had ordered the withdrawal of its main
forces in the South and instructed them to move northward.
By 23 September, North Korean movement away from the Pusan
Perimeter was in full swing. Gen. Walker followed the fleeing North Korean
Army. His focus was clear: ‘He planned to kill, capture, or drive off all of the
North Korean Army from South Korea.’ He understood that his Eighth Army
would be beyond its logistical capabilities by the time it reached Seoul and
the border, so he focused on liberating Korea where he could until he was
able to link up with the X Corps forces working southward.
The drive towards Seoul was made possible by the cover provided by the
Fifth Air Force, which punished enemy forces, and the combined arms task
forces formed by some of the ground divisions. Movement became more
efficient and rapid due to truck-borne infantry following mobile artillery and
tanks. By 29 September, much of the western half of South Korea had been
taken by IX Corps. In the I corps area of operations, the 24th Division had
broken up the North Korean defence around Kumchon and entered Taejon,
capturing the straggling forces of the North Korean division that had been
routed from the south.
An American tank crew watch South Koreans on the march near Taejon after the Eighth Army
liberates the town on the drive towards Seoul.
The 2nd Infantry Division, after its breakout at Tabudong, headed north
towards Seoul. In a week, I Corps had covered the same ground that had
taken the North Korean Division almost two months to capture. The ROK
army enjoyed great success in the last week of September as well. Finally
winning the admiration of Gen. Walker, the ROK First Division mopped up
enemy forces behind I Corps forces.
The breakout from Pusan and the subsequent push towards the 38th
Parallel had been costly to both sides. Moreover, advancing Eighth Army
forces came face to face with the horrors of the war as they passed the bodies
of their men who were North Korean prisoners of war, executed in horrific
ways. As UN units entered the towns of Mokpo, Hamyung, Chonju, Kongju
and others along the route north, they also saw the bodies of hundreds of
murdered men, women and children. Most of those civilians were families of
ROK office holders, Christians, police officers, property owners, ROK
soldiers and other counter-revolutionaries. Many were killed only because the
North Koreans would not transport them on their retreat.
South Korean President Syngman Rhee (right) with US General Edward Craig. Craig
commanded the highly effective 1st Marine Provisional Brigade during the Battle of the Pusan
Perimeter.
A propaganda leaflet distributed by United Nations forces contrasting the communist leaders’
luxury with the poverty of the average North Korean citizen. It shows a poorly-clothed and
starving mother and child juxtaposed with the well-fed leader of North Korea, Kim Il-sung.
WAKE ISLAND
While the Wonsan operation was underway and the navy was working
desperately to clear a passage, President Truman and Gen. MacArthur flew
out to an arranged meeting at Wake Island on 15 October. Truman had made
an earlier request to see MacArthur in Washington or Honolulu, but
MacArthur thought that too far from his principal area of concern.
The meeting served two goals: (1) To assess the policies that would flow
from the approaching victory and (2), to provide a media event that allowed
them to share that victory. The idea was devised by Washington officials;
they wanted Truman to be presented more as a commander-in-chief figure
than someone who fell second behind the reputation of MacArthur. A full day
of group talks and a private president–MacArthur session would address
current operations, rehabilitation in Korea, and future relations with Japan,
Formosa, Indochina and China.
MacArthur wasted no time in taking the stage. After assuring Truman that
he would advance the plans set forth by Washington and not other political
motivations, he launched into a two-hour tirade about occupation, nation-
building and internal security. All signs pointed to the belief that the war was
already won. Truman asked MacArthur about Chinese or Russian
intervention, to which he responded, that ‘no, they had missed their chance.
IF the Chinese in Manchuria marched, there would be the greatest slaughter
administered by Far East Air Forces. Soviet air could not stop an air
offensive on the Chinese army.’
MacArthur reassured Truman ‘that victory was won in Korea, that Japan
was ready for a peace treaty, and that the Chinese communists would not
attack.’ After the meeting was concluded, Truman read a press release before
boarding a plane home that expressed his satisfaction with the conference,
MacArthur and the progress of the war. He stressed Korea’s need for
reconstruction. The trip had accomplished what it intended. Truman’s goal
for peace in Asia and the simultaneous demonstration of his control over
MacArthur impressed US and foreign media and leaders.
US President Harry Truman and General Douglas MacArthur meet on Wake Island after the
success of the Inchon landings and recapture of Seoul to discuss achieving a ‘political victory’ in
Korea.
TOWARDS THE YALU
By 28 October, the 1st Marine Division had landed at Wonsan. They
marched north to Hungnam, where the minesweeping operations had moved
to clear the harbour. There they met with 7th Infantry Division, who had
finally made it to the north. Gen. Almond also expected to add the 3rd
Infantry Division to X Corps, bringing its combined strength to 85,000
troops. On 26 October, Almond began to shift his forces around so that the
1st Marine Division and 7th Infantry Divisions could move northwest into the
interior to find remaining North Korean resistors.
During the same period, a final drive by I Corps on Pyongyang
commenced. After the collapse of fighting in the Kumchon pocket on 15
October, the 5th Cavalry and the Commonwealth 27th Brigade took the lead
for the 1st Cavalry and the 24th Infantry Divisions. The main advance units
of the 5th Cavalry and the ROK 1st Division reached the Taedong River and
the main bridge into Pyongyang on 19 October. The next day, Gen. Paik led
ROK forces across the river, reached the Democratic Republic of Vietnam’s
capitol building, and blocked the major highway to the north. For the next
week, Syngman Rhee attempted to establish control over the whole of Korea,
while the UN remained steadfast in its position that the Rhee government
should not be allowed to govern north of the 38th Parallel.
This Republic of Korea (ROK) soldier shows his indebtedness to US supplies. His clothing is the
US M1943 battledress, a uniform that worked on a layering system. The outer layers had good
properties of wind- and rain-resistance, while inner layers provided warmth. The US M1 helmet
is worn on top of a woollen cap. He is armed with an M1 carbine.
Gen. Walker and Gen. Almond, the two principal commanders in North
Korea, responded to MacArthur’s order to advance in different ways. Gen.
Walker ordered the Commonwealth 27th Brigade up the Sinanju coast road
towards the Yalu estuary. The ROK 1st Division advanced north towards
Unsan, while the 187th Regimental Combat Team and 1st Calvary Division
remained between the river and Pyongyang. Walker exercised little control
over ROK II Corps, whose elements spread east to west and attacked north
towards the river, with the ROK 7th Infantry scoring a victory at Chonan.
ROK forces left a company to patrol the river, but most retreated to Chosan
to begin their celebration.
Almond, unlike Walker, fully intended to acquiesce to MacArthur’s order
to let US forces take the lead. His challenge, then, was replacing the ROK I
Corps with his own 1st Marine Division and 7th Infantry Division along the
east coast. The ROK 3rd Division would hold at Wonsan and push west
towards the Eighth Army boundary along the Taebaek Mountains, while the
1st Marine Division would replace the Capital Division in the Hamhung–
Hungnam area. The ROK division would occupy Iwon and hold it for the 7th
Infantry Division’s arrival. By 25 October, one regiment of the ROK 3rd
Division advanced 48km (30 miles) inland to the hydroelectric plant at the
base of the Changjin (Chosin) Reservoir, where they captured a soldier who
claimed to be a Chinese regular. Since the 7th Marines were on their way to
the same area, X Corps headquarters found no cause for concern.
So it was that, by the end of October 1950, the United Nations Command
stood on the brink of a complete victory against North Korean forces. Or did
they? While MacArthur and his always eager-to-follow X Corps commander
Gen. Almond felt complete confidence in the control of their position, none
of the other principal ground commanders echoed the same sentiments. Only
time would tell if UN forces had indeed won the war, or if they were merely
staring down the face of an enemy onslaught.
British machine gunners cover the advance of infantry at Chongju as part of the advance
towards the Yalu River, 29 October 1950.
3
CHINESE INTERVENTION
A war-weary Korean girl trudges by a stalled M-26 tank with her brother on her back at
Haengju, north of Seoul by the Han River, 9 June 1951.
UN FORCES continued to push north towards the Yalu River and the Chinese
border in an offensive that spread east to west throughout the country,
spurred on by Gen. MacArthur’s removal of restrictions on their advance.
While the US president and his government officials wished to avoid
bringing the Chinese into the war, each victory against the NKPA provided
MacArthur with further vindication in his struggle with Washington and a
Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) who he felt did not understand the true situation in
Korea. To his consternation, in the last week of October 1950, the Chinese
crossed the Yalu River, blunting the UN offensive simultaneously across its
front, and completely surprising UN forces and MacArthur himself.
UNSAN
Unsan was in the eastern section of North P’yongan province, roughly 60km
(37 miles) northeast of the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. Between 25
October and 4 November 1950, Unsan was the site of one of the most
devastating battles for US forces in the Korean War. On 25 October, the
ROK 1st Infantry Division attacked what they thought were remnants of the
KPA at Unsan. Soon after, captured Chinese soldiers alerted the ROK
soldiers to a 10,000-strong Chinese force waiting north of Unsan to join the
fight. ROK forces fought for positions in the surrounding hills around Unsan,
but by the following morning they found themselves surrounded by enemy
forces from the north and to the west, on the road between Unsan and
Yongsan-dong.
The US 6th Medium Tank Battalion and the US 10th Anti-Aircraft
Artillery Group were ordered to provide air support to ROK troops trying to
break through Chinese lines to little avail. Gen. Walton Walker of the Eighth
United States Army ordered the US 8th Cavalry Regiment of the US 1st
Cavalry Division to fight with the ROK 15th Regiment in a northern attack.
Captain Emil Kapaun (right), with Headquarters Company, 8th Cavalry Regiment, helps carry
an exhausted soldier away from the battlefield. Kapaun, a Catholic chaplain, died in a prisoner-
of-war camp in 1951.
The US 8th Cavalry Regiment had taken up positions around the town, its
1st Battalion defending the north of Unsan by the Samtan River, while its 2nd
and 3rd Battalions defended the areas west of Unsan by the Nammyon River.
Lack of UN manpower, however, created a 1.6-km (1-mile) gap between the
1st and 2nd Battalions, which Chinese forces exploited on 1 November. By
later that night, the ROK 15th Infantry Regiment had been decimated and the
US 1st and 2nd Battalions were low on ammunition. UN forces were ordered
to withdraw by Maj. Gen. Frank W. Milburn, commander of the US I Corps.
The UN withdrawal from Unsan proved difficult, as Chinese forces
continued to pour into the gap between the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the US
8th Calvary Regiment. Surrounded by the 347th and 348th Regiments of the
PVA 116th Division, US forces had to mount an escape by infiltrating the
Chinese lines and abandoning most of their vehicles and heavy weapons
along the way. They managed to reach UN lines the following day.
Their brethren in the 3rd Battalion of the US 8th Cavalry were not so
fortunate. Left alone during the night while Chinese forces were attacking the
1st and 2nd Battalions, a company of Chinese commandos from the 116th
Division disguised as ROK soldiers infiltrated the 3rd Battalion command
post and caught them in a surprise attack that killed many while they slept.
After being pinned down, US 5th Cavalry Regiment was ordered to mount
rescue attempts. The US 5th Calvary Regiment lost 350 soldiers in attacks
against the PVA 343rd Regiment in their efforts to help, but were eventually
ordered to retreat. Soldiers of the 3rd Battalion (8th Cavalry) continued to
endure attacks from Chinese forces until fewer than 200 made it to UN lines
on 4 November.
November 1950: A Sherman tank laden with Australian soldiers 80km (50 miles) north of
Pyongyang heads towards the Central Mountains and the Yalu River.
AUSTRALIAN ADVANCEMENTS
While the Chinese were finding success against the US and ROK forces at
Unsan, the 27th British Commonwealth Brigade was fighting in a
simultaneous effort against the Chinese invasion in the Central Mountains
between 27 and 31 October. The leading battalion of the composite forces
that made up the 27th was 3 Battalion Royal Australian Regiment (3 RAR).
As UN forces continued their drive towards the Yalu River in the preceding
week, the 3 RAR had fought a significant battle at Yongju, otherwise known
as the Battle of the Apple Orchard.
Racing north to link up with American paratroopers who had dropped
ahead of the advance, the battalion was suddenly fired upon by an element of
239th Regiment of the KPA hidden in an apple orchard beside the road. C
Company fixed bayonets and, with US Sherman tanks in support, swept
through the enemy position. After a three-hour fight, the KPA began to
retreat.
On 25 October, 3 RAR came up against the Taeryong River. A patrol
crossed the partly demolished bridge and discovered the enemy in strength on
the far side. In the search for an alternative crossing point, D Company
captured the town of Pakchon further north along the river. That night, A and
B Companies crossed the ‘broken bridge’ and dug in on the far side. They
were soon detected by the KPA, who were determined not to allow the
Australians to establish a bridgehead.
Several attacks were made on A and B Companies, who were reinforced
by a platoon from C Company. At one point, a T-34 tank approached in the
dark to within 10m (33ft) of the B Company Headquarters. American tanks
were unable to cross the river to help the Australians. Nevertheless, the
position was held, and at dawn the KPA called off their attack and withdrew.
An Australian soldier tries to keep warm by staying bundled up. The Aussie slouch hat he is
wearing was designed for warmer climates, not the bitterly cold conditions that were
characteristic of Korea in late 1950.
Men of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders take cover as they advance into the town of
Chonju. As members of the 27th Commonwealth Brigade, the Highlanders were instrumental in
the fighting between the Chongchon and Taeryong rivers.
TURKISH BRIGADE
A Turkish soldier dug-in for the Battle of Kunu-ri in late November 1950. Fighting in the
snow, the Turkish Brigade was attached to the US 25th Infantry Division.
The Chinese had moved large contingents into the area. Standing in front
of IX Corps to the west was the 180,000-man XIII Army Group of the
Chinese Fourth Field Army. If that number was not ominous on its own, the
120,000-man IX Army Group of the Chinese Third Field Army stood against
the US I Corps in the east. Total Chinese strength was about 300,000 men,
and 12 divisions of the NKPA added approximately 65,000 men to the enemy
strength.
Eighth Army forces were effectively split down the middle by the
Chongchon River. As IX Corps moved northward, the Turks were ordered on
21 November to move north with the 25th Division. By 22 November 1950,
the Turks had completed their assignment of neutralizing North Korean
patrols in their allocated area. Advancing along with their American
counterparts, the Turks were ordered to establish contact with the US 2nd
Division on the right flank of the IX Corps and also to cover the right flank
and rear of their division. The brigade had received information concerning a
Chinese regiment known to be northwest of Tokchon.
On 26 November, the Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) launched strong
counter-attacks against the US I Corps and IX Corps. The main Chinese force
moved down the central mountain ranges against the ROK II Corps at
Tokchon. The South Koreans could not withstand the attack and their
defences collapsed. The Turks were ordered to protect the UN right flank.
Trucks were assigned to transport the Turks’ 1st Battalion to Wawon, 24km
(15 miles) east of Kunu-ri, about halfway to Tokchon, unload and return for
the 2nd Battalion. After insufficient trucks arrived, some of the brigade set
out on foot. Orders, counter-orders and unclear transmissions made the
situation worse. The Turks were ordered to close the road and secure
Unsong-ni. The Turks soon found themselves in an undesirable position.
General Yazici, commander of the Turkish forces, claimed that:
Turks march prisoners back to their command post after the battle of Kunu-ri as more troops
move up to engage the enemy.
Having to withdraw to the southeast, the Turks found their position on their
east flank too exposed. Gen. Yazici ordered his men to move and position
themselves at Wawon. During the move towards Wawon, the Turks lost
communications with the US 2nd Division. When communications were
reestablished, the Turks received intelligence that air observers had seen
hundreds of Chinese moving towards Tokchon.
When they reached Wawon, they attacked towards Tokchon, on foot and
without tank support. The terrain was upstream along the Tongjukkyo River
into the mountain divide that separated the Chongchon River from the
Taedong drainage. Two platoons of the Turkish Brigade assigned
reconnaissance duty were now given rear-guard duty. The Chinese followed
the brigade closely. The reconnaissance unit engaged the oncoming Chinese
at the Karil L’yong Pass but was unable to break contact.
SUCCESSFUL DEFENCE
Although many Turks had fallen in this first engagement, they had
successfully tied down the enemy. The Chinese suffered heavy casualties
trying repeatedly to take the Turkish position, and all their attacks were
repelled. Finally, Yazici, understanding that the brigade was being encircled
by the numerically superior Chinese, ordered withdrawal.
The engulfing enemy constantly changed tactics and directions.
Communications resumed with the Turkish Brigade, but there was difficulty
in understanding the order received. The brigade was ordered to merge with
the US 38th Regiment, cover the 38th’s flank and secure a retreat route
westward. In the confusion of the retreat and the garbled, misdirected and
delayed messages, that crucial directive was two hours late in delivery. The
column got turned about in the mass confusion and congestion of the road.
November 1950: Master Sergeant George Miller selects human blood for a patient at the 8076th
Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (M.A.S.H.) at Kunu-ri, Korea.
During the withdrawal, the Chinese had attacked the Turks with
overwhelming force and the brigade took such high casualties that by 30
November it was destroyed as a battleworthy unit. The only support the
Turks received from IX Corps was a tank platoon and truck transportation.
That was added to the brigade’s artillery and enabled some of the brigade to
survive.
At the 2nd Division Headquarters, information about the Turks and their
actual movements was more and more difficult to obtain. Communication
issues seemed to plague UN efforts in both directions. The tanks sent towards
the Turks’ position were repeatedly turned back. Confusion led to startling
events, such as American soldiers simply abandoning their positions and
equipment, including their weapons. The Chinese appeared to be everywhere
and nowhere at the same time. Confirmation of Chinese movements was
sparse and often erroneous. The Chinese, reported to be just ahead, turned out
to be advancing on the soldiers from behind. The Turks decided to evacuate
the command post.
US Marines in winter gear as they fight entrenched Chinese troops during the Battle of Chosin
Reservoir. More than 150,000 soldiers of the Chinese Ninth Army Group attacked Marine Corps
units attached to X Corps.
ATTACK REPULSED
The ROK 3rd Infantry Regiment attached to the 2nd Infantry Division was
sent to reinforce the US 9th Infantry Regiment, but it was routed by friendly
fire. With no contacts between the American commands and the British units,
the Middlesex Regiment advanced to the south end of the valley without
attacking the roadblock. Believing that the roadblock was short, and the
British were attacking up the road, the 2nd Infantry Division was ordered to
run through the blockade.
As the 2nd Infantry Division entered the valley, the PVA machine guns
delivered punishing fire while mortar shells saturated the road. The length of
the roadblock caught the 2nd Infantry Division by surprise. The road leading
south from Kunu-ri would later be termed ‘The Gauntlet’, because Chinese
soldiers lined the mountains above the narrow road, picking off soldiers and
destroying tanks and other vehicles. Here, too, the frigid weather played a
vital role in the outcome of the withdrawal.
Eugene Inman fought with the 2nd Infantry Division at the Battle of
Kunuri. Inman remembered it being so cold that ‘rifles and machine guns
refused to fire in the low temperatures. The oil in the trucks and jeeps turned
to glue, and the vehicles refused to function.’ In that particular battle, the cold
had led to a wasteland of machinery that had effectively stopped the 2nd
Division’s escape southward.
Members of the 2nd Infantry that attempted to take cover were promptly
left behind by the convoy rushing south, and unit cohesion evaporated.
During the day, the air cover tried to suppress the PVA positions with some
success, but with no air cover at night, the PVA attack intensified. Finally,
the PVA blocked the road completely by destroying the US 38th and 503rd
Artillery Battalion of the 2nd Infantry Division, and the immobilized artillery
pieces forced the rest of the division to abandon all vehicles and to retreat by
hiking through the hills. In one of the last acts of the battle, the 23rd Infantry
Regiment fired off its stock of 3206 artillery shells, and the massive barrage
shocked the PVA troops from following the regiment. The last stragglers
from the US 2nd Infantry Division finally arrived at Sunchon on 1 December,
and by 2 December the Eighth Army had completely lost contact with the
Chinese.
Korean civilians prepare to board an LST during the evacuation of Hungnam, while other
refugees transfer some of their meagre belongings from an ox-cart to a fishing boat, December
1950.
CHANGJIN RESERVOIR
While the Battle on the Chongchon River marked the start of the Chinese
second phase attack in the west, the Changjin Reservoir, a manmade lake
located in the northeast of the Korean peninsula, became the site of one of the
most brutal campaigns during the Korean War, which included the road that
connected Hungnam and the Changjin Reservoir. On 25 November 1950,
Chinese forces descended upon the Eighth Army forces, catching them by
surprise and forcing them to retreat. At the same time, Eighth Army forces
had been coming in from the west, X Corps was approaching from the east.
On 27 November, an X Corps attack proceeded west towards Mupyong,
northeast of Kunu, to the rear of Chinese Communist Forces (CCF). The
attack called for X Corps, led by the US 1st Marine Division forces
commanded by Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Smith, to advance up the west side of the
Chosin Reservoir.
The US 7th Infantry, led by Task Force MacLean, advanced along the
east side, while the 3rd Infantry Division guarded the Marines’ flanks.
Trouble quickly ensued, as scattered units of Task Force MacLean were
isolated, not only from the rest of the 7th Infantry Division and the Marines
but also from each other. To make matters worse, winter had long since
descended over the Korean Peninsula, making life at the reservoir harrowing.
Charles McNabb, with B and D Companies, 1st Engineering Battalion,
1st Marine Division, who was posted on the east side of the reservoir at
Hagaru-ri, remembers the temperature falling as low as -54˚F (-47°C). When
recalling the early fighting and the weather, he asserted:
They—the bodies got so high you couldn’t shoot over ’em. … You’d
set machine guns up on top of bodies. We wasn’t dug in. And they got
—they started getting bodies. They was froze. You know like it got
down to 44 degrees below zero right quick. And later on it got colder
than that. Ice would freeze in your nose in 40 degrees and 43. And
when you breathe in, ice would freeze. But when it gets down around
50 degrees when you breathe in and breathe out, the ice don’t melt.
So we cut and stripped some blankets off and legs out of wool
underwear and pulled them over our head and had little red goggles
we wore. We really needed Arctic, you know, type clothing, but we
had mountain sleeping bags. And those sleeping bags, when you got
out of one, it’d turn to frost inside, and you start at the bottom, roll it
up, try to get the hot air out, you know. The next night when you got in
it, it got wet. … Finally it become useless. It was just wet. They didn’t
get rid of the frost inside, so we got to wearing the sleeping bag at
night with your clothes on.
On 25 November, the Chinese entered the war, and Walker had to react to
a determined adversary. During those attacks, Walker organized the most
difficult of all military manoeuvres – a retreat during battle. His mobile
defence during the withdrawal proved so skilful that Walker was able to save
most of the Eighth Army. MacArthur, however, was not impressed with him.
Never actually liking Walker, MacArthur now found a reason to relieve him
of command. Before he could do so, on 23 December 1950, Walker was
killed in a traffic accident when a civilian truck collided with his jeep.
Walker’s death left a gap in the command structture. He had effectively
commanded the Eighth Army from the beginning of its involvement on the
Korean peninsula. To replace him, the Army chose Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway, the current deputy chief of staff for administration and training. A
successful infantry commander during World War II, Ridgway was keen to
mount an attack to turn the tide of the retreat from the Chinese. Upon arriving
in Korea, he looked to do just that, but found an Eighth Army defeated in
both body and spirit. He took it upon himself to meet the men (from top to
bottom), show them that their commander was interested in their fate, and get
an honest assessment of the situation. What he found was a completely
demoralized force.
Pfc. Preston McKnight, of the 19th Infantry Regiment, uses his poncho to get protection from the
biting wind and cold, Yoju area, January 1951. Korean winters descended to temperatures of 40
degrees below zero.
Ridgway’s surprise did not come only from the lowly enlisted men wose
job it was to actually conduct the fighting. He also went to his corps
commanders and asked them what their attack plans were. The comanders
looked at him in bewilderment and told Ridgway that they had no plan for an
attack; they were retreating. These responses precipitated a ‘cleaning house’
of senior officials in the Eighth Army.
Ridgway was cold and calculating. He did not want ineffective generals
who would not or did not possess the capability to command as he sought fit.
Much like his friend and mentor George C. Marshall had done in World War
II, Ridgway built up a corps of commanders that would heed his orders,
motivate their men and stop running. Unfortunately for him, his position was
untenable, and he would have to wait to launch his major offensive.
On New Year’s Eve, the Chinese and North Koreans attacked with all-out
fury. The Eighth Army presented a strong defence, but it wasn’t enough.
Ridgway later wrote that they ‘were killing them by the thousands’, but they
kept coming. They smashed huge holes in the centre of Ridgway’s battle line,
where ROK divisions broke and ran. By 2 January, it was evident that the
Eighth Army would have to move south of the Han River and abandon Seoul.
Refugees flee southward across the frozen Han River, in advance of Chinese and North Korean
communist forces, January 1951. Many displaced North Koreans would never return north after
the war, choosing to stay in the Republic where they were offered more freedom.
WONJU
THERE WAS A SERIES of major battles on the UN retreat. Wonju was a
critical village set amid the Taebaek Mountains in central Korea. It
sat along Route 29, which connected Chuncheon on the 38th Parallel
with Daegu on the Pusan Perimeter, a vital line of communication
for UN forces. It was also connected to Seoul by another road
running northwest that intersected route 29. Its location made it a
vital stronghold for the defence of the central and eastern fronts,
and was regarded by Eighth Army commander Matthew Ridgway
as second only to Seoul in order of importance. From 31 December
1950 to 20 January 1951, Wonju was the site of multiple battles that
determined who controlled the 38th Parallel and, ultimately, Seoul.
Allied forces approach Wonju, South Korea, January 1951. Wonju was a critical village set
amid the Taebaek Mountains in central Korea and was the site of several battles for
control of the 38th Parallel.
EXPANDED FRONT
While the three US corps advanced west and into the centre, Gen. Ridgway
decided to expand the offensive to the east by committing additional elements
of the X Corps and the ROK III Corps in an operation code-named Roundup.
Roundup’s object was the expansion of the offensive to the central sector of
the front. The X Corps’ ROK 5th and 8th Divisions were to retake
Hongch’on, 24km (15 miles) north of Hoengsong, and in the process destroy
the North Korean forces in that vicinity. US forces supporting the movement
included the 2nd and 7th Infantry Divisions and the 187th Airborne
Regimental Combat Team (RCT). Roundup would also protect the right flank
of Thunderbolt. Farther east, the ROK III Corps, on X Corps’ right flank and
still under its control, would also advance north. The operation commenced
on 5 February, with both the X and the ROK III Corps attacking steadily, but
against increasing enemy resistance.
This Chinese soldier of the People’s Volunteer Army wears a fully quilted jacket and trousers,
with archaic puttees. The cap is fur-lined, with extensive earflaps to prevent frostbite.
Ammunition for his Type 88 Hanyang rifle is held in cotton bandoliers across the chest.
At the time, Ridgway and Almond were seeking to stabilize the front line
between Chip’yong-ni and Wonju, where the destruction of the ROK forces
around Hoengsong had created major gaps in the defensive line. For three
desperate days, the front wavered as the Chinese attempted to exploit these
gaps before UN reinforcements could arrive. Ridgway quickly pushed units
into the critical areas, moving the 27th British Commonwealth Brigade and
the ROK 6th Division over to X Corps and into the gap south of Chip’yong-
ni. The action proved timely. On the night of 13–14 February, the Chinese
conducted major assaults at Chip’yong-ni, Ch’uam-ni, 8km (5 miles)
southeast of Chip’yong-ni, and at Wonju. Supported by massed artillery and
air support, the UN forces repulsed the attacks, causing heavy Chinese
casualties.
Elsewhere on 15 February, efforts to restore the front were finally
realized. Rather than take advantage of the weakened front to the east, the
Chinese had chosen to concentrate on eliminating the US forces at
Chip’yong-ni first. But they had chosen poorly, and the respite allowed UN
forces to restore their lines. Reinforcements, particularly the US 7th Infantry
Division and 187th Airborne RCT, helped the South Koreans form a solid
line around Wonju and near Chech’on.
By 18 February, the communist offensive was spent, and enemy forces
began withdrawing to the north rather than attempting to hold what they had
taken. With the enemy withdrawing, Ridgway ordered IX Corps to advance,
while the X Corps moved to destroy the communist forces around Chech’on
in the central sector. With the initiative restored and fully in the hands of the
UN forces by 19 February, Ridgway ordered the commencement of
Operation Killer (20 February–6 March 1951), the UN counteroffensive.
OPERATION RIPPER
On 7 March, Ripper began with I and IX Corps on the west near Seoul and
Hoengsong and X and ROK III Corps in the east. On the left, the US 25th
Infantry Division quickly crossed the Han and established a bridgehead.
Farther to the east, IX Corps reached its first phase line on 11 March. Three
days later, the advance proceeded to the next phase line. During the night of
14 March, elements of the ROK 1st Division and US 3rd Infantry Division
liberated Seoul. The capital city changed hands for the fourth and last time in
the war. The communist forces were compelled to abandon it when the UN
approach to the east of the city threatened the defenders with encirclement.
A US 1st Division Sherman tank drives north through Chuncheon, South Korea, March 1951.
MacArthur inspects troops of the 24th Infantry Regiment on his arrival at Kimpo airfield for a
tour of the battlefront, February 1951.
OPERATION KILLER
OPERATION KILLER WAS DESIGNED to enhance the damage to enemy
forces in a methodical manner. Ridgway named the operation as
such, in the hopes that it would ignite an offensive spirit in the
Eighth Army and continue the momentum gained hitherto. The IX,
X and ROK III Corps were directed north towards a line named
‘Arizona’ running from Yangp’yong east to positions north of
Hoengsong and along the east–west portion of the Wonju–
Kangnung highway. By 28 February, all of the units involved had
met their goals, pushing their lines forward 19– 24km (12–15 miles).
Once the objectives of Killer were met, Ridgway, with the support of
MacArthur, commenced Operation Ripper, which envisioned the
recapture of Seoul and the towns of Hongch’on, 80km (50 miles)
west of Seoul, and Ch’unch’on, 24km (15 miles) further north.
Men of the US 1st Marine Division capture Chinese troops during fighting on the central
front, Hoengsong, March 1951.
MACARTHUR LEAVES
The day after he issued the communiqué, MacArthur authorized Ridgway to
advance up to 32km (20 miles) north of the 38th Parallel. Truman was
furious. He and MacArthur had been at odds before, but he viewed
MacArthur’s actions in this case as a direct violation of the directives he had
discussed with him at their Wake Island meeting the previous December. He
believed MacArthur’s communiqué to be far ‘beyond the scope and place of
a military commander of the United Nations to issue on his own
responsibility. It was an act totally disregarding all directives to abstain from
any declarations on foreign policy. It was in open defiance of my orders as
President and as Commander-in-Chief. This was a challenge to the authority
of the President under the Constitution. It also flouted the policy of the
United Nations.’
When MacArthur gave approval for Operation Rugged, to pursue the
enemy north of the 38th Parallel, Truman held a meeting in his office with
Averell Harriman, his special secretary, Secretary of Defense George C.
Marshall, Chairman of the JCS Omar Bradley, and Secretary of State Dean
Acheson to discuss what would be done about MacArthur. With a unanimous
decision among the attendees reached, President Truman relieved MacArthur
of command on 11 April and replaced him with Eighth Army Commander
Matthew Ridgway. Ridgway in turn was replaced as Eighth Army
commander by Lt. Gen. James Van Fleet. He continued Ridgway’s policy of
using coordinated firepower, rolling with communist counterpunches, and
inflicting maximum casualties.
General Matthew B. Ridgway (foreground) and General James A. Van Fleet assessing the
situation. Ridgway took over as Commander-in-Chief of UN forces after MacArthur was fired,
and Van Fleet replaced Ridgway as commander of the Eighth US Army.
By the time Van Fleet took control of the Eighth Army, Operation
Rugged was underway. I and IX Corps had moved forward towards
Ch’orwon, southwest of the Iron Triangle, and reached an intermediate phase
line, Utah. To their right, X Corps forces took a dam overlooking the
Hwach’on Reservoir five days later. On 20 April, the last UN forces, the US
7th Infantry Division and the ROK 3rd Division of the X Corps, reached the
Kansas line. Final preparations began to continue the advance to the
Wyoming line. However, all UN offensive action ceased when communist
forces launched their spring offensive across the entire front.
At his disposal were three Chinese army groups – the 3rd, 9th and 19th
Army Groups – and three North Korean corps – the I, III and V Corps. The
offensive commenced on 22 April on two broad fronts: the main thrust across
the Imjin River in the western sector held by the US I Corps involved
337,000 troops driving towards Seoul, while the secondary effort involved
149,000 troops attacking further east across the Soyang River in the central
and eastern sectors, falling primarily on the US IX Corps, and to a lesser
extent on the US X Corps sector.
A further 214,000 Chinese troops supported the offensive; in total, more
than 700,000 men. As part of the preparation, the battle-hardened 39th and
40th Armies of the 13th Army Group were transferred to the 9th Army Group
under the overall command of Song Shi-Lun, and Commander Wen Yuchen
of the 40th Army was given the mission of destroying the South Korean 6th
Division while blocking any UN reinforcements towards the Imjin River at
Kapyong.
At Imjin River, Chinese forces attempted to breakthrough in their push to recapture Seoul. The
area was defended by the 29th Infantry Brigade, made up of three British and one Belgian
infantry battalions. Their actions slowed the Chinese advance and allowed defensive positions to
be established north of Seoul.
When the units of the 29th Infantry Brigade were ultimately forced to fall
back, supported by the defensive rearguard actions of the Filipino contingent
during the Battle of Yultong, their actions in the Battle of the Imjin River,
together with those of other UN forces, had blunted the impetus of the
Chinese offensive and allowed UN forces to retreat to prepared defensive
positions in the area called the ‘No-Name Line’ just 8km (5 miles) north of
Seoul, where the Chinese were halted. Both sides then realized that the
prospect of the communists parading along the streets of Seoul during May
Day had evaporated. On the other hand, although the UN forces made a
strategic gain during the battle by preventing the Chinese from recapturing
Seoul, the loss of the unit caused much controversy in Britain and within the
UN Command.
An M24 Chaffee used by the 79th Tank Battalion, 25th Infantry Division, in Operation Ripper,
where the enemy were driven across the Han River. Success continued with Operations
Dauntless, Detonate and Piledriver in the Spring of 1951. These offensives enhanced the UN’s
bargaining platform.
British soldiers of the 1st Battalion, the Gloucestershire Regiment, ride atop their Universal
Carrier after fighting their way out of a communist encirclement, May 1951.
KAPYONG VALLEY AND SOYANG RIVER
In the Kapyong sector of the offensive, the 27th British Commonwealth
Brigade established blocking positions in the Kapyong Valley, also one of the
key routes south to the capital, Seoul. The two forward battalions, 3rd
Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (3 RAR) and 2nd Battalion, Princess
Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (2 PPCLI), occupied positions astride the
valley and hastily developed defences on 23 April.
As thousands of South Korean soldiers began to withdraw through the
valley, the Chinese infiltrated the brigade position under the cover of
darkness and assaulted the Australians on Hill 504 during the evening and
into the following day. Although heavily outnumbered, the 27th Brigade held
their positions into the afternoon before the Australians withdrew to positions
to the rear of the brigade on the evening of 24 April, with both sides having
suffered heavy casualties. The Chinese then turned their attention to the
Canadians on Hill 677, but during a fierce night battle they were unable to
dislodge them.
The fighting helped stem the Chinese offensive, and the actions of the
Australians and Canadians at Kapyong were important in helping to prevent a
breakthrough on the United Nations Command central front. The two
battalions bore the brunt of the assault and stopped an entire Chinese division
during the hard-fought battle. The next day, the Chinese withdrew back up
the valley to the north, in order to regroup for the second impulse of the
offensive.
The second offensive occurred at the Battle of the Soyang River. Even
though the communist forces lost the strategic initiative after the first
offensive, Mao insisted that the second phase of the offensive still be carried
out. The attack took place across the entire front, but with the main thrust
below the Soyang River in the Taebaek Mountains. The objective of the main
effort was to sever the six Republic of Korea Army (ROKA) divisions on the
eastern front from the remainder of the Eighth US Army and annihilate them
and the US 2nd Infantry Division.
Marines take cover behind an M26 tank while it fires on enemy positions ahead. Hongchon Area,
22 May 1951.
Navy corpsmen prepare three wounded US Marines for evacuation via helicopter at Kari San
Mountain, May 1951.
Van Fleet’s plan called for I Corps, IX Corps and part of the 1st Marine
Division at the left of X Corps to advance on 20 May towards the Munsan-
Chuncheon segment of Line Topeka, 24km (15 miles) north of the defences
at Seoul. Once the Topeka segment was occupied, strikes to start closing the
noose were to be made towards the Iron Triangle – one up Route 3 to secure
a road centre in the Yongp’yong River valley some 32km (20 miles) above
Uijongbu; another up Route 17 beyond Chuncheon to seize the complex of
road junctions at the west end of the Hwacheon Reservoir.
Within a week, UN forces had successfully routed the enemy at these
locations, on the Syuoang River bridge, Kansong. By 27 May, they had
reached their objectives but had allowed most major Chinese units to escape
entrapment. To extend the reach of the UN counter-attack, Van Fleet ordered
Operation Piledriver.
In the west, I and IX Corps were to seize Line Wyoming to cut PVA/KPA
lines of communication at the base of the Iron Triangle and to block the main
roads running southeast out of the triangle towards the Hwacheon Reservoir
and Chuncheon. The weight of the western attack was to be in the I Corps
zone. Reinforced by the 3rd Division and its attached ROKA 9th Division,
and backed up by the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team, I and IX
Corps were to seize the Ch’orwon-Kumhwa area. In a narrowed IX Corps
zone, the ground beyond Hwacheon town was to be taken to block the roads
reaching southeast out of Kumhwa.
East of the reservoir, after completing operations to capture the Yanggu-
Inje area and reach Kansong on the east coast, X Corps and ROKA I Corps
were to seize and establish defensive positions along a newly drawn segment
of Line Kansas running northeast from the reservoir across the southern rim
of a hollow circle of mountains aptly called the ‘Punchbowl’ to the coastal
town of Kojin-ni 8km (5 miles) above Kansong. Once on the adjusted line,
both Corps could use the road as their main supply route and, in addition,
could receive supplies through the port at Kansong. Van Fleet had in mind
another use for Kansong as part of an operation that he planned to open on 6
June to isolate and destroy PVA/KPA forces that had succeeded in
withdrawing above Route 24 into the area northeast of the Hwacheon
Reservoir, but Ridgway did not feel the gains would be worth the risks.
LIMITED OFFENSIVE
Ridgway did approve the preceding two plans, and when the Eighth Army
seized Line Wyoming and the adjusted segment of Line Kansas in the east, it
had reached its allowed limit of general advance in support of efforts to open
ceasefire negotiations. As yet, there had been no clear sign that Chinese and
North Korean authorities favoured that kind of resolution, but there had been
a search for a way to open armistice talks.
RIDGWAY AGREED THAT LINE KANSAS WOULD BE THE
BEST LOCATION FOR THE EIGHTH ARMY IF ARMISTICE
NEGOTIATIONS STARTED SOON.
On 9 June, Van Fleet offered Ridgway several plans for limited offensive
action to keep PVA/KPA forces off balance, three of which he proposed to
execute immediately after the Eighth Army reached Lines Kansas and
Wyoming. Each of the three called for a raid on enemy troops and supplies
within a specific area. In the west, a division was to hit Kaesong 16km (10
miles) above the Imjin River. In the central region, an armoured task force
was to attack P’yonggang at the apex of the Iron Triangle, and the 1st Marine
Division was to make an amphibious landing at T’ongch’on and attack
southwest over Route 17 to join Eighth Army lines at Kumhwa.
Ridgway agreed with Van Fleet’s concept of holding the Eighth Army
along the Kansas–Wyoming front and punishing enemy forces with limited
attacks, but refused the 1st Marine Division operation, presumably for the
same reasons that he had refused Van Fleet’s earlier T’ongch’on landing
proposal. He approved the other attack plans, but they were to be executed
only if intelligence confirmed that worthwhile targets existed in the Kaesong
and P’yonggang areas.
Ridgway then requested recommendations on the best location for the
Eighth Army during a ceasefire. Van Fleet recommended Line Kansas
because of its suitability for a strong defence, but pointed out that since a
ceasefire agreement might require opposing forces to withdraw several miles
from the line of contact to create a buffer zone, the Eighth Army would have
to be well forward of Line Kansas at the time an agreement was reached.
Ridgway agreed that Line Kansas would be the best location for the Eighth
Army if armistice negotiations started soon. He assured Van Fleet that, if
possible, he would advise him of forthcoming negotiations in time to allow
him to move at least part of his forces to a line of contact 32km (20 miles)
above Kansas.
So ended the period of the Korean War characterized by main offensives.
The rest of the war would be characterized as a stalemate. Fighting still
continued, but was conducted for limited aims, and never reached the scale of
the offensives that characterized the first year of the war.
Pfc. Roman Prauty (crouching foreground) and his gun crew of 31st RCT, fires a 75mm (2.95in)
recoilless rifle in support of infantry units across the valley near Oetlook-tong, June 1951.
4
THE WAR IN THE AIR
Five North American F-86A Sabre fighters of the 4th Fighter Interceptor Wing on the flight line
at Suwon, June 1951. The Sabre was one of the new jet-propelled fighters used in the Korean
War.
The 1950–53 Korean War is unique with respect to airpower
because most of the aerial combat that occurred was between
Russian and American pilots rather than among the Koreans. While
the Korean War as a whole has become known as the ‘Forgotten
War’, the air war on both sides of the 38th Parallel inflicted
irrevocable damage on the landscape and on the psyches of those
who bore witness to it.
I work on the Korean War, historian Brian Cummings notes that the
N HIS
American-led air war punished North Korea for three years without regard to
civilian casualties. Air assaults ranged from the widespread use of
firebombing to the threatened use of nuclear and chemical weapons.
Although Cummings’ research is geared towards the memory of the war in a
Korean context, the fact remains that the Allied air effort resembled the
annihilationist strategies employed in World War II. That in itself is
interesting when the espoused strategy was to engage in a limited campaign
with clear rules of engagement designed not to escalate into a ‘hot’ war with
the Soviet Union.
The history of the air war in Korea between 1950 and 1953 could fill a
book-length study on its own, but there are a number of topics that are
important precursors to such a study, as is a discussion of those who actually
fought in the air war. The UN force predominantly comprised US air
elements, so the following analysis will support that fact, but other
contributors to the air war effort will also be addressed.
SUWON AIRFIELD
The first use of UN air power, predominantly made up of US forces, was on
Kimpo Airfield and Suwon Airfield on 27 June 1950. When the war began
two days earlier with the North Korean invasion, US forces attempted to
evacuate US civilians and diplomats from the city of Seoul, where a battle
was ongoing between North and South Korean forces. Transport aircraft and
ships, escorted by US fighter planes, attempted to take civilians out of the
country as fast as possible. During these missions on 27 June, US forces were
attacked by North Korean aircraft in two separate incidents in the Seoul area.
Despite being outnumbered, the better-built American aircraft
outmanoeuvred the North Koreans, quickly shooting down half of the
attacking force.
July 1950: a tea shop in Suwon puts up a welcome sign for US servicemen. Suwon Airfield was
one of the first and most vital airfields captured on the Korean peninsula at the start of the war.
The air battle over Suwon was important for numerous reasons. For one,
US forces emerged victorious after being first attacked by North Korean
forces. Secondly, it marked the first engagement of the newly constituted
United States Air Force (USAF). The most important reason, however, was
its place as the turning point from conventional fighters to those powered by
jet engines. The fight pitted the US P-51 Mustang and the F-80C Shooting
Star, the first jet-powered plane used by the USAF, against the North Korean
Lavochkin La-7 and Ilyushin Il-10. While the Korean People’s Air Force
(KPAF) attacked first, the F-80 aircraft were able to attack the North Koreans
from a greater distance and had far better manoeuvrability. The Ilyushin Il-10
was considered formidable in World War II, but it failed in comparison to the
new jet-powered planes. The discrepancy in the air technology and the early
Allied victory at Suwon gave the North Koreans pause when planning any
future air campaigns.
A Russian-made Ilyushin ground attack aircraft stands at Kimpo Airfield after being strafed and
rocketed by United Nation’s aircraft. Dubbed the ‘flying tank’, the Il-2 and Il-10 models enjoyed
great success before the use of jet-propelled aircraft.
P-51 MUSTANG
THIS WORLD WAR II veteran was considered the best long-range
ground-attack aircraft in Far East Command by General
Stratemeyer, commander of the Far East Air Forces. It was fitted
with rockets and bombs, and photo reconnaissance, rather than
operating in the pure fighter-interceptor role. After the first North
Korean invasion, USAF units were forced to fly from bases in
Japan; the F-51Ds, with their long range and endurance, could
attack targets in Korea that short-ranged F-80 jets could not.
Because of their vulnerable liquid cooling system, however, the P-
51s sustained heavy losses to ground fire.
A P-51D Mustang fighter used by the South African Air Force (SAAF) that served with the
18th Fighter-Bomber Wing, USAF, prepares to take off, May 1951.
The Marines were the only service that used a ground coordinator, later
known as a forward air controller (FAC). They provided their FACs with an
exceptional level of authority. FACs served as agents of the ground
commanders, usually posted at the battalion level. As such, they had direct
tactical control over the prosecution of the air strike. They could determine
the level of air support needed and then brief the pilot on how the strike was
to be conducted.
The Marine Corps validated and legitimized the FAC role by ensuring
that first-rate pilots served in those billets and, indeed, even made serving as
an FAC a career-enhancing experience. The small size of Marine aviation
ensured that the FACs and the pilots overhead often knew one another
personally and, because they spoke the same language, air support was
enhanced. Furthermore, assigning aviators to FAC roles spurred a
multidisciplinary attitude that enhanced better air– ground integration.
In previous wars, air–ground support had not been the priority. In the
latter stages of World War II, naval airpower existed to protect the fleet. In
Korea, with the Seventh Fleet having control over the Strait of Formosa and
remaining uncontested in the waters off Korea, US and UN forces could
focus more on the land war and the use of airpower for ground support. Close
air support in Korea for US forces followed the Joint Training Directive for
Air–Ground Operations (JTD). The US commander of Far East Air Forces
(FEAF) was Lt. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer. At the start of the Korean War,
his forces were an occupation force, and its charter was the air defence of its
area of operations, which included Japan, the Ryukyus, the Marianas and the
Philippines. It had many secondary missions, including air support of
operations as arranged with appropriate Army and Navy commanders. Little
training, however, had been accomplished with the Army because of the
severe budget cuts that followed World War II.
Lieutenant General George Stratemeyer, commander of the Far East Air Forces, awards Royal
Air Force Wing Commander Peter Wykeham-Barnes the distinguished US Air Medal for service
in Korea.
During the early, desperate days of the war, Stratemeyer and his vice
commander, Maj. Gen. Otto P. Weyland, tried their best to provide the
ground forces with needed support, using B-26s, B-29s and even F-82s for
close air support. Although many ground commanders appreciated the
support given them by FEAF aircraft, notably the 2nd Infantry Division
during the ordeal in its battle south of Kunu-ri in early December 1950,
others did not. World War II had shown that close air support worked best in
fluid situations, when the enemy was on the move. In the static conditions
that occurred during the last two years of the Korean War, when the enemy
was dug in deeply, artillery fire was often a better choice than air.
IN THE STATIC CONDITIONS OF THE LAST TWO YEARS
OF THE KOREAN WAR, WHEN THE ENEMY WAS DUG IN
DEEPLY, ARTILLERY FIRE WAS OFTEN A BETTER
CHOICE THAN AIR.
Unfortunately, the ground troops had become used to having air support
virtually on-call, and they were not pleased when the airmen began to seek
more lucrative targets behind the lines – in other words, interdiction. More
instances of friendly fire occurred during the static phase of the war as well.
Commanders on the ground noted that they could always get air support
when needed, but their ability to hit stationary enemy forces was not the best.
INTERDICTION
The interdiction effort had three discernible phases – two distinguishable by a
difference in principal target, the other by its concept of attack. In Phase I,
which lasted from August to November 1950, selected rail and highway
bridges were the principal targets. Until mid-September, the bridge targets
were located variously from southwestern Korea to the Yalu River boundary
between Korea and Manchuria.
It was the FEAF concept that destroying the main bridges in North Korea
would sever enemy road and rail traffic from the north and that concurrent
attacks on river crossings in South Korea would interdict the flow of enemy
troops and materiel to the battlefront. In September and October, as UN
troops pushed the North Koreans out of South Korea and moved above the
38th Parallel, FEAF concentrated on bridges whose destruction could help to
prevent an orderly retreat by the North Koreans.
The lead B-29 bomber of the 19th Bomb Group of the United States Air Force carries out its
150th combat mission in Korea, February 1951.
The shattered remnants of the Wonsan petroleum refinery after B-29 bomber strikes are used to
destroy North Korean industrial capacity, August 1950.
Then, when the Chinese first appeared in Korea in late October and early
November, seven interdictory air attacks centred on the international road and
rail bridges spanning the Yalu. In Phase II, from December 1950 to August
1951, bridges were again the main targets, but emphasis was placed on
concentrated attacks within designated zones. The zones received priorities
according to their considered importance to enemy movements, and the air
plan called for attacks by massed airpower, one zone at a time, according to
the established priorities. Special attention was given to the rail system since
the enemy was expected to make maximum use of its larger capacity.
As a result, the enemy shifted the bulk of its movements from the rail
lines to the road. Consequently, near the end of Phase II, the area destruction
plan was modified to include concentrated attacks on major roads within a
specified zone. Beginning in June 1951, this effort, known as Operation
Strangle, concentrated on the roads in a one-degree latitudinal belt across the
peninsula just above the battle line. This operation lasted for two months and
bridged Phases II and III.
In Phase III, which lasted for ten months from August 1951 to June 1952,
the rail system became the principal target. Whereas previous operations
against rail lines had stressed the destruction of bridges, the new objective
was to make multiple cuts of the tracks and roadbeds. Repairing such
damage, it was judged, would be more difficult for the enemy than repairing
or replacing downed bridge spans.
At the termination of this effort, a program of general destruction was
instituted wherein all available airpower was employed to make the conflict
as costly as possible to the enemy in terms of equipment, facilities and
personnel. Although this might be considered a fourth interdictory phase,
interdiction itself became secondary to the intended purpose of encouraging
the Chinese and North Koreans to conclude armistice negotiations. This new
period is often referred to as the ‘air pressure’.
AIR PRESSURE
As the stalemate on the ground and the ineffectiveness of air interdiction
continued amid truce negotiations in 1952, the FEAF looked for more
effective means to use air power to force the North Koreans to quit the war. A
US Air Staff Study of 1952 recommended that any air resources beyond
those required to maintain air superiority be employed towards
accomplishing the maximum amount of selected destruction, thus making the
Korean conflict as costly as possible to the enemy in terms of equipment,
supplies and personnel. Targets were prioritized on the basis of the effect
their destruction would have on the enemy, their vulnerability to available
weapons, and the cost to FEAF of attacking them.
Suggested objectives included hydroelectric plants, locomotives and
vehicles, stored supplies, and even buildings in cities and villages, especially
in areas that were active in support of enemy forces. Based on the study,
interdiction was to be abandoned to concentrate on the new target systems,
aimed at bringing about defeat of the enemy as expeditiously as possible
rather than allowing it to languish in relative safety while UN forces
exhausted their resources by attacking supply routes that were not as
important in a static war.
The new direction for the use of air power began with hydroelectric
plants. Hitting those targets was meant not only to deter North Korea from
pursuing the war, but also China, as some of the border facilities supplied
power to China as well. Next, the UN increased air pressure in an all-out
assault on Pyongyang, which the JCS cleared for attack in early July.
Operation Pressure Pump on 11 July involved 1254 sorties from Fifth Air
Force, US Navy, US Marine Corps, Republic of Korean, Australian, South
African and British aircraft by day, and 54 SHORAN-directed B-29s at night.
The UN air campaign did not actually force the enemy to armistice talks,
but it did have a profound psychological effect on the enemy. It was most
successful in punishing Chinese armies and North Korean towns throughout
the course of the war. Eighteen of 22 major cities were at least half
obliterated by bombs, and most villages were reduced to a low, wide mound
of violet ashes. That experience for North Koreans still remains ingrained in
their memory of UN airpower, and North Korean programs to develop
missiles and weapons of mass destruction have been motivated to a large
extent by the desire to deter any future applications of air pressure.
PSYWAR
PSYWAR LEAFLETS WARNING CIVILIANS to leave Pyongyang were
dropped before the Operation Pressure Pump strike. The raid was
designed to demonstrate the omnipotence of UN air power and to
disrupt industrial activity in the city. Radio Pyongyang was knocked
off the air for two days, but with power restored, announcers stated
that the ‘brutal’ attacks had destroyed 1500 buildings and inflicted
thousands of civilian casualties.
Pyongyang was not the only North Korean city or town attacked
during the air pressure campaign. In the latter half of 1952, more
than 30 joint maximum-effort air strikes were carried out against
key industrial objectives. Targets included supply, power,
manufacturing, mining, oil, and rail centres.
On 20 July, Fifth Air Force B-26s began using incendiary and
demolition bombs in night attacks on enemy communications
centres to destroy supply concentration points, vehicle repair areas
and military installations in towns where damaged buildings were
being utilized. Psywar activities continued to precede bombings on
towns to warn civilians that attack was imminent. This style of
psywar was argued against by the US State Department, whose job
it was to handle all humanitarian issues and the concerns of other
nations.
Psywar efforts waned in late 1952, but the bombing of North
Korean towns and cities continued unabated. By early 1953, Far
East Bomber Command considered small cities and towns the last
vulnerable link in the supply and distribution system for the
communist armies. By the middle of 1953, 40–90 per cent of North
Korean towns had been destroyed by UN bombing.
F-86 SABRE
THE F-86 WAS the United States’ first swept-wing fighter that could
counter the swept-wing Soviet MiG-15 in high-speed dogfights in the
Korean War. Considered one of the best and most important fighter
aircraft in that war, the Sabre fought some of the earliest jet-to-jet
battles in history. Such was its quality that it remained in front-line
service into the early 1980s with some operators. It was the F-86A
model that first went to war in Korea, where its primary opponent
was the Soviet-built MiG-15. By the end of hostilities, F-86 pilots
had shot down 792 MiGs, according to USAF records, achieving a
kill ratio of about 8:1.
In order to provide a welcome increase in range, the Korean
Sabres often carried underwing drop tanks. The additional fuel
allowed the fighters to extend their duration in the ‘MiG Alley’
combat zone, but they were always in short supply. A production
line was set up in Japan in an effort to increase provision of the
tanks.
This F-86E was flown in Korea by Major William T. Whisner, who served with the 25th
Fighter Interceptor Squadron, 51st Fighter Interceptor Wing. The F-86E was one of the
new jet-propelled fighters that provided UN forces with air superiority during the Korean
War.
Greece and Thailand also contributed air units to the war effort in Korea.
The Hellenic Air Force sent seven Douglas C-47 Dakota transport aircraft
from the 13th Transport Aircraft Squadron to South Korea to assist the
United Nations. Greek aircraft operated in Korea until May 1955, flying
thousands of missions including air evacuations, personnel transport,
intelligence gathering and supply flights. The Royal Thai Air Force supplied
three Douglas C-47 Skytrain aircraft for transport duties in the Korean War.
While the UN coalition clearly won the air war, North Korean forces put
up a good fight with their MiG fighters. The twin-engine MiG-15 jet fighter
was developed for the Soviet Union in the late 1940s. In Korea, it outclassed
straight-winged jet day fighters, which were largely relegated to ground-
attack roles, and was quickly countered by the similar American swept-wing
North American F-86 Sabre. The MiG-15 is often mentioned, along with the
F-86 Sabre, as the best fighter aircraft of the Korean War. It is mentioned as
such, because the F-86 Sabre jets were designed as a direct response to the
MiG-15, which was causing havoc in the Korean skies against the outdated
aircraft being used by the UN.
F-86 Sabres with the 51st Fighter Interceptor Wing, known as the Checkertails, prepare for
combat at Suwon Air Base, 1952.
While technically a part of the Korean People’s Air Force, the MiGs
flown during the war were done so by World War II veteran Soviet pilots.
They would fly the flag of China or North Korea, but it was Soviet air power
that waged war in the air against the UN forces. Stalin, however, went to
great lengths to keep Soviet involvement a secret, as even he was not yet
willing to directly engage the UN. Flying under the flag of China or North
Korea was the first step in his efforts at misdirection. The second provision
was that, while in the air, Soviet pilots would communicate only in Mandarin
or Korean; the use of Russian was banned. And finally, Russian pilots would
under no circumstances approach the 38th Parallel or the coastline. This was
to prevent their capture by the Americans.
MIG ALLEY
While ultimate success in the air war over Korea rested with the UN, the
Soviet forces can claim one great feat. The most famous air battle of the war
has been dubbed Black Tuesday, and this occurred in MiG Alley. MiG Alley
was the name given by United Nations pilots to the northwestern portion of
North Korea, where the Yalu River emptied into the Yellow Sea. It was the
site of numerous dogfights between UN fighter pilots and their opponents
from North Korea and the People’s Republic of China.
MIG-15
TECHNICALLY A PART OF the Korean People’s Air Force, MiG-15s
were flown during the war by WWII veteran Soviet pilots. They
would fly the flag of China or North Korea, but it was Soviet air
power that waged war in the air against the UN forces.
The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 was developed to intercept
bombers, but proved a highly effective dogfighter. It was widely
exported, with examples serving in the Chinese air force as well as
the forces of Warsaw Pact nations.
The Western powers became aware of the MiG-15 during the
Korean War, when six MiGs clashed with a force of piston-engined
P-51 Mustangs. Although the MiG-15 performed well, an upgraded
version designated MiG-15bis was quickly put into service. This
variant had a more powerful engine and lighter weight, improving
range and performance.
MiGs flew out of Chinese bases, and could only be engaged once
they crossed the Yalu River into Korea. Their presence changed the
nature of the air war in Korea; up to that time the UN forces had air
superiority and could operate against ground targets more or less at
will. Losses of B-29 bombers mounted, forcing the move to less
effective night missions, and air-to-air clashes became deadly for
UN pilots.
This aircraft (illustrated) fought during the Korean War for the
People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in 1950. Note the prominent wing
fences, which reduce the tendency of swept-wing aircraft to stall due
to spanwise (rather than front-to-back) airflow over the wings.
On 23 October 1951, the Western air forces cobbled together an armada
of 200 jet fighters (F-86 Sabres, F-84s, F-80s and British-built Gloster
Meteor IVs) and nearly two dozen B-29 Superfortress bombers. Their
mission was to provide a concentrated attack to disrupt the flow of supplies to
Korean and Chinese forces and to put the airbases at Naamsi and Taechon in
North Korea out of action. They were countered by two fighter air divisions.
The 303rd, comprising 58 MiG-15s, formed the first echelon and was
assigned to attack the primary group of enemy bombers and fighter-bombers.
The 324th division had 26 MiG-15s and comprised the second echelon.
The Russian strategy was to ignore the fighter escorts and go straight for
the slower Superfortresses. The MiGs tore into the B-29 formations. Some of
the Russian pilots attacked the American bombers vertically from below,
seeing the B-29s explode in front of their eyes. It was almost a turkey shoot,
as the crew of the stricken bombers bailed out one by one. The Russians
claimed the destruction of ten B-29s – the highest percentage of US bombers
ever lost on a major mission – and lost only one MiG.
Black Tuesday would forever change the USAF’s conduct of strategic
aerial bombardment. The B-29s would no longer fly daytime sorties into MiG
Alley. North Korean towns and villages would no longer be carpet-bombed
and napalmed by the Americans. Thousands of civilians were out of the firing
line. More important to the overall war effort, however, was the fact that
Russian suppression of the B-29s might have prevented the dropping of
nuclear bombs and the escalation of the Korean War on the world stage.
USAF pilots walk through the famous torii gate leading to the Sabre flight line at Kimpo Airfield.
There, they flew to the northwestern portion of North Korea known as ‘MiG Alley’ – a region
known for the most harrowing dogfights between the US F-86 Sabre and the Soviet MiG-15.
July 1951. The remnants of US bombing missions at Sinuiju, a North Korean town that sits along
the Yalu River.
On 15 April, the JCS ordered immediate atomic retaliation against
Manchurian bases if large numbers of troops came into the fighting, or if it
appeared that bombers were being launched against American assets from
there.
The threat was real, as atomic cores were transferred to the Far East
Command. In this instance, nuclear technology was not pursued, and
President Truman used MacArthur’s posture against him in the ensuing battle
between the two magnates. The JCS entertained the idea of using nuclear
technology again in June 1951 in a tactical application. Project Vista was
actually devised to determine the feasibility of using tactical atomic weapons,
but the potential for damage to civilian populations eventually negated any
further talk of the use of atomic bombs.
While the atomic bomb was never deployed in the Korean War, an
unrelenting bombing campaign upon the enemy ensued that created
irrevocable damage. When Gen. Dean, the commander of the 25th Infantry,
was released after spending the war in captivity, he was amazed at the
destruction of the Korean landscape. The city of Huichon, he noted, had been
filled with two-storied buildings and a prominent main street at the outset of
the war. When he was released, none of that remained. The villages were in
rubble and nothing else was left. Others recounted that there was nothing left
between the Yalu River and Pyongyang. North Korean cities simply no
longer existed. According the US Airforce estimates, the scale of urban
destruction in North Korea exceeded the damage inflicted upon Germany and
Japan during World War II.
HUMAN TOLL
In 1984, Curtis Lemay, the head of the Strategic Air Command, the organizer
of bombings over Japan and Korea, noted that the bombing of North Korea
had killed 20 per cent of the population. Other sources cite a somewhat lower
number. According to a data set developed by researchers at the Centre for
the Study of Civil War (CSCW) and the International Peace Research
Institute, Oslo (PRIO), the ‘best estimate’ of civilian deaths in North Korea is
995,000, with a low estimate of 645,000 and a high estimate of 1.5 million.
Interestingly, the CSCW/PRIO estimate of 995,000 deaths still exceeds
the civilian death tolls of any other bombing campaign, including the Allied
firebombing of German cities in World War II, which claimed an estimated
400,000–600,000 lives; the firebombing and nuclear bombing of Japanese
cities, which caused an estimated 330,000–900,000 deaths; and the bombing
of Indochina from 1964 to 1973, which caused an estimated 121,000–
361,000 deaths overall.
More important, however, is the Korean death toll in comparison with the
relatively modest population of the country: just 9.7 million people in 1950.
By comparison, there were 65 million people in Germany and 72 million
people in Japan at the end of World War II. The attacks by the US Air Force
against North Korea used the firebombing tactics that had been developed in
the World War II bombing of Europe and Japan: explosives to break up
buildings, napalm and other incendiaries to ignite massive fires, and strafing
to prevent fire-fighting crews from extinguishing the blazes. But public
opinion at the close of World War II and the US policy of not attacking
civilians curtailed the bombing campaigns at the outset of the war. When the
Chinese entered the war en masse, however, MacArthur broke with previous
policy and issued a statement to Gen. Stratemeyer to burn and destroy as a
lesson to any of those towns that he considered of military value to the
enemy.
Stratemeyer interpreted MacArthur’s commands to mean that every
installation, facility and village in North Korea was a military and tactical
target. Stratemeyer sent orders to the Fifth Air Force and Bomber Command
to ‘destroy every means of communications and every installation, factory,
city, and village.’ In May 1951, an international fact-finding team sent to
assess the damage of the UN air war did not see one town that had not been
destroyed, and there were very few undamaged villages.
SINCE THE MOST SEVERE BOMBING TOOK PLACE IN
NOVEMBER 1950, THOSE WHO ESCAPED IMMEDIATE
DEATH BY FIRE WERE LEFT AT RISK OF DEATH BY
EXPOSURE.
T HE UNITED STATES, and therefore the UN, had nothing left to gain from
continued fighting. The goal of saving South Korea had been accomplished.
North Korea could also claim a semblance of victory. While they ended up
with no territorial gain, they had fought the power of the US and UN to a
standstill and demonstrated to the world that Asian races were not inferior to
Western powers – a myth that had been exacerbated by Japan’s defeat in
World War II.
During the Kaesong talks on 30 July, all parties agreed that hostilities
should continue even while negotiations were in progress. That decision led
to political turmoil in the United States, as the Truman Administration had to
defend why it was still keeping soldiers in Korea despite both sides wishing
to pursue peace. The stalemate war seemed a needless waste of American
lives that the citizenry could not cope with.
The generals in the field also found the situation tough. It was not in their
nature or training to sit idly by. While peace negations ensued, they were
ordered to fight on, but not too hard: don’t lose, but don’t win. With their
hands tied behind their backs, they were to wage a truly limited war while the
diplomats worked on negotiations.
If commanders felt hampered by their situation, the men on the front were
more bewildered by their predicament. They knew that any order they were
given would be limited, and that their actions would not have any real effect
on the war. It was not the same as it had been in the first year of the war,
when there were clear objectives. As such, morale quickly declined. The men
constantly looked for word from Kaesong, hoping that the war would be over
and they could return home.
On 1 July, roughly 750,000 Chinese and North Korean troops stood
across the line from half a million UN troops. Eighth Army commanders had
been preparing offensives when the talks at Kaesong began, the objectives of
which were to capture hills such as the Punchbowl or Fool’s Mountain, or to
deny ground to the enemy. The North Koreans, however, had dug in, much
like the Japanese had in World War II. They had gone underground into
elaborate tunnel systems in the sides of the mountains.
13 August 1951: UN delegates attend peace talks at Kaesong during the Korean War. From left
to right: Major-General Henry I. Hodes; Major-General L.C. Craigie (USAF); Vice-Admiral
Turner Joy (USN), the chief UN delegate; Major-General Paik Sun Yup of the Republic of Korea
Army; and Rear Admiral Arleigh A. Burke.
BLOODY RIDGE
The Battle of Bloody Ridge began as an attempt by UN forces to seize a ridge
of hills that they believed were being used as observation posts to call in
artillery fire on a UN supply road. It consisted of three hills – 983, 940 and
773 – and their connecting ridges. Four razor-back ridges converged on the
western extremity of Bloody Ridge to form Hill 983, a sharp and well-
defined point and the highest peak of the ridgeline. To the east, separated
from 983 by a steep draw, the 1000m-long (3280ft) centre section of Bloody
Ridge came to a peak at Hill 940. Another 900m (3000ft) east of this peak
was Hill 773. US X Corps commander Maj. Gen. Clovis E. Byers was
ordered to eliminate important observation posts of the Korean People’s
Army (KPA) that directed heavy and accurate artillery fire upon the Line
Kansas position from the ridge, some 3km (2 miles) west and slightly south
of Hill 1179. The US 2nd Infantry Division, augmented by the ROK 36th
Regiment, 5th Infantry Division, were ordered to take this east–west ridge,
which they later named Bloody Ridge due to the intense fighting that
occurred there.
Medical staff at the 121st Evacuation Hospital at Yongdong-pu gather around a seriously
wounded soldier of the 116th Engineers, prior to operating.
The maze of enemy trenches on the ridges made it appear to air observers
that Bloody Ridge had been ploughed. The trenches connected many bunkers
that the enemy had built strong enough to withstand artillery fire and air
strikes. The larger ones sheltered as many as 60 men. Some protected small
artillery pieces or mortars. Detection of enemy positions from the ground was
difficult because the hills were partially wooded and enemy soldiers had been
skilful with camouflage.
The battle began on 17 August 1951. The ROK 36th Regiment assaulted
the ridge, but had to withdraw under heavy KPA pressure to the tune of over
a thousand casualties. Continuing to press forward, the ROK 36th finally took
the hill on 25 August. Victory was short-lived, however. The following day,
they were forced off the hill by the enemy. On 27 August, the 9th Infantry,
which had placed its 2nd Battalion in supporting positions on Hill 940,
attempted to seize Hill 983, without success.
The 2nd Battalion withdrew that evening, going all the way back to
Worunni. The following day, the 3rd Battalion, attacking the long ridge from
the east, failed to reach even the first objective. Faced with a surprise attack
that night, it also fell back to Worun-ni. Thus, before the 1st Battalion made
its first attack against the Bloody Ridge hill mass, UN forces had captured the
long ridgeline only to lose it again, hill by hill.
On 30 August, the 9th Infantry made a frontal assault, sending its 1st and
2nd Battalions straight north against Hill 940. Both battalions got within a
few hundred yards of the top of the ridgeline before enemy fire halted the
advance. When it became apparent that neither battalion would reach the
objective before dark, the regimental commander ordered both to withdraw.
A US Marine catching up on much needed sleep after intense hill fights on the central front.
The withdrawal took until 4.00 a.m. on 31 August. The entire 1st
Battalion reassembled in the area it had occupied before the attack. There was
talk of an imminent enemy attack. Tired and hungry, the men were denied
their much-needed rest after fleeing their forward positions, as they had to
remain alert. While they received rations, sleep still proved an elusive
concept. After waiting a few hours with no attack, the battalion was moved
by trucks to an assembly area south of Worun-ni, where the companies
reorganized before another planned attack on another hill.
At noon on 31 August, some eight hours after having fled from the enemy
on Hill 940, the 1st Battalion was loaded on trucks again and rode 3km (2
miles) forward, where it was tasked with taking Hill 773, this time from the
east. At the eastern tip of the ridgeline, where Bloody Ridge ended at the road
pass between Worun-ni and the Pia-ri Valley, Company C turned left and
climbed towards the first knoll on the ridgeline leading towards Hill 773. The
knoll was already in friendly hands, but morning fog obscured the way
forward. The peaks of hills 773 and 940 were completely covered by the
haze, making the forward path invisible beyond the first observation point.
An enemy machine gun suddenly commenced firing from a knoll 90–180m
(295– 590ft) beyond the front of the column, setting off a ten-minute
firefight. The fog had an equal effect on the enemy, who could not aim
correctly without clear visibility. With the supporting fire of four machine
guns, the Americans advanced without incident and against negligible enemy
fire.
American soldiers securing the top of the hill known as ‘Bloody Ridge’, the first in a series of hills
believed to be used as observation posts to call in artillery fire on a UN supply road.
While the fog was initially a blessing, elements of the 2nd Division soon
realized that the enemy had only stopped firing because they, too, could not
see through it to assess the opposing force. On 1 September the fog cleared,
and the enemy fire began once again. The 2nd Division continued to press
forward against a well-dug-in enemy. For the next few days, UN forces used
air attacks, flamethrowers and grenades to bust up the tunnels that permeated
the hills in front of them. On 3 September, Hills 940 and 983 were taken
without opposition. The enemy had apparently moved north to strengthen
positions on the next prominent terrain feature in that area: Heartbreak Ridge.
Heartbreak Ridge would be an even greater test to the resolve of both sides of
the conflict.
THE PUNCHBOWL
In late August, three regiments of the US 1st Marine Division were given
orders to move from their reserve areas around Inje County to support the UN
offensive. One of their main responsibilities was to distract People’s
Volunteer Army (PVA) and KPA reinforcements from the Battle of Bloody
Ridge. Bloody Ridge had turned into a bitter give-and-take struggle between
the 2nd Division and dugin KPA forces. The 1st Marine Division was
ordered to attack Yoke Ridge and advance to a new defensive line to be
called the Hays Line, marked by the southern edge of the Soyang River to the
north of the Punchbowl. On 30 August, in preparation for the attack, a
battalion of 1st Korean Marine Corps Regiment (1st KMC) occupied Hill 793
on the eastern edge of the Punchbowl between the Kansas Line and Yoke
Ridge.
At 6.00 a.m. on 31 August, the 7th Marine Regiment and two battalions
of the 1st KMC launched the assault with an attack from Hill 793 up the
eastern edge of the Punchbowl towards Yoke Ridge in the west and
Tonpyong in the east. By late morning, the assault units had reached Yoke
Ridge and were engaging the KPA defenders. By the end of the first day, the
UN force occupied the southeastern end of Yoke Ridge.
US Marines launch a 4.5-inch (114-mm) rocket barrage against Chinese forces. Such attacks
were frequent occurrences during the ‘Outpost War’, where rockets would be fired from
trenches on enemy hill positions.
On 1 September, the 1st KMC moved west along Yoke Ridge, while the
7th Marines moved north, clearing out KPA bunkers with grenades and
flamethrowers. The KPA launched several small-scale counter-attacks against
the advancing Marines, but these were broken up by small-arms and mortar
fire, artillery and several airstrikes. The UN forces consolidated their
positions in the evening under KPA mortar and artillery fire. That night, the
KPA launched an attack under the cover of darkness on the 1st KMC on Hill
924, driving them out of the position they had secured earlier that day.
An American Sherman tank advances towards a North Korean roadblock as infantrymen look
for concealed enemies, September 1951.
SECOND PHASE
The second phase of the campaign occurred between 4 and 10 September at
Kanmubong Ridge. It was considered essential to seize Kanmubong Ridge,
immediately north of Yoke Ridge, in order to defend the Hays Line and to
allow US X Corps to attack the KPA’s main line of resistance, which was
believed to be located approximately 3km (2 miles) north of it. The 1st
Marine Division and 1st KMC consolidated their positions on Yoke Ridge,
established the Hays Line, and built up ammunition and supplies for the
attack on Kanmubong Ridge. The KPA used the lull in fighting to reinforce
their positions on Hill 673, opposite Hill 602. Both sides actively patrolled
the area.
The 7th Marines received orders to launch an attack at 3.00 a.m. on 11
September from the Hays Line through a narrow valley, across a tributary of
the Soyang River and then uphill towards Hills 680 and 673, with Hill 749 as
a further objective. Supporting the 7th Marines would be the 1st Tank
Battalion, with artillery support from the 11th Marine Regiment. The 3rd
Battalion, 7th Marines were tasked with capturing Hill 680. Despite extensive
artillery fire to prepare for their attack, progress was slow, with the KPA
defenders able to provide interlocking fire from their bunkers. By the end of
the day, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines were forced to dig in 90m (300ft) south of
the summit. The 1st Battalion, 7th Marines were tasked with capturing Hill
673, but strong opposition from the KPA bunkers forced them to stop short of
their objective.
Members of the 1st Marine Division take respite near a Korean hut after destroying an enemy
sniper housed there, September 1951.
On 13 September, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines were ordered to seize Hill
749 and then move northwest to take Hills 812, 980 and 1052, while 3rd
Battalion, 1st Marines would move west from Hill 680 to take Hill 751and
then attack northwest to Hill 1052. Hill 749 proved to be a heavily defended
fortress of bunkers, covered trenches and tunnels and part of the KPA main
line of resistance. 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines seized the summit at midday,
but were soon driven back.
They finally gained control of the summit three hours later, but it would
be nearly 8.00 p.m. before they could relieve 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines on
the reverse slope of the hill. The 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines’ advance towards
Hill 751 was delayed by mines and the more urgent need for supporting arms
on Hill 749. By evening, they dug in short of Hill 751, where they endured
mortar fire and 10 KPA counter-attacks during the night. September saw the
first operational use of Marine helicopters in combat, with the HRS-1
helicopters of HMR-161, operating from forward base X-83 near Cheondo-ri,
conducting 28 flights to resupply the Marines near Hill 793 and evacuate 74
casualties.
The battle continued in this manner for the next several days. The
Marines would take a hill only to relinquish it the following day. The battle
for a better main line position appeared to drag on with no end in sight. After
midnight on 20 September, the KPA launched an intense mortar and artillery
barrage on the Marines between The Rock and Hill 812. On the same day,
east of the Kanmubong Range, the ROK 8th Infantry Division struggled to
secure Hill 854. The 1st Marines were ordered to assist the 8th ROK, but the
attack did not begin until evening and the forces quickly became bogged
down against stiff resistance. On 21 September, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines
resumed the assault on Hill 854; by 17:45, it had been secured.
HEARTBREAK RIDGE
In the west, a second great battle for command of the hills was already under
way. After UN forces withdrew from Bloody Ridge, the North Koreans set
up new positions just 1400m (4500ft) away on an 11km-long (7 mile) hill
mass. That hill was soon dubbed ‘Heartbreak Ridge’ due to the bitter struggle
that took place for control of it from 13 September to 15 October 1951.
Communist defences were even more formidable there than on Bloody
Ridge.
It was a bold plan, but one that could not be accomplished until a way had
been found to get the 72nd’s Sherman tanks into the valley. The only existing
road was little more than a track that could not bear the weight of the
Shermans. To make matters worse, the road was mined and blocked by a 2m-
high (6ft) rock barrier built by the North Koreans. Using shovels and
explosives, the men of the 2nd Division’s 2nd Engineer Combat Battalion
braved enemy fire to clear these obstacles and build an improved roadway.
While they worked, the division’s three infantry regiments – 9th, 23rd and
38th – launched coordinated assaults on Heartbreak Ridge and the adjacent
hills.
SHERMAN M4A3
THE M4 SHERMAN WAS by far the most numerous Allied tank of
World War II. Almost 50,000 were built, with many variants and
derivatives. Shermans remained in service many years after the
war, with examples surviving into the 1990s. During the Korean
War, the United States kept the M4A3 ‘Easy Eight’ in service,
usually armed with the powerful 76mm (3in) gun. The lighter
M4A3(76) W HVSS tank (illustrated below) was appreciated for its
mechanical reliability compared to the heavier M26 Pershing. The
M4A3(76) Sherman and the Russian-supplied T-34/85 had similar
abilities and could destroy each other at normal combat ranges –
although better crew training and the use of advanced optics and
High Velocity Armor Piercing ammunition gave the Sherman an
advantage.
The 23rd Regiment did not assault the hills on the next day. The South
Korean 8th Division, however, starting from 13 October, launched its attack
on hills 97, 742, 650, 932 and 922. These battles were as brutal and costly as
those that preceded them, but the ROK Army took the hill on its eleventh
assault on 14 October. Eight Shermans attacked the Chinese positions along
Mundung-ni Valley. All the tanks were knocked out by the crossfire of
Chinese anti-tank guns. Two more were lost on 19 October due to mines.
Over the five days, the Shermans roared up and down the Mundung-ni
Valley, overrunning supply dumps, mauling troop concentrations and
destroying approximately 350 bunkers on Heartbreak and in the surrounding
hills and valleys. A smaller tank infantry team scoured the Sat’ae-ri Valley
east of the ridge, thereby completing the encirclement and eliminating any
hope of reinforcement for the beleaguered North Koreans on the ridge.
Infantrymen of the 27th Infantry Regiment, near Heartbreak Ridge, take advantage of cover and
concealment in tunnel positions, 10 August 1952.
The armoured thrusts turned the tide of the battle, but plenty of hard
fighting remained for the infantry before French soldiers captured the last
communist bastion on the ridge on 13 October. After 30 days of combat, the
Americans and French eventually gained the upper hand and secured
Heartbreak Ridge. Yet the Sherman tanks did not penetrate through the
Mundung-ni Valley and reach the town of Mundung-ni. The Defence of
Mundung-ni is still celebrated by North Korea as a great victory, despite the
heavy losses they incurred on Heartbreak Ridge.
NEGOTIATIONS IN TROUBLE
Communist agents in the POW camps were ordered to begin disruptive
activities. Armed with homemade weapons, pro-communist elements deftly
employed intimidation and violence to gain control of the interiors of many
POW camps. Then, in early May, communist prisoners scored a stunning
coup when they succeeded in capturing Brig. Gen. Francis T. Dodd, the
commandant of the UN’s main POW camp on Kojedo. To achieve his
release, American authorities pledged to suspend additional repatriation
screenings in a poorly-worded communiqué that seemed to substantiate
communist allegations that the UN had previously mistreated prisoners.
‘Freedom Gate Bridge’ spanning the Imjin River, built by the 84th Engineer Construction
Battalion, 10 March 1952. This bridge temporarily replaced the original structure which was
destroyed by bombs.
PRISONER EXCHANGE
A NUMBER OF ISSUES separated UN and communist negotiators
during the winter of 1951–52. Chief among them was the exchange
of prisoners. Both sides had pledged to abide by the Geneva
Convention of 1949, which called for the immediate and complete
exchange of all prisoners upon the conclusion of hostilities. This
seemingly straightforward principle, however, disturbed many
Americans. More than 40,000 South Korean captives that had been
impressed into service by the NKPA and Chinese were detained in
UN prisoner camps. There were many Chinese prisoners that were
also impressed by the PVA – the Nationalists.
Many of those expressed no desire to return north, leaving the
UN with a moral dilemma. How could they repatriate people who
expressed a desire not to return to their home countries? Memories
of repatriation after World War II, when Soviet detainees were
released only to be mistreated, imprisoned or even killed by their
own government, affected US President Truman, who was
ultimately responsible for policy concerning prisoner exchange. Also
important to him was the potential publicity he could gain against
communists in the greater Cold War if he erred on the side of
morality. The Chinese and North Koreans, however, were also well
aware of the potential political outfall from their inability to return
prisoners, so they chose to dig their heels in, only entertaining the
idea of a complete exchange or nothing.
Chinese and North Korean prisoners assembled at the United Nations’ prisoner-of-war
camp at Pusan, April 1951.
OPERATION COUNTER
OPERATION COUNTER IS ONE example of some of the larger outpost
battles. This was an attempt by American forces to attack and
occupy 12 Chinese outposts, including Hill 266 near Ch’orwon. The
hill was very important, as it gave a strategic advantage to its
possessor for miles in all directions. The 45th Infantry Division,
tasked with the job of securing these outposts, easily seized 11 of its
12 objectives during a night assault on 6 June, with the twelfth
falling into American hands six days later during a second-phase
attack.
The Chinese did not give up, however. The 45th successively
repulsed 20 Chinese attacks, but Chinese perseverance paid off
when they managed to push elements of the 2nd Infantry Division
off one of these outposts later in the month – a key mountain 14km
(9 miles) west of Ch’orwon known as Old Baldy. Battles like Old
Baldy occurred on countless mountain peaks and ridges during
1952, as the two sides struggled to gain control over the rugged
terrain that separated their respective battle lines.
Soldiers digging into bunkers atop Old Baldy. Old Baldy, Hill 266 near Ch’orwon, was the
site of one of the larger outpost battles during Operation Counter in 1952.
The episode humiliated the United Nations Command (UNC) and handed
communist negotiators and propagandists alike a new weapon that they
wielded with great zeal, both within the negotiating tent and on the larger
stage of world public opinion. As positions at the negotiating table hardened,
a return to hostilities seemed imminent.
During the winter, the Chinese had fortified their positions and moved in
a massive force. By the spring of 1952, 200,000 UN forces stood against an
enemy of 900,000. By June, communist guns were hurling shells daily at UN
positions, and the UN artillery responded in kind. Nor did a day go by when
communist and UN soldiers did not clash somewhere along the frontline. One
of the most common missions performed by UN infantrymen was the small
raid for the purpose of capturing enemy prisoners for interrogation. These
operations were usually launched at night and were extremely dangerous –
indeed, relatively few succeeded in capturing any prisoners.
Throughout the rest of 1952, the war was fought along the outpost line – a
string of strongpoints several thousand yards to the front of the UN’s main
battle positions. Outposts consisted of a number of bunkers and
interconnecting trenches ringed with barbed wire and mines perched
precariously on the top of a barren, rocky hill. As the UN’s most forward
positions, the outposts acted as patrol bases and early-warning stations. They
also served as fortified outworks that controlled key terrain features. As such,
they represented the UN’s first line of defence and were deemed strategically
important by both sides. The outposts were the scenes of some of the most
vicious fighting of the war. Small in scale, some of the biggest battles of
1952 revolved around efforts to establish, defend or retake these outposts.
TRIANGLE HILL
On 8 October, UN negotiators walked out of the armistice talks due to their
frustration over being unable to reach an accommodation with the enemy on
the prisoner issue. With no hope in sight for a resolution of the conflict, UN
commanders felt that some demonstration of UN resolve was in order. On 14
October, Gen. Van Fleet ordered an operation to take Triangle Hill, a
mountain 4km (3 miles) north of Kumhwa. Success there and on its
neighbour, Sniper Ridge, Van Fleet reckoned, would force the enemy to fall
back over 1000m (3280ft) to the next viable defensive position, thereby
strengthening UN dominance over the sector and reducing friendly casualties.
OUTPOSTS
THE OUTPOSTS WERE FORWARD positions ranging up to 4.5km (3
miles) in front of the Main Line of Resistance (MLR), spanning the
width of Korea. Outposts commanded high ground from which
opposing forces could observe, control and raid the enemy, or that
covered ground over which the enemy could pass to assault outposts
and the MLR itself. Outposts ranged from squad to company size.
Some were constantly manned; others were manned only by day or
by night. They were fought over, gained or lost, regained or re-lost,
for well over a year, and always at the cost of lives.
Marines threw back 800 screaming, bugle-blowing Chinese in bitter fighting on ‘the Hook’,
a crescent-shaped ridge near the Samichon River. A wounded Marine is given a drink of
water by buddies as he lies awaiting evacuation to an aid station, November 1952.
EVENTS OF 1953
The spring of 1953 brought many changes that eventually paved the way for
the long-awaited armistice. In January, Dwight D. Eisenhower succeeded
Harry S. Truman as President of the United States. Eisenhower’s presidency
created an air of uncertainty among communist leaders. Although he had
campaigned on a platform promising to end the war, some communists feared
that Eisenhower, a former five-star general in World War II, whose
Republican Party contained some militant elements, might seek to end the
war by winning it.
In March, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin died, creating a succession struggle
inside the Soviet Union. Preoccupied with their own political affairs, Kremlin
leaders looked to minimize their involvement in Korea. They certainly were
not willing to continue hostilities that might trigger a full-scale war with the
US during the period of reconstruction. Shortly after Stalin’s death, Soviet
officials began to signal a new interest in seeing the Korean conflict put to
rest. These sentiments were echoed by Mao, who likewise found that the
conflict in Korea was detracting from his ability to address pressing domestic
issues inside the newly-formed People’s Republic of China.
On 26 April, UN and communist negotiators returned to the truce tent at
Panmunjom. This time, communist negotiators expressed a willingness to
allow prisoners of war to decide whether or not they wanted to return to their
homelands. This key concession opened the door to fruitful negotiations. As a
goodwill measure, both sides quickly agreed to an immediate exchange of
sick and wounded prisoners. The two parties moved towards discussions with
the goal of reaching an actual implementation of a ceasefire and a final, full
exchange of prisoners. Communist negotiators, however, despite the waning
support from China and the Soviet Union, were determined to seek every
possible advantage, and the talks dragged on for months.
In June, South Korean President Syngman Rhee, who opposed any
resolution of the conflict that left North Korea in communist hands, jarred
negotiators on both sides when he unilaterally released about 25,000 North
Korean prisoners who had previously voiced a desire to remain in South
Korea after the war. The action was meant to thwart the negotiations, but, to
his consternation, it served to keep the negotiators together. His actions had
actually helped the North Korean government; it no longer had to explain that
its captured prisoners did not want to return home. Willingness to remain at
the negotiating table, however, did not bring an end to North Korean
hostilities.
This map shows the ground gained by UN forces between 26 January 1951 (Operation
Thunderbolt) and the 27 July 1953 ceasefire line.
Soldiers help a wounded comrade after he is hurt at the Battle of Pork Chop Hill, a fight that
historians claim had no strategic value for either side.
April remained relatively quiet, but communist forces began attacking
again in May. In June, as the Panmunjom negotiators sat down to draw up a
final ceasefire line, the enemy launched a major, three-division offensive
against the ROK II Corps in the vicinity of Kumsong. The Chinese succeeded
in pushing the South Koreans back about 5km (3 miles) before the front was
stabilized, a significant advance after two years of stagnant trench warfare.
UN forces continued to repulse more limited communist attacks until, by the
end of June, the intensity of the fighting had once again subsided. The
communist forces were far from done, however, and looked to mount another
offensive on Pork Chop Hill, the largest one since the spring of 1951.
On the night of 6 July, using tactics identical to those in the April assault,
the PVA again attacked Pork Chop. The hill was now held by Company A of
the US 17th Infantry. Company B of the same regiment, in ready reserve
behind the adjacent Hill 200, was immediately ordered to assist, but within an
hour, Company A reported hand-to-hand combat in the trenches. A major
battle was brewing, and division headquarters ordered a third company to
move up.
The battle was fought in a persistent monsoon rain for the first three days,
making both resupply and evacuation of casualties difficult. On the second
night, the PVA made a new push to take the hill, forcing the 7th Division to
again reinforce. Parts of four companies defended Pork Chop under a storm
of artillery fire from both sides.
At daybreak on 8 July, the rain temporarily ended, and the initial
defenders were withdrawn. A fresh battalion, the 2nd Battalion of the 17th,
counter-attacked and re-took the hill, setting up a night defensive perimeter.
On both 9 and 10 July, the two sides attacked and counter-attacked. A large
part of both PVA divisions were committed to the battle, and ultimately five
battalions of the 17th and 32nd Infantry Regiments were engaged, making
nine counter-attacks over four days.
On the morning of 11 July, the commander of US I Corps decided to
abandon Pork Chop Hill to the PVA, and the 7th Division withdrew under
fire. Six Chinese divisions slammed into UN lines south of Kumsong. The
ROK II Corps once again bore the brunt of the assault, falling back in
confusion for 13km (8 miles) before regrouping along the banks of the
Kumsong River. UN counter-attacks regained some of this lost ground, but
there seemed little point in pressing the issue. On 20 July, the negotiators
reached an armistice agreement, which they signed seven days later in a
ceremony at Panmunjom. At 11pm on 27 July 1953, silence fell across the
front. The Korean War was over.
23 July 1953: General W.K. Harrison, Jr (left table) and North Korean General Nam Il
(right table), sign an armistice agreement ending the three-year Korean conflict – a feat
that took 158 meetings and two years of bitter fighting following the offensive phase of the
war to realize.
6
AFTER THE ARMISTICE
July 1953: US soldiers celebrate the long-awaited ceasefire.
A LL PARTIES involved were elated that the bloodshed had ended, but there
was no real satisfaction gained from the agreement. Moreover, all leaders
involved knew that the failure to reach a permanent peace settlement was
bound to present problems in the future.
South Korea did not even sign the armistice, although the nation recently
confirmed that it has discussed signing a peace treaty with North Korea. Even
so, the parties that signed the armistice did not plan for the conflict to remain
unresolved for more than half a century. They planned to reach a permanent
peace agreement the following year, at a conference in Geneva. That
conference, which addressed a number of other global issues, convened on 26
April 1954. When it came time to set the final terms, however, the leaders
could not agree on the best path forward. The idea of the Geneva conference
was that there would be a new unified Korean government established after
an election, but delegates could not agree on the process of how that would
happen. Because of that, the Geneva conference collapsed, and the same
situation in Korea has prevailed ever since.
South Korea did not sign the armistice because its president, Syngman
Rhee, thought that the US should have done more to extend South Korea’s
control over the peninsula. Another obstacle was America’s refusal to
recognize the People’s Republic of China as a legitimate government,
symbolized by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles’ refusal to shake hands
with Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai during the Geneva conference.
During the war, the United States and its allies had captured tens of
thousands of communist soldiers. Many of those POWs claimed that they had
been coerced into fighting for China and North Korea and said they did not
want to return to their home countries once they were exchanged. This
presented a serious stumbling block to peace negotiations between the
parties. North Korea and China insisted that their POWs be repatriated; the
United States and South Korea refused on humanitarian grounds. Finally, as
the military stalemate dragged on, North Korea and China relented,
conceding to American demands to let prisoners of war either return or be
granted asylum with their captors as long as a neutral UN commission
handled POWs who did not want to return.
RETURNING POWS
The newly empowered Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission, led by
India, sprang into action. The first priority was sick and injured POWs:
Operation Little Switch began in April 1953. The communists traded 684
United Nations troops for more than 5000 North Koreans, 1000 Chinese and
about 500 civilians. However, United States officials complained that the
communists were construing ‘sick and wounded’ so narrowly that they had
not released the proper number of POWs, and squabbling over how to
exchange the prisoners continued.
Litter cases carrying North Korean POWs are exchanged at the communist receiving
centre at Panmunjom during Operation Little Switch.
The next phase was the trade of the much larger number of POWs who
were not deemed sick or wounded. By then, the terms of the armistice had
mostly been hashed out. On 5 August 1953, Operation Big Switch began.
More than 75,000 communist prisoners were returned to North Korea and
China, which handed over 12,722 prisoners from the United Nations
Command. More than 22,000 communist soldiers decided to seek asylum
rather than return to their home countries; 88 defected to India instead. A
handful of Americans refused to be repatriated.
This was an ambitious exchange, and not without crises. The main
problem came in the form of Syngman Rhee, then-president of South Korea.
He did not want the war to end at all without the reunification of Korea, and
Rhee threatened to mobilize his own soldiers against their UN allies during
prisoner returns.
Another problem was the condition of the POWs, many of whom had
been subjected to torture and brainwashing while in communist custody.
Then there were the POWs who were not returned at all. About 80,000 South
Koreans were in North Korea when a ceasefire ended the war. Most are
thought to have been put to work as labourers, ‘re-educated’ and integrated
into North Korean society. In 2010, South Korea estimated that 560 were still
alive. Their ordeals in repressive North Korea were unknown until a small
group of defectors told their stories.
September 1953: American POWs released during Operation Big Switch are interviewed by the
press at ‘Freedom Village’, where UN-repatriated POWs were processed before returning to
their homes.
While the infiltration of armed agents was originally the most popular
form of provocation, terrorism took over in the late 1960s, authorized by
North Korean dictator Kim Il-sung. More recent cause for concern has
continued under the leadership of his grandson, Kim Jong-un. The first of
these provocations was the Blue House Raid in January 1968.
UNIT 124
Park Chung-hee had seized power in South Korea in a 1961 coup. He ruled as
a military strongman until his election and inauguration as the president of
the Third Republic of South Korea in 1963. Following the 1967 South
Korean presidential election and the legislative election, the North Korean
leadership concluded that Park Chung-hee’s domestic opposition no longer
constituted a serious challenge to his rule.
The Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) fence viewed from Dora Observatory, South Korea. A border
barrier that divides the Korean peninsula roughly in half, it separates one of the most heavily
militarized borders in the world.
Park Chung-hee, leader of a military coup that overthrew the weak Korean Second Republic in
1961, shakes hands with retired General Douglas MacArthur at MacArthur’s Waldorf Astoria
Tower apartment in New York City, November 1961.
RETALIATION FOR THE BLUE HOUSE RAID
THE BLUE HOUSE RAID marked a low point in a period of already
bad relations between the two Koreas. Shortly after the attack,
South Korea’s president ordered his armed forces to retaliate in
kind. Accordingly, the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA)
organized its own assassination squad to carry out a strike on the
communist leader Kim Il-sung. The team – which, like the North’s
Unit 124, also comprised 31 members – was dubbed Unit 684.
Strangely, recruits were not the military’s elite. Instead, mission
planners combed the nation’s prisons for hardened criminals to
carry out the daring raid. The convicts signed on to the risky
mission in exchange for pardons. All were subjected to rigorous
training on an uninhabited island off South Korea’s west coast – so
rigorous, in fact, that seven of the volunteers perished during the
preparations. It would all be for nothing, however.
Kim Shin Jo, the North Korean commando captured during the ‘Blue House Raid’ of 1968.
23 December 1968: 82 members of the USS Pueblo are released after being imprisoned for 11
months for intruding into North Korean waters.
RANGOON BOMBING
While North Korean attempts on Park Chung-hee proved unsuccessful, those
failures did not deter North Korea from employing assassination as a mode of
terror. On 9 October 1983, President Chun Doo-hwan, the fifth president of
South Korea, flew to Rangoon on an official visit to Burma. During the visit
he planned to lay a wreath at the Martyrs’ Mausoleum to commemorate Aung
San, one of the founders of independent Burma, who had been assassinated in
1947.
As some of the president’s staff began assembling at the mausoleum, one
of three bombs concealed in the roof exploded. The huge blast ripped through
the crowd below, killing 21 people and wounding 46 others. Four senior
South Korean politicians were killed: Foreign Minister Lee Beom-seok;
Minister of Power Resource Suh Sang-chul; Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Economic Planning Suh Suk Joon; and Minister for Commerce
and Industry Kim Dong Whie. President Chun was saved because his car had
been delayed in traffic and was only minutes from arriving at the memorial.
Burmese police identified three suspects: a Korean People’s Army major
and two captains. A police investigation revealed that they had slipped off a
ship docked in Rangoon port, and had received explosives in a North Korean
diplomatic mission. Suspect Kang Min-chul and another attacker attempted
to commit suicide by blowing themselves up with a hand grenade that same
day, but survived and were arrested. A third suspect, Zin Bo, went missing,
but was hunted down by the Burmese Army. Zin managed to kill three
soldiers before being shot dead. Kang Min-chul confessed his mission and
links to North Korea, an action by which he was able to avoid a death
sentence and instead receive life imprisonment.
SIGNS OF CHANGE
While incursions across the border continued on both sides, North Korea
continued to exist as a totalitarian state, where its citizens were tightly
controlled and freedoms remained but a dream. South Korea continued to
flourish, becoming a vibrant capitalist economy whose citizens enjoyed a
better life and chance of prosperity than their North Korean counterparts. The
first sign of possible change came with UN Resolution 702, which added
both North and South Korea to its roster of member nations.
In 1991, the South Korean government had been courting Moscow and
Beijing – historically the North’s two patrons – to support South Korea’s
entry to the United Nations. For decades, North Korea fiercely opposed
separate membership, saying it would amount to international ratification of
the 46-year partition of the Korean Peninsula. It is important to remember
here that both governments have claimed to be the one true government of
Korea, as evinced by South Korea’s refusal to sign the armistice in 1953.
North Korea’s decision not to block South Korea’s application to the UN was
announced in a bitterly-worded statement that acknowledged that its hand
had been forced.
TRAINING A TERRORIST
KIM HYON-hui disclosed that she had been travelling undercover for
three years preparing for the Flight 858 attack. Kim told
investigators that, when she was 16, she had been chosen by the
Workers’ Party of Korea and trained in a number of languages.
Three years later, she was educated at a secret elite espionage school
run by the North Korean Army, where she was trained to kill with
her hands and feet and to use rifles and grenades. Training at the
school involved enduring several years of gruelling physical and
psychological conditioning. In 1987, aged 25, Kim was ordered to
detonate the bomb aboard Flight 858 to reunify her divided country
forever. Kim was later pardoned by then-South Korean President
Roh Tae-woo; he claimed that the young Kim was clearly a product
of North Korean brainwashing, and that if anyone should be held
responsible for the attack it should be the North Korean
government.
Kim Hyon-hui enters the South Korean high court, where she will stand trial for the
bombing of Korean Air Flight 858.
The announcement was met with jubilation in Seoul, where officials said
it was the first clear sign that North Korea’s leadership was changing its
policies in response to increasing apprehension about its international
isolation. The South Korean government was careful not to appear too
enamoured with the change, however. The past between the two nations had
soured any South Korean hope that North Korea had turned a new leaf,
although Seoul recognized it as a possible stepping stone to forging better
relations in Asia.
South Korea also clearly saw the North Korean decision as a result of
Kim Il-sung recognizing that the North Korean economy was falling apart,
and that he no longer had anyone to turn to. If UN membership represented a
major positive development in the relationship between the two Koreas, that
relationship continued to be tempered by North Korean operations against its
neighbour. One of those incidents was the 1996 landing of North Korean
commandos on the South Korean coast (see opposite).
INTER-KOREAN SUMMIT
The culmination of Kim’s efforts to improve relations with the North came in
June 2000, when he flew to Pyongyang for a historic summit with North
Korean leader Kim Jong-il. Kim Jong-il had assumed leadership in North
Korea after the death of Kim Il-sung, his father, in 1994. The two leaders
adopted a joint peace declaration after the three-day meeting, agreeing to
promote independent unification and humanitarian and economic
cooperation. The meeting led to a series of reunions of families separated by
the 1950–53 Korean War, as well as the launch of a joint factory park in the
North’s border town of Kaesong in 2004. Kim Jong-il travelled to Beijing to
meet then-Chinese president Jiang Zemin before the summit. The North and
the United States were also holding a series of high-level talks on
Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programmes.
Members of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) delegation participate at a
general assembly at the United Nations, 17 September 1991.
KIM JONG-IL
BORN IN VYATSKOYE, Russia, Kim Jongil took over as General
Secretary of the Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK), WPK Presidium,
Chairman of the National Defence Commission of North Korea and
the Supreme Commander of the Korean People’s Army after his
father, Kim Il-sung, died in 1994. Eventually known as the Supreme
Leader, Kim was notorious for his repressive regime, human rights
violations and growth of the North Korean nuclear weapons
programme.
Ethnic Koreans in Japan offer flowers at the altar upon the death of Kim Jong-il in 2011.
He was the second communist leader of North Korea.
Kim Dae-jung won a Nobel Peace Prize for his Sunshine Policy of
engagement with the North. However, this first summit was later mired in
controversy, when rumours emerged that the South Korean government had
paid the North Koreans to attend. It is also important to remember that both
governments had to placate the UN, the US, China and Japan.
Further tension was to follow on January 2002, when then-US president
George Bush made his State of the Union address, later dubbed his ‘Axis of
Evil’ speech. The majority of the speech informed the union on the four-
month period following the attacks on 11 September 2001 and the subsequent
actions to pursue the perpetrators. The speech – more a call to fund the US
government’s war on terror – clearly linked North Korea with Iran and Iraq.
Kim Dae-jung (left) and North Korean leader Kim Jong-il holding hands ahead of the signing of
a joint declaration at their summit in Pyongyang, June 2000.
In 2002, rumours circulated that North Korea was pursuing both uranium
enrichment technology and plutonium reprocessing technologies in defiance
of the Agreed Framework. North Korea reportedly told American diplomats
in private that they were in possession of nuclear weapons, citing American
failures to uphold their own end of the Agreed Framework as a motivating
force. In late 2002 and early 2003, North Korea ejected International Atomic
Energy Agency inspectors. As late as the end of 2003, North Korea claimed
that it would freeze its nuclear programme in exchange for American
concessions – in particular a non-aggression treaty – but a final agreement
was not reached, and talks continued to fall through. North Korea withdrew
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 2003 after not receiving the
light-water reactors from the United States that were promised in exchange
for North Korea not developing its own power plants.
South Korean soldiers watch a TV news program showing images published in North Korea’s
Rodong Sinmun newspaper showing a ballistic missile believed to have been launched from
underwater and watched by Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
On 31 October 2006, North Korea agreed to rejoin six-nation
disarmament talks. On 2–4 October 2007, a second summit between North
and South Korea took place in Pyongyang. Roh Moo-hyun, a liberal South
Korean president who carried on with Kim Dae-jung’s engagement policy,
crossed the border to the North to meet Kim Jong-il. The meeting came amid
the six-party denuclearization talks between the United States, China, Japan,
Russia and the two Koreas. The six nations were working to implement a
framework deal that they had reached in September 2005 under which
Pyongyang was to give up its nuclear programme in return for massive
economic and energy aid and an end to its diplomatic isolation.
INTERNATIONAL CONDEMNATION
Relations descended to a new low when, on 25 May 2009, North Korea
conducted a second nuclear test. Kim Jong-il had walked out of talks aimed
at ending North Korea’s nuclear programme a month earlier, after the
international community had condemned his launching of a satellite as an
intercontinental ballistic missile test. The underground nuclear weapon in
May, however, was successful and had a yield greater than the earlier test in
2006. The international community nearly universally condemned the test.
Following the test, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution
1874 condemning the test and tightening sanctions on the country. It also
authorized UN member states to inspect North Korean cargo and destroy any
that might be involved in the nuclear weapons programme.
In June 2009, Kim Jong-un, Kim Jung-il’s youngest son, was announced
as the intended successor. Kim Jong-il had suffered multiple strokes and
remained out of the public eye, except when necessary to dissuade
international rumours of his decline. The international community speculated
that the nuclear tests and subsequent missile tests were designed to
demonstrate that even in a time of possible weakness, North Korea did not
intend to give up its nuclear weapons programme, and that programme would
be realized under Kim Jong-un. Two more rounds of North Korean missile
tests were conducted the following month. Timed for the United States’
Independence Day and coming on the heels of UN Security Council
Resolution 1874, the seven short-range missiles launched into the Sea of
Japan were meant to be a show of force and direct defiance of the sanctions.
Peace, it seemed, would continue to be illusive on the Korean peninsula, and
tensions in the greater Asian sphere of influence would remain high. More
importantly, the new North Korean president demonstrated quickly that he
could be more of a threat than his father and grandfather had been.
CONTINUING REPRESSION
North Korea remains one of the world’s most repressive states. In his seventh
year in power, Kim Jong-un continues to exercise almost total political
control. The government restricts all civil and political liberties, including
freedom of expression, assembly, association and religion. It also prohibits all
organized political opposition, independent media, civil society and trade
unions. The government routinely uses arbitrary arrest and punishment of
crimes, torture in custody, and executions to maintain fear and control over
the population.
The international community has continued to press the North Korean
government to engage with UN human rights mechanisms and to accept and
act on the findings of the 2014 United Nations Commission of Inquiry report
on human rights in North Korea, which found the government committed
crimes against humanity, including extermination, murder, enslavement,
torture, imprisonment, rape and other forms of sexual violence, and forced
abortion. On 19 December 2017, the UN General Assembly adopted a
resolution without a vote condemning human rights abuses in North Korea.
On 23 March 2018, the Human Rights Council adopted without a vote a
resolution emphasizing the need for advancing mechanisms to ensure that
North Korean officials responsible for crimes against humanity be held to
account.
20 June 2018: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un holding a summit with Chinese President Xi
Jinping in Beijing in his first trip outside North Korea since taking power in 2011.
The United States government is still the only government in the world
that imposes human rights-related sanctions, including on government
entities, on Kim Jong-un, and on several other top officials. In February 2018
at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, North Korea engaged in new
diplomatic efforts with South Korea, the United States, China, Russia and
others. Kim Jong-un had previously not met with any major world leaders,
but between March and September, he met once with US President Donald
Trump, three times each with South Korean President Moon Jae-in and
Chinese President Xi Jinping, and once with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov. Such moves might indicate changing tides in the North Korean
position yet again. However, most of the security experts in the Western
world have speculated that Kim Jong-un always has an ulterior motive, and
harbours no designs to follow through on any moves that limit his power
within the Asian sphere.
If any of the world leaders could push for real change in the region, it is
China. China is the most influential international actor in North Korea. Most
of North Korea’s energy supplies come from China and it is the country’s
largest trading partner. China has the ability to pressure North Korea on
human rights, but has declined to do so, including during President Xi
Jinping’s three meetings with Kim in 2018. The US continues to lead the
push against the nuclear threat developing on the Korean Peninsula as a result
of China’s apathy towards enforcing sanctions on North Korea.
On 27–28 February 2019, President Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un met
in Hanoi, Vietnam. On the first night of the summit, the White House
announced that Trump and Kim would sign a joint agreement the next
afternoon. However, this did not come to fruition: the talks were cancelled,
and both leaders returned to their respective homes. Again, the US demanded
that North Korea completely scrap its nuclear programme and North Korea
sought to lift the UN sanctions against them.
February 2019: US President Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un meet in a second summit hosted
in Vietnam’s capital city Hanoi to discuss nuclear weapons and the removal of sanctions.
Danish forces 64
Dean, Maj. Gen. William 30, 31–2, 34, 35
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) 38, 195, 195
Deshazo, Brig. Gen. Thomas 172
Dodd, Brig. Gen. Francis T. 180
Douglas C-47 Dakota aircraft 152
Douglas C-47 Skytrain aircraft 152
Douglas C-54 Skymaster aircraft 33
Dulles, John Foster 192
Dutch forces 59, 64, 70, 115, 131–2
Van Fleet, Gen. James A. 126, 126–7, 132–4, 136–7, 179, 184
Vishinsky, Andrei 22
Amber Books Ltd/Art-Tech: 28, 30, 43, 46, 56, 86, 95, 106, 118, 129, 150, 154, 186
Getty: 13 (The LIFE Picture Collection/George Silk), 15 (Underwood Archives), 18 (The LIFE Picture
Collection/Carl Mydans), 20 (Universal History Archive), 26 (The LIFE Picture Collection/Carl
Mydans), 31 (The LIFE Picture Collection/Carl Mydans), 36 (Bettmann), 52 (Picture Post/Bert Hardy),
54 (AFP/ Getty), 55 (The LIFE Picture Collection/ Carl Mydans), 68 (Picture Post/Bert Hardy), 72/73
(Paul Popper/Popperfoto) 74 (Hulton/Keystone), 75 (Hulton/Deutsch), 77 (Bettmann), 84 (Rolls Press/
Popperfoto), 85 (Keystone), 87 (Bettmann), 89 (Popperfoto), 93 (Keystone), 94 (The LIFE Picture
Collection/Carl Mydans), 96 (Hulton Archive), 97 (The LIFE Picture Collection/Carl Mydans),
100/101 (Keystone), 104 (Photoguest), 107 (The LIFE Picture Collection/Carl Mydans), 113 (Interim
Archives), 119 (US Army), 126 Corbis/Historical), 128 (Keystone-France), 133 (Hulton Archive), 143
(Keystone), 149 (Hulton Deutsch), 156 (Sovfoto), 160 & 162 (Keystone), 182 (Bettmann), 187
(Authenticated News), 190 (Bettmann), 201 (Bettmann), 203 (Gamma-Rapho/ Kurita KAKU), 204
(The Asahi Shimbun), 207 (AFP), 208 (AFP/ Jiji Press)
Library of Congress: 8
National Archive: 5, 6, 11, 12, 16, 25, 38, 40–42 all, 44, 51, 57– 66 all, 71, 82, 88, 91, 103, 108, 111,
112, 116/117, 122–125, 131, 132, 134–138 all, 163, 166/167, 170, 173, 176–181, 184, 189
Rex Shutterstock: 199 (AP), 205 (AP/Liu Hueng Shing), 212 (AP/ Ahn Young-Joon)
Shutterstock: 196/197
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