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Korean War | |||||||||
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United States Marines storm ashore at Inchon. | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
United Nations: Medical staff: |
Communist states: | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Syngman Rhee
Chung Il-kwon |
Kim Il-Sung
Choi Yong-kun | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
Note: All figures may vary according to source. This measures peak strength as sizes changed during the war. |
North Korea 260,000 | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
South Korea: 673,000 dead United States: 36,516 dead(33,686 combat, 2,830 non-combat) 103,000 wounded 8,142 MIA United Kingdom: 1,078 dead 2,674 wounded 1,060 MIA/POW Turkey: 721 dead 2,111 wounded 168 MIA Total: 1,271,244 to 1,818,410 |
North Korean: 200,000+ dead Chinese: 145,000 dead 260,000 wounded Soviet: 315 dead Total: 1,858,000 to 3,822,000 | ||||||||
Civilians killed/wounded (total Koreans) = millions |
The Korean War, occurring between June 25 1950 and a ceasefire on July 27 1953, was a war fought in Korea that was divided by the post-World War II Soviet and American occupation zones, with large-scale participation by other countries. The war began with the invasion of South Korea by forces in North Korea in 1950 and ended as a stalemate between the two sides in 1953.
The principal support on the side of the North Korean communists was the People's Republic of China, with limited assistance by Soviet combat advisors, military pilots, and weapons. South Korea was supported by United Nations (UN) forces, principally from the United States, although many other nations also contributed personnel. When conflicts began, North and South Korea existed as provisional governments competing for control over the Korean peninsula after the Division of Korea.
In South Korea, the war is often called 6·25, from the date of the start of the conflict or, more formally, Han-guk Jeonjaeng (Korean: 한국전쟁, literally "Korean War"). In North Korea, it is formally called the Fatherland Liberation War (Korean: 조국해방전쟁). In the United States, the conflict was officially termed a police action — the Korean Conflict — rather than a war, largely in order to avoid the necessity of a declaration of war by the U.S. Congress. The war is sometimes referred to outside Korea as "The Forgotten War", because it is a major conflict of the 20th century that is rarely mentioned in public discourse. In China, the conflict was known as the War to Resist America and Aid Korea (抗美援朝), but is today commonly called the "Korean War" (朝鮮戰爭, Chaoxian Zhanzheng).
Historical background
Japanese occupation
The Japanese army occupied strategically important parts of Korea in the early days of the Russo-Japanese War (February, 1904) as part of their early emergence as an imperialist power. The Japanese occupied the peninsula against the wishes of the Korean government, gradually expanded their control over local institutions and finally annexed Korea in August, 1910. Korea remained a Japanese colony until the end of World War II in 1945. On August 6, 1945, the Soviet Union, in keeping with a commitment asked for by the United States government, declared war on the Japanese Empire and on August 8, 1945, began an attack on the northern part of the Korean peninsula. As agreed on with the U.S., the USSR halted its troops at the 38th parallel. President Harry S. Truman ordered the landing of U.S. troops in the south.
Post-WWII Division of Korea
On August 10, 1945 with the Japanese surrender imminent and following a plan drawn up earlier by the United States, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to divide Korea along the 38th parallel. Japanese forces north of that line would surrender to the Soviet Union, and those to the south to the United States. Thus, without consulting the Korean people, the two major powers divided the Korean peninsula into two occupation zones, thereby putting into place the foundation for the civil war. Although later policies and actions contributed to Korea's division, the United States did not envision this as a permanent partition.
In December 1945, the US and the Soviet Union agreed to administer the country temporarily in place of Koreans. Subsequently, both the US and the USSR established Korean lead governments in their respective halves, each one favorable to their political ideology. In an election that was UN-sanctioned, but widely seen as corrupt, the U.S.-administered south saw the defeat of a left-wing and popular group of political leaders that had been active years before the end of the war. The government that emerged was led by anti-Communist Syngman Rhee, a Korean who had lived outside of Korea for over three decades. The south's left-wing parties boycotted the elections in part to protest US support for Rhee and its suppression of indigenous political movements. The Soviet Union, in turn, approved and furthered the rise of a Communist government in the northern part. Bolstered on the one hand by his history as an anti-Japanese fighter and on the other by his connections with the Soviet Union, Kim Il-Sung rose to become leader of this new government. The Allies had said that Korea would be a unified, independent country under an elected government but failed to specify the details and seemed more concerned with winning the opening round of the Cold War than with fulfilling the wishes of the Korean people. In 1949, both Soviet and American forces withdrew.
South Korean President Syngman Rhee and North Korean General Secretary Kim Il-Sung were each intent on reuniting the peninsula under their own systems. Partly because of Soviet tanks and heavy arms, the North Koreans were the ones able to go on the offensive, while South Korea, with only limited American backing, had far fewer options. As for the American government, they believed at the time that the Communist bloc was a unified monolith, and that North Korea acted within this monolith as a pawn of the Soviet Union Thus, the U.S. portrayed the conflict in the context of international aggression rather than a civil war. (Kim Il-Sung, operating with massive Soviet assistance, was responsible for the attack of the South.)
Opening of the Civil War
Rhee and Kim competed to reunite the peninsula, conducting military attacks along the border throughout 1949 and early 1950. The North Koreans, however, armed with Soviet tanks, changed the nature of the war from border skirmishes to a full-scale civil war.
On January 12 1950 United States Secretary of State Dean Acheson said that America's Pacific defense perimeter was made up of the Aleutians, Ryukyu, Japan, and the Philippines implying that the U.S. might not fight over Korea. Acheson said that Korea's defense would be the responsibility of the United Nations.
In mid 1949, Kim Il-Sung pressed his case with Joseph Stalin that the time had come for a reunification of the Korean peninsula. Kim needed Soviet support to successfully execute an offensive far across a rugged, mountainous peninsula. Stalin as leader of the communist bloc refused permission, concerned with the relative lack of preparedness of the North Korean armed forces and with possible U.S. involvement.
Over the following year, the North Korean leadership molded the North Korean army into a formidable offensive war machine modeled partly on a Soviet mechanized force, but strengthened primarily by an influx of Koreans who had served with the Chinese People’s Liberation Army since the 1930s. By 1950 the North Korean military was equipped with outdated Soviet weaponry, yet it enjoyed substantial advantages over the Southern forces in virtually every category of equipment. After another visit by Kim to Moscow in March-April of 1950, Stalin approved an attack.
Korean War (1950–1953)
North Korean attack
The North Korean army struck in the pre-dawn hours of Sunday, June 25, 1950, crossing the 38th parallel behind a firestorm of artillery barrage. Equipped with 150 Soviet-made T-34 tanks, the North Korean military began the war with about 180 aircraft, including 40 YAK fighters and 70 attack bombers. The navy was inconsequential. The most serious weakness was its lack of a reliable logistics system for moving supplies south as the army advanced. (In practice, it forced thousands of Korean civilians to hand-carry supplies, many of whom later died when subjected to American air attacks.)
Nevertheless, the North's well planned attack with about 135,000 troops achieved surprise and quick successes. North Korea attacked many key places including Kaesŏng, Chuncheon, Uijeongbu and Ongjin. Within days South Korean forces, outnumbered, out-gunned, and often of dubious loyalty to the southern regime, were in full retreat or often defected enmasse to the northern side. As the ground attack continued, the North Korean Air Force conducted bombing on Kimpo Airport near Seoul. Seoul was occupied by the North Korean forces on the afternoon of June 28. However, the North Korean leaders' hopes for a quick surrender by the Rhee government and the disintegration of the South Korean Army went up in smoke when foreign powers intervened. They did not expect the war to last long enough for American intervention, so there were no significant defenses prepared against American air attacks.
The South Korean Army had 65,000 soldiers armed, trained, and equipped by the US military, and as a force, it was deficient in armour and artillery. There were no large foreign combat units in the country when the civil war began, but there were large American forces stationed in nearby Japan.
Western Reaction
The invasion of South Korea came as a surprise to the United States and the other western powers; in the preceding week Dean Acheson of the State Department had told Congress on June 20 no such war was likely. Contacted hours after the invasion had begun, Truman was mistakenly convinced the beginning of World War III had arrived.
The same day that the civil war had officially begun (June 25) the United Nations immediately drafted a resolution, which was unanimously passed in the Security Council since the Russian ambassador was boycotting the UN at the time. This lead to direct action by the United States and other United Nations members. The Resolution called for 3 things: firstly, for all hostilities to end and North Korea to withdraw back to the 38th Parallel; secondly, for a United Nations Commission on Korea to be formed to monitor the situation and report to the Security Council; and lastly, for all United Nations members to support the United Nations in achieving this task, and refrain from providing assistance to the North Korean authorities. Later, debates would arise over the legality of this resolution since it sponsored UN intervention into a civil war. Though the resolution passed, it is thought that had the USSR not been boycotting the UN at the time they likely would have used their veto to cancel the resolution American action was taken for a number of reasons. Truman, a Democratic president, was under severe domestic pressure for being too soft on communism by, among others, Republican senator Joseph McCarthy. Especially outspoken were those who accused the Democrats of having lost China to the communists. The intervention was also an important implementation of the new Truman Doctrine, which advocated the opposition of communism wherever it tried to expand. The lessons of Munich in 1938 also influenced the American decision, leading them to believe that appeasing aggressive states would only encourage further expansion.
Instead of pressing for a congressional declaration of war, which he regarded as too alarmist and time-consuming when time was of the essence, Truman went to the UN for approval. (He would later come under harsh criticism for not consulting Congress before sending troops.) Thanks to a temporary Soviet absence from the Security Council — the Soviets were boycotting the Security Council to protest the exclusion of People's Republic of China (PRC) from the UN — there was no veto by Stalin and the (Nationalist-controlled) Republic of China government held the Chinese seat. Without Soviet and Chinese vetoes, and with only Yugoslavia abstaining, the UN voted to aid South Korea on June 27. U.S. forces were eventually joined during the conflict by troops from 15 other UN members: Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Britain, France, South Africa, Turkey, Thailand, Greece, the Netherlands, Ethiopia, Colombia, the Philippines, Belgium, and Luxembourg. The Soviet Union and its allies, however, challenged the resolution on grounds of illegality since a permanent members of the Council (Soviet Union) was absent from the voting. The North Korean government also did not concur. In 1950, A Soviet resolution calling for an end of hostilities and withdrawal of foreign troops was rejected.
Although American opinion was solidly behind the venture, Truman would later take harsh criticism for not obtaining a declaration of war from Congress before sending troops to Korea. Thus, "Truman's War" was said by some to have violated the spirit, and the letter, of the United States Constitution. The other foreign powers allied with the US quickly agreed with American actions, volunteering their support for the intervention. 16 nations finally contributed to "UN forces", but the United States provided 50 percent of the ground forces (South Korea provided most of the remainder), 86 percent of the naval power, and 93 percent of the air power.
U.S. Intervention
Despite the post-World War II demobilization of U.S. and allied forces, which caused serious supply problems for American troops in the region (excluding the United States Marines, the infantry divisions sent to Korea were at 40% of paper strength, and the majority of their equipment was found to be useless), the United States still had substantial forces in Japan relative to the North Korean military with its largely outdated Soviet equipment. These forces were under the command of General Douglas MacArthur. Apart from British Commonwealth units, no other nation could supply sizable manpower. On hearing of the outbreak of large-scale hostilities in Korea, President Harry S. Truman ordered MacArthur to transfer munitions to the ROK Army, while using air cover to protect evacuation of US citizens who were fleeing from the advancing North Korean army. Truman did not agree with his advisors who called for unilateral U.S. airstrikes against the North Korean forces, but did order the Seventh Fleet to protect Taiwan, thereby ending the policy of the United States of acquiescing to the defeat of the forces of Chiang Kai-Shek. The KMT government (now confined to Taiwan) asked to participate in the war, but their request was denied by the Americans who felt they would only encourage Chinese intervention.
The first significant foreign military intervention was the American combat unit Task Force Smith, part of the U.S. Army 24th Infantry Division based in Japan. On July 5 it engaged in the first North Korean-U.S. clash of the war at Osan, and was defeated with heavy losses. The half strength 24th Division was forced to fall back to Taejeon, which also fell and made General William F. Dean a prisoner of war.
By August the South Korean forces and the Eighth United States Army, which had arrived to help South Korea resist the North Korean attack, had been easily defeated and had retreated into a small area in the southeast corner of the Korean peninsula around the city of Pusan. American Eighth Army commander Lieutenant General Walton Walker was able to maneuver his forces to successfully confront the North Koreans as the Communists attempted a flanking maneuver instead of concentrating their forces which might have destroyed U.N. forces in the area. Nonetheless by September only the area around Pusan, about 10% of the total Korean peninsula, was still in the hands of the coalition. With the aid of massive American supplies, air support, and additional reinforcements, the U.S. and ROKA forces managed to stabilize a line along the Nakdong River. This desperate holding action became known in the US as the Pusan Perimeter. Although more UN support arrived, the situation was dire for the southern regime and its foreign allies, and it appeared as if the North Koreans would unite the peninsula under their government.
Allied forces rally
In the face of fierce North Korean attacks, the allied defense became a desperate holding action called the Battle of Pusan Perimeter by Americans. The failure of North Korea to capture Pusan doomed its hopes for national unification.
American air power arrived in large numbers, flying 40 sorties a day in ground support actions, targeting North Korean forces, but also creating widespread destruction among civilians and cities as well. Strategic bombers (mostly B-29s based in Japan) closed most rail and road traffic by day, and destroyed 32 critical bridges necessary not only for the conduct of warfare, but the flight of civilians. Trains used by military and civilians alike waited out the daylight hours in tunnels. Throughout all parts of Korea, the American bombers knocked out the main supply dumps, leveled entire cities and their populations, and eliminated oil refineries and seaports that handled imports such as military supplies, food, and medicine. Naval air power also attacked transportation chokepoints. The North Korean logistics problems grew severe, with shortages of food and ammunition. The North lost half its invading force and morale was poor.
Meanwhile, supply bases in Japan were pouring foreign weapons and soldiers into Pusan. American tank battalions were rushed in from San Francisco; by late August, the US had over 500 medium tanks in the Pusan perimeter. By early September, UN-ROK forces were vastly stronger and outnumbered the North Koreans by 180,000 to 100,000. At that point, they began a counterattack.
Liberation of South Korea
Main article: Battle of InchonIn the face of these overwhelming reinforcements, the North Korean forces found themselves undermanned with weak logistical support, and lacking naval and air support that could match the Americans. In order to alleviate pressure on the Pusan Perimeter, MacArthur, as UN commander-in-chief for Korea, ordered an amphibious landing far behind the North Korean troops at Inchon. The violent tides made this an extremely risky operation, but once the American and other UN troops gained a foothold on the beach, it was successful. MacArthur initiated his attack with the landing far behind the North Korean lines at Inchon (인천; 仁川). MacArthur had started planning a few days after the war began, but had been strongly opposed by the Pentagon. When he finally received permission to go ahead, MacArthur activated X Corps under General Edward Almond (comprising 70,000 troops of the 1st Marine Division and the Army's 7th Infantry Division (United States) and augmented by 8,600 Korean troops) and ordered them to land at Inchon in "Operation CHROMITE". The landing was a decisive victory, as X Corps rolled over the few defenders and threatened to trap the main North Korean army. MacArthur quickly recaptured Seoul. The North Koreans, almost cut off, rapidly retreated northwards; about 25,000 to 30,000 made it back.
Invasion of North Korea
The United Nations troops drove the North Koreans back past the 38th parallel. The American goal of saving South Korea's government had been achieved, but because of the success and the prospect of uniting all of Korea under the government of Syngman Rhee, the Americans - with UN approval - continued the advance into North Korea. This marked a crucial moment in American foreign policy, when the American leaders decided to go beyond simply "containing" perceived communist threats to actual rollback. Other issues included the psychological effects of destroying a Communist nation and the liberation of POWs.
The U.N. forces crossed into North Korea in early October 1950. The U.S. X Corp made amphibious landings at Wonsan and Iwon, which had already been captured by South Korean forces advancing by land. The rest of the U.S. army, along with the South Koreans, drove up the Western side of Korea and captured Pyongyang on October 19. By the end of October the North Korean Army was rapidly disintegrating and the U.N. took 135,000 prisoners.
The U.N. offensive greatly concerned the Chinese, who worried that the UN forces would not stop at the Yalu River, the border between the DPRK and China, and extend their rollback policy into China itself. Many in the West, including General MacArthur, thought that spreading the war to China would be necessary. However, Truman and the other leaders disagreed, and MacArthur was ordered to be very cautious when approaching the Chinese border. Eventually, MacArthur disregarded these concerns, arguing that since the North Korean troops were being supplied by bases in China, those supply depots should be bombed. However, except on some rare occasions U.N. bombers remained out of Manchuria during the war.
The Chinese entry (October, 1950)
The People's Republic of China, fearful of a capitalist Korean state and American military on its border, warned American leaders through neutral diplomats that it would intervene to protect its national security. Truman regarded the warnings as "a bald attempt to blackmail the UN" and did not take it seriously. On October 15, 1950, Truman went to Wake Island for a short, highly publicized meeting with MacArthur. The CIA had previously told Truman that Chinese involvement was unlikely. MacArthur, saying he was speculating, saw little risk. The general explained that the Chinese had lost their window of opportunity to help North Korea's invasion. He estimated the Chinese had 300,000 soldiers in Manchuria, with between 100,000-125,000 men along the Yalu; half could be brought across the Yalu. But the Chinese had no air force; hence, "if the Chinese tried to get down to Pyongyang there would be the greatest slaughter." MacArthur thus assumed that Chinese were motivated to help North Korea, and wished to avoid heavy casualties.
On October 8 1950, the day after American troops crossed the 38th, Chairman Mao Zedong issued the order to assemble the Chinese People's Volunteer Army. The members of the PVA were actually Chinese regulars from the Chinese People's Liberation Army, called volunteers so that their entry into the war would not seem to indicate a state-to-state war between the US and China. Mao ordered the army to move to the Yalu River, ready to cross. Mao sought Soviet aid and saw intervention as essentially defensive: "If we allow the U.S. to occupy all of Korea… we must be prepared for the US to declare… war with China", he told Stalin. Premier Zhou Enlai was sent to Moscow to add force to Mao's cabled arguments. Mao delayed his forces while waiting for Russian help, and the planned attack was thus postponed from 13 October to 19 October. Soviet assistance was limited to providing air support no nearer than sixty miles (96 km) from the battlefront. The Russian MiG-15s in PRC colors became a serious challenge to the UN pilots. In one area called "MiG Alley" by UN forces, they held local air superiority against the American made F-80 Shooting Stars until newer F-86 Sabres were deployed. The Chinese were angry at the limited support, having assumed that the Soviets had promised to provide full scale air support. The Soviet role was known to the U.S. but they kept quiet so as to avoid widening the conflict and potential nuclear warfare.
The Chinese made contact with American troops on October 25 1950 with 270,000 PVA troops under the command of General Peng Dehuai, much to the surprise of the UN who had ignored evidence that such a massive force existed. However, after these initial engagements, the Chinese forces pulled back into the mountains. UN leaders saw the withdrawal as a sign of weakness, and greatly underestimated the Chinese fighting capability. The UN forces thus continued their advance to the Yalu river, ignoring stern warnings given by the Chinese.
In late November, the Chinese struck in the west, along the Chongchon River, and completely overran several South Korean divisions and successfully landed a heavy blow to the flank of the remaining UN forces. The resulting defeat of the U.S. Eighth Army was the longest retreat of any American military unit in history. In the east, at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, a 30,000 man unit from the U.S. 7 Infantry Division was also unprepared for the Chinese tactics and was soon surrounded, though eventually managed to flee the encirclement after suffering over 15,000 casualties. The US Marines were also defeated at the Chosin Reservoir and forced to retreat after inflicting heavy casualties on six Chinese divisions.
The US forces in northeast Korea who had rushed northwards with great speed only a few months earlier, were now forced to race southwards with even greater speed and form a defensive perimeter around the port city of Hungnam, where a major evacuation was being carried out in late December 1950. Facing complete defeat and surrender, 193 shiploads of American men and material were evacuated from Hungnam Harbor, and about 105,000 soldiers, 98,000 civilians, 17,500 vehicles, and 350,000 tons of supplies were shipped to Pusan in orderly fashion. As they left, the American forces blew up large portions of the city to deny its use to the Communists, depriving many Korean civilians of shelter in the dead of winter.
Fighting across the 38th Parallel (Early 1951)
In January 1951, the Chinese and North Korean forces struck again in their 3rd Phase Offensive (also known as the Chinese Winter Offensive). The Chinese repeated their previous tactics of mostly night attacks, with a stealthy approach from positions some distance from the front, followed by a rush with overwhelming numbers, and using trumpets or gongs both for communication and to disorient their foes. Against this UN forces had no remedy, and their resistance crumbled; they retreated rapidly to the south (referred to by UN forces as the “bug-out”).Seoul was abandoned, and was captured by Communist forces on the 4 January, 1951.
To add to Eighth Army's difficulties, General Walker was killed in an accident. He was replaced by a World War II airborne veteran, Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway, who took immediate steps to raise the morale and fighting spirit of the battered Eighth Army, which had fallen to low levels during its retreat. Nevertheless, the situation was so grim that MacArthur mentioned the use of atomic weapons against China, much to the alarm of America's allies.
UN forces continued to retreat until they had reached a line south of Suwon in the west and Wonju in the center, and north of Samchok in the east, where the front stabilized.The PVA had outrun its supply line and was forced to recoil. The Chinese could not go beyond Seoul because they were at the end of their logistics supply line--all food and ammunition had to be carried at night on foot or bicycle from the Yalu River.
In late January, finding the lines in front of his forces were deserted, Ridgway ordered reconnaissance in force, which developed into a full-scale offensive, Operation Roundup. The operation planned to proceed gradually, to make full use of the UN's superiority in firepower on the ground and in the air; by the time Roundup was completed, in early February, UN forces had reached the Han River, and re-captured Wonju.
The Chinese struck back in mid-February with their Fourth Phase Offensive, from Hoengsong in the centre against IX Corps positions around Chipyong-ni. A short but desperate siege there fought by units of US 2nd Division, including the French battalion, broke up the offensive; in this action the UN learned how to deal with Chinese offensive tactics and be able to stand their ground.
Roundup was followed in the last two weeks of February 1951,with Operation Killer, by a revitalized Eighth Army, restored by Ridgway to fighting trim.This was a full- scale offensive across the front, again staged to maximize firepower and with the aim of destroying as much of the PVA and NKPA as possible. By the end of Killer, I Corps had re-occupied all territory south of the Han, while IX Corps had captured Hoengsong.
On 7th March, 1951, Eighth Army pushed forward again, in Operation Ripper, and on 14th expelled the North Korean and Chinese troops from Seoul, the fourth time in a year the city had changed hands. Seoul was in utter ruins; its prewar population of 1.5 million had dropped to 200,000, with severe food shortages.
MacArthur was removed from command by President Truman on April 11 1951 for insubordination, setting off a firestorm of protest back in the States. The new supreme commander was Ridgway, who had managed to regroup UN forces for the series of effective counter-offensives. Command of Eighth Army passed to General James Van Fleet.
A further series of attacks slowly drove back the Communist forces,such as operations Courageous and Tomahawk, a combined ground- and air-assault to trap Communist forces between Kaesong and Seoul. UN forces continued to advance until they reached Line Kansas, some miles north of the 38th parallel.
The Chinese were far from beaten, however; In April 1951 they launched their Fifth Phase Offensive,( also called the Chinese Spring Offensive ) This was a major effort, involving 3 Field Armies ( up to 700,000 men ). The main blow fell on I Corps, but fierce resistance in battles at the Imjin river and Kapyong, blunted its impetus, and the Chinese were halted at a defensive line north of Seoul (referred to as No-Name Line.
A further Communist offensive in the east against ROK and X Corps on the 15 May also made initial gains, but by the 20th the attack had ground to a halt. Eighth Army counterattacked and by the end of May had regained Line Kansas.
The decision by UN forces to halt at Line Kansas, just north of the 38th Parallel, and not to persist in offensive action into North Korea, ushered in the period of stalemate which typified the remainder of the conflict.
Historian Bevin Alexander had this to say about Chinese tactics in his book How Wars Are Won:
- The Chinese had no air power and were armed only with rifles, machineguns, hand grenades, and mortars. Against the much more heavily armed Americans, they adapted a technique they had used against the Nationalists in the Chinese civil war of 1946–49. The Chinese generally attacked at night and tried to close in on a small troop position — generally a platoon — and then attacked it with local superiority in numbers. The usual method was to infiltrate small units, from a platoon of fifty men to a company of 200, split into separate detachments. While one team cut off the escape route of the Americans, the others struck both the front and the flanks in concerted assaults. The attacks continued on all sides until the defenders were destroyed or forced to withdraw. The Chinese then crept forward to the open flank of the next platoon position, and repeated the tactics.
Stalemate (July 1951-July 1953)
The rest of the war involved little territory change, large scale bombing of the north and its population, and lengthy peace negotiations, which began on July 10, 1951 at Kaesong. Even during the peace negotiations, combat continued. For the South Korean and allied forces, the goal was to recapture all of South Korea before an agreement was reached in order to avoid loss of any territory. The Chinese and North Koreans attempted similar operations, and later in the war they undertook operations designed to test the resolve of the UN to continue the conflict. Principal military engagements in this period were the actions around the Punchbowl, in the east, such as Bloody Ridge and Heartbreak Ridge in 1951, the battles for Old Baldy, in the centre, and the Hook, in the west, during 1952-53, and the battle for Pork Chop Hill in 1953. The peace negotiations went on for two years, first at Kaesong, and later at Panmunjon. A major issue of the negotiations was repatriation of POWs. The Communists agreed to voluntary repatriation, but only if the majority would return to China or North Korea, something that did not occur. As many refused to be repatriated to the communist North Korea and China, the war continued until the Communists eventually dropped this issue.
In October 1951, U.S. forces performed Operation Hudson Harbor intending to establish the capability to use nuclear weapons. Several B-29s conducted individual simulated bomb runs from Okinawa to North Korea, delivering "dummy" nuclear bombs or heavy conventional bombs; the operation was coordinated from Yokota air base in Japan. The battle exercise was intended to test "actual functioning of all activities which would be involved in an atomic strike, including weapons assembly and testing, leading, ground control of bomb aiming," and so on. The results indicated that nuclear bombs would be less effective than anticipated, because "timely identification of large masses of enemy troops was extremely rare."
On November 29, 1952, U.S. President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower fulfilled a campaign promise by going to Korea to find out what could be done to end the conflict. With the UN's acceptance of India's proposal for a Korean armistice, a cease-fire was established on July 27, 1953, by which time the front line was back around the proximity of the 38th parallel, and so a demilitarized zone (DMZ) was established around it, still defended to this day by North Korean troops on one side and South Korean and American troops on the other. The DMZ runs north of the parallel towards the east, and to the south as it travels west. The site of the peace talks, Kaesong, the old capital of Korea, was part of the South before hostilities broke out but is currently a special city of the North. No peace treaty has been signed to date.
Characteristics
Tank warfare
When the North Korean soldiers stormed across the 38th Parallel into South Korea, the Soviet T-34-85 tank was nearly invincible against the South Korean lines. During the time, the South Korean army had few soldiers, no tanks, few anti-tank guns and few bazookas. In fact, nearly all the Korean soldiers were unfamiliar with tanks and how to counter them.
As noted above, the South Korean army had anti-tank rockets but these were World War II vintage 2.36 inch (60 mm) M9 bazookas. These weapons were obsolete even when produced during World War II and could not pierce the frontal armor of the T-34-85s. Until the U.S introduced the heavier 3.5 inch (89 mm) M20 bazooka, South Korean troops were unable to effectively counter North Korean tanks.
The first American tanks to arrive in Korea and go into action were M24 Chaffee light tanks which had been left in Japan for post-WWII occupation duties (heavier tanks would have torn up Japanese roads). These light tanks had very limited success against the far superior Medium T-34/85 tanks used by communist forces. Later shipments of heavier American tanks such as the M4 Sherman and the M26 Pershing, the British Centurion as well as American and allied ground attack aircraft were able to neutralize the Communist tanks advantage.
However, in contrast to World War II's heavy emphasis on armor, few open tank battles actually occurred over the course of the Korean War. The country's heavily forested and often mountainous terrain meant that tanks were unable to efficiently move around, but could be set up in a position to strike the enemy on a hill or cliff.
Air war
Air-to-air combat
- See also: MiG Alley
The Korean War was the last major war where propeller-powered fighters such as the P-51 Mustang, F4U Corsair and aircraft carrier-based Supermarine Seafire were used, as turbojet fighter aircraft such as F-80s and Grumman F9F Panthers came to dominate the skies, overwhelming North Korea's propeller-driven Yakovlev Yak-9s and Lavochkin La-9s.
From 1950, North Koreans began flying the Soviet-made MiG-15 jet fighters, some of which were piloted by experienced Soviet Air Force pilots, a casus belli deliberately overlooked by the UN allied forces who were reluctant to engage in open war with the Soviet Union and the PRC. At first UN jet fighters, which now also included Royal Australian Air Force Gloster Meteors, had some success, but the superior quality of the MiGs soon held sway over the first generation jets used by the UN early in the war.
In December 1950, the U.S. Air Force began using the F-86 Sabre. The MiG could fly higher, 50,000 vs. 42,000 feet, offering a distinct advantage at the start of combat. In level flight, their maximum speeds were comparable - about 660 mph. The MiG could climb better, the Sabre was more maneuverable and could dive better. For weapons, the MiG carried two 23 mm and one 37 mm cannon, compared to the Sabre's six .50 caliber machine guns. The American .50 caliber machine guns, while not packing the same punch, carried many more rounds and were aimed with a superior gunsight. Maintenance of the Sabre was a headache and a large proportion of the UN air strength was grounded due to repairs during the war.
Even after the USAF introduced the more advanced F-86, its pilots often struggled against the jets piloted by elite Soviet pilots. The lighter-weight MiG-15 had an edge in ceiling, acceleration and rate of climb although overall speed and roll rate were slightly inferior. The armament differences were questionable. While the MiG had a heavier armament (3 cannons vs. 6 machine-guns), the MiG had limited ammunition and the rate of fire was considerably slower. The U.N. gradually gained a numerical advantage, and their aggressiveness gave them an air superiority that lasted until the end of the war — a decisive factor in helping the U.N. first advance into the north, and then resist the Chinese invasion of South Korea. The Chinese also had jet power, but the American forces had superior training for their pilots. With the introduction of the F-86F in late 1952 the two aircraft had virtually identical performance characteristics.
Among other factors which helped tip the balance toward the U.N. jets were the F-86s' better radar gunsight, which led to installation of the first radar warning receiver on MiG fighters, better cockpit visibility, better stability and control at high speed and high altitudes, and the introduction of the first G-suits. U.S. F-86 pilots claimed 792 MiG-15s shot down and 108 additional aircraft for the loss of 78 Sabres, a ratio in excess of 10:1. Some post-war research has only able to confirm 379 victories, although the USAF continues to maintain its official credits and the debate is possibly irreconcilable. Recently exposed Stalin-era Soviet documentation claims that only 345 Soviet MiG-15s were lost during the Korean war.
The Soviets claimed about 1300 victories and 335 MiG losses at that time. China's official losses were 231 planes shot down in air-to-air combat (mostly MiG-15) and 168 other losses. The number of losses of the North Korean Air Force was not revealed. It is estimated that it lost about 200 aircraft in the first stage of the war, and another 70 aircraft after Chinese intervention. Soviet's claims of 650 victories over F-86s and China's claims of another 211 F-86s in air combats are probably exaggerated. According to a recent US publication, the number of USAF F-86s ever present in the Korean peninsula during the war totalled only 674 and the total F-86 losses due to all causes were about 230.
Direct comparison of Sabre and MiG losses seem irrelevant, as primary targets for MiGs were heavy B-29 bombers, and primary targets for Sabres were MiG-15s.
By early 1951, the battle lines hardened and didn't change too much for the rest of the conflict. Throughout the summer and early fall of 1951, the outnumbered Sabres (as few as 44 at one point) of the 4th FIW continued to seek battle in MiG Alley near the Yalu (at least 500). Jabara, Becker, and Gibson became the first Sabre aces. Following Col. Thyng's famous message to the Pentagon, the 51st FIW reinforced the beleaguered 4th in December 1951. For the next year and a half, the duel continued, in generally the same fashion.
American air interdiction and civilian casualties
The United Nations Command enjoyed freedom from air attack after the North Korean Air Force was defeated soon after the start of the war. Except for nuisance raids at night by obsolete aircraft attacking singly, the north did not attempt to attack the battle line or bases south of it.
Conversely, the UN Command, operating primarily through the USAF Far East Air Forces and the U.S. Navy's Task Force 77, exerted constant pressure both day and night against the industrial infrastructure of North Korea and against the logistics system supplying the communist armies. Some lengthy operations, such as Operation Strangle, an attempt to force the communists to truck in supplies by cutting its railroads, were unsuccessful, while others, such as the joint-service and multi-national air attacks on the hydroelectric system and the capital city of Pyongyang in 1952 achieved military success.
Throughout the conflict, the United States maintained a policy of heavy bombing of any location thought to be useful to North Korea, including civilian and food centers. Americans also used incendiary weapons against any and all North Korean settlements. Although images of the civilian victims of the weapon were to be ingrained upon the memory of the world in Vietnam, it was later claimed that significantly more napalm was dropped on North Korea, despite the relative short length of the conflict. Tens of thousands of gallons were dropped on Korea each day.
In May and June 1953 the USAF undertook missions to destroy several key irrigation dams, and targeted various agriculture and industry centers in the North. Dams on the Kusŏng/Guseong, Tŏksan/Deoksan and Pujŏn/Bujeon Rivers were all destroyed, severely flooding vast areas of land, drowning thousands of civilians, and ultimately leading to the starvation of many more. This destruction of civilian peasants and their farmland diminished the food supplies available for the civilians and troops and created famine like conditions in some areas. However, in the context of the war's resolution it did not dramatically effect the war's ultimate outcome.
A U.S. intelligence report in 1953 noted that these floods caused by bombing dams would destroy enemy supplies and the villages where they were stored. The report also noted that the loss of rice - the staple food commodity for North Koreans - would result in "starvation and slow death", a course of action that was deemed a war crime when used--under admittedly greatly different circumstances--by the Nazis against food supplies in the Netherlands in 1944.
- See also British Commonwealth Forces Korea
Use of nuclear weapons
There were two occasions when the United Nations forces came very close to using nuclear weapons (see Knightley, p 334). The first was the entry of China into the war, which prompted General MacArthur to urge President Truman to use nuclear weapons against "Red China, Eastern Russia, and everything else" (Truman later admitted this played a part in his decision to sack MacArthur in 1951). The second occasion arose in the run-up to the signing of the Armistice in 1953, when Eisenhower took the view that if the North Koreans failed to sign, the US would have used nuclear weapons against military targets in order to win the war.
Atrocities
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North and South Korean, Chinese and United States soldiers targeted civilians and/or POWs in some cases. Specifically, there is extremely strong evidence to suggest the following incidents:
- North Korean and Chinese troops repeatedly violated the Geneva Conventions through reported abuse of prisoners of war. North Korean forces also committed several massacres of captured U.S. troops at places such as "Hill 312" on the Pusan perimeter, and in and around Daejeon. This occurred particularly during early mopping up actions. During the periods when parts of South Korea were under North Korean control, political killings, reportedly into the tens of thousands, took place in cities across South Korea.
- POWs were mistreated by all sides. The UN side was ultimately responsible for more deaths and violence than the communist side as there were more prisoners. As pointed out by Britain's former Chief of the Defense Staff, Field Marshal Lord Carver: "The UN prisoners in Chinese hands, although subject to 're-education' processes of varying intensity...were certainly much better off in every way than any held by the Americans...." Carver's assessment differs from other historical accounts which report frequent beatings, summary executions and death marches imposed by the North Koreans on UN prisoners.
- For a time, American troops were under orders to consider any Korean civilians on the battlefield approaching their position as hostile and were instructed to "neutralize" them due to fears of infiltration. This led to the indiscriminate killings of hundreds of South Korean civilians by the U.S. military at places such as No Gun Ri, where many defenseless refugees – most of whom were women, children and old men – were shot at by the U.S. Army and may have been strafed by the USAF. Recently, the U.S. admitted having a policy of strafing civilians in other places and times. Americans and their South Korean allies also blew up several bridges that were crowded with fleeing civilians when they could not clear the bridges before the enemy arrived.
- Korean forces on both sides routinely rounded up and forcibly conscripted both males and females in their area of operations. Whether they refused or not, thousands of them never returned home.
- South Korean military and police, often with U.S. military knowledge and without trial, executed tens of thousands of alleged "communist sympathizers" during incidents like the Daejeon and Jeju Massacres. The bodies of these civilians were often dumped into mass graves. Gregory Henderson, a U.S. diplomat in Korea at the time, put the figure at 100,000.
Legacy
The Korean War was the first armed confrontation of the Cold War and set the standard for many later conflicts. It created the idea of a limited war, where the two superpowers would fight in another country, making the people in that nation suffer the bulk of the destruction and death involved in a war between such large nations. The superpowers avoided descending into an all-out war with one another, as well as the mutual use of nuclear weapons. It also expanded the Cold War, which to that point had mostly been concerned with Europe. The war led to a strengthening of alliances in the Western bloc and the splitting of China from the Soviet bloc.
Australia
From 1950-53, 17,000 Australians in the Army, Navy and Air Force fought as part of the United Nations (UN) multinational force. After the war ended, Australians remained in Korea for four years as military observers. Australia gained political and security benefits, the most important being the signing of the ANZUS Treaty with the United States and New Zealand. Australian War Memorial
People's Republic of China (China)
The fact that Chinese forces held their own against American forces in this war heralded that China was once again becoming a major world power. By many Chinese the war is generally seen as an honour in the People's Republic of China history as it was the first time in a century the Chinese army was able to withstand a Western army in a major conflict, in spite of China's heavy losses.
China successfully prevented a capitalist Korea and US military from presence on its Manchuria border. At that time, Manchuria, especially Liaoning - the province right across the Yalu River, was China's most important industry center. To protect the Manchuria industry center was one of the major reasons for China to enter the war. By saving the North Korea state, China obtained more than 300km strategic buffer zone from US and saved the military spending needed to protect its Manchuria border in the next fifty years.
By entering the war, China won the trust from Soviet Union. Right after the Korea War, China obtained loans and technical assistances from USSR and engaged the first five-year plan (1953-1957) to develop heavy industries, which laid down a solid foundation for further industry development. In addtion, during this war, PLA modernized its troops and built a powerful air force from nothing.
On the other hand, China lost the chance to reunify Taiwan as a result of military involvement in the Korean war. Initially, the United States abandoned the KMT and expected that Taiwan would fall to China anyway, so the basic US policy was to "wait and watch" and assumption that Taiwan's reunification with China was inevitable. However, in 1950, North Korea invaded South Korea, and in the context of the Cold War, US President Harry S. Truman intervened again and dispatched the 7th Fleet into the Taiwan Straits to "neutralize" the Straits, thus ending hesitation to separate Taiwan from China by force.
There is an argument that the Chinese paid a high price for getting involved in the Korean War --- Reunification with Taiwan was indefinitely postponed until even today. Some war veterans and ordinary Chinese feel China's intervention in Korean War at the sacrifice of Taiwan reunification has not paid off. A typical reflection was made by Korean War veteran Zhang Zeshi, who spent two years in a South Korean POW camp, "We spilled our blood in vain. It kept alive (North Korea's) feudal dictatorship." In the Korean War Memorial in North Korea, the Hall of Chinese Assistance is only open to Chinese and closed to North Koreans. Official history interpretation by North Korea never mentioned the role played by China, but attributed the success merely to North Korean army under the leadership of Kim. After the recent nuclear bomb test by North Korea, the majority of Chinese believe "we should abandon" North Korea, and North Korea "may no longer be our friend." However, it should be noted that Harry S. Truman dispatched the 7th Fleet into the Taiwan Straits in the June of 1950, while China didn't entered the war until October. Even if red China hadn't got involved in the war, given the cold war environment, there would be only little chance for US to allow China to retake Taiwan.
From official Chinese sources, PVA casualties during the Korean War were 390,000. This breaks down as follows: 110,400 killed in action; 21,600 died of wounds; 13,000 died of sickness; 25,600 MIA/POW; and 260,000 more wounded in action. Mao Zedong's only healthy son, Mao Anying, was also killed as a PVA officer during the war.
As the PVA rotated about 2 million troops during the war the casualties figure of some western sources might at first glance seem excessive. For example, if the PVA had suffered 500,000 casualties (1/4 of all troops rotated) or 1,000,000 casualties (1/2 of all troops rotated) one might think that the PVA would have been so weakened that they would not have been able to defend the line let alone mount any meaningful offensive, and since the battle line hardly shifted from 1951 to 1953, the untrained eye might think that the U.N. and Chinese, because they enjoyed (a) similar (lack of) progress, endured a relative parity of losses such that the high casualty figures should be regarded with skepticism. However, given their disadvantage in air power and logistics, inexhaustible manpower reserves, and the traditional willingness of Communist armies to accept high casualties (e.g. the USSR in World War II and the North/VC in Vietnam), the Communists could plausibly have held their own on the battlefield while suffering much higher casualties than their U.S./UN adversaries.
The war also partly contributed to the decline of Sino-Soviet relations. Although the Chinese had their own reasons to enter the war (i.e. a strategic buffer zone in the Korean peninsula), the view that the Soviets had used them as proxies was shared by the Western bloc. China had to use a Soviet loan, which had been originally intended to rebuild their destroyed economy, to pay for Soviet arms.
Republic of China (Taiwan)
After the war was over, 14,000 of the Chinese prisoners of war hostile to the communists of the People's Republic of China defected to the Republic of China (ROC) (7,110 Chinese POWs opted to return to the PRC). However, there are conflicting reports. Some say that they were forced to go to ROC, some say that they did so voluntarily. Further, some of the soldiers got anti-communist tattoos on their body, such as: "Anti-Reds"; "Anti communism, fight against Russia," (反共抗俄); "Kill the pig (Zhu), pull out the hair (Mao)" (殺豬拔毛) (Zhu refers to the Chinese General Zhu De, and Mao is the family name of Mao Zedong); or the emblem of the Republic of China. Some say that they got those voluntarily, some say that they were forced to do so because they did not want to go initially.
The defectors arrived in Taiwan on January 23, 1954 and were referred to as "Anti-Communist volunteers" and January 23 was named World Freedom Day in their honour in Taiwan.
The Korean War also led to other long lasting effects. Until the conflict in Korea, the U.S. had largely abandoned the government of Chiang Kai-Shek, which had retreated to Taiwan, and had not intervened in the Chinese Civil War. The start of the Korean War rendered any policy that would have caused Taiwan to fall under PRC control untenable. Truman's decision to send American ships to the Taiwan strait further deterred the PRC from making any attempt to invade Taiwan. The anti-communist atmosphere in the West in response to the Korean War contributed to the unwillingness to diplomatically recognize the People's Republic of China until the 1970s. Today, diplomacy between the Republic of China and mainland China remains strained, and mainland China continues to claim sovereignty over Taiwan.
Korea
600,000 Korean soldiers died in the conflict, according to U.S. estimates. About one million South Koreans were killed, 85 percent of them civilians. According to figures published in the Soviet Union, 11.1 percent of the total population of North Korea died, around 1.13 million people were killed. The total casualties were about 2.5 million. More than 80 percent of the industrial and public facilities and transportation infrastructure, three-quarters of all government buildings, and half of all housing was destroyed.
The war left the peninsula divided, with a communist state in the North and an authoritarian state in the South. Initially, South Korea suffered economically in the 1950s, and later transitioned to democracy with a rapidly-growing market economy, becoming one of the East Asian Tigers. Politically, South Korea had an authoritarian form of government until the late 1980s. North Korea enjoyed substantial economic growth, becoming the second most industrialized nation in East Asia until the 1970s. Later, a combination of extremely poor policy decisions in the world mineral market, the constraints inherent in Juche ideology, and catastrophic weather all worked to create a near collapse of the economy by the late 1990s. Politically, North Korea established a political system that included strident self-reliance, strong nationalism, a cult of personality around leaders Kim Il-Sung and later his son Kim Jong-il, and a highly-disciplined society that some term Stalinist. American troops remain in Korea as part of the still-functioning UN Command, which commands all allied military forces in South Korea - American Air Forces, Korea, the Eighth U.S. Army, and the entire South Korean military. This presence of foreign troops has been the source of many popular protests by South Koreans. No significant Russian or Chinese military forces remain in North Korea today. The demilitarized zone remains the most heavily-defended border in the world. Many Korean families were also divided by the war, most of whom have had no opportunity to contact or meet one another.
United States
The U.S. military had been caught ill-prepared for the war. Accordingly, after the war, the American defense budget was boosted to $50 billion, the Army was doubled in size, as was the number of Air Groups, and they were deployed outside American territory in Europe, the Middle East and elsewhere in Asia.
There has been some confusion over the previously reported number of 54,589 Korean War deaths. In 1993 this number was divided by the Defense Department into 33,686 battle deaths, 2,830 non-battle deaths, and 17,730 deaths of Defense Department personnel outside the Korean theatre. There were also 8,142 US personnel listed as Missing In Action (MIA) during the war. U.S. casualties in the war are fewer than in the Vietnam War, but they occurred over three years as opposed to 15 years (1960-1975) in Vietnam. However, advances in medical services such as the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital and the use of rapid transport of the wounded to them such as with helicopters enabled the death rate for UN forces to be much lower than in previous wars. For service during the Korean War, the U.S. military issued the Korean Service Medal.
Later neglect of remembrance of this war, in favor of the Vietnam War, World War I and World War II and the Gulf Wars, has caused the Korean War to be dubbed the Forgotten War or the Unknown War. The Korean War Veterans Memorial was built in Washington, D.C. and dedicated to veterans of the war on July 27, 1995.
The war also changed America's view of the Third World, most notably in Indochina. Before 1950 the Americans had been very critical of French endeavours to reestablish its presence there against local resistance; after Korea they began to heavily support the French against the Viet Minh and other nationalist-communist local parties, paying for up to 80% of the French military budget in Vietnam.
The Korean War also saw the beginning of racial integration efforts in the U.S. military service, where African Americans fought in integrated units. President Truman signed Executive Order 9981 on July 26, 1948, calling on the armed forces to provide equal treatment and opportunity for black servicemen. The extent to which Truman's 1948 orders were carried out varied among the various branches of the military, with segregated units still in deployment at the start of the conflict, and eventually being integrated towards the end of the war. The last large segregated operational unit was the U.S. 24 Infantry Regiment which was deactivated on October 1, 1951.
The U.S. still maintains a heavy military presence in Korea, as part of the effort to uphold the armistice between South and North Korea. A special service decoration, known as the Korea Defense Service Medal is authorized for U.S. service members who serve a tour of duty in Korea.
See also: Army:
Corps:
- US I Corps
- US IX Corps (United States)
- US X Corps
- Corps of Engineers (Battalions}
U.S. Army units in Korean War: see {reference only}
U.S. Air Force:
See United States Pacific Air Forces
U.S. Navy:
See United States Navy and United States Coast Guard
U.S.M.C:
Divisions:
Reserve Units:
- United Nations Service Medal
- National Defense Service Medal
- Korean Service Medal
- Korean War Service Medal
- Korean Defense Service Medal
- Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation
Canada
Canada sent 26,791 troops to the war, with 7,000 more remaining to supervise the ceasefire until the end of 1955. Of these 1,558 became casualties, including 516 deaths, most of them due to combat. Canada's participation included a brigade of troops, eight naval vessels and 22 pilots for U.S. jet squadrons. See also History of the Canadian Army.
The Korean War was the last major conflict Canadian forces participated in until the 1991 Persian Gulf War, and the last major combat by ground troops until 2002 in Afghanistan.
The Canadian military was revitalized as a result of the Korean War. A planned changeover to U.S.-designed weapons equipment had been planned for the 1950s, but the emergency in Korea forced the use of war stocks of British-designed weapons from World War II. In the late 1950s, Canada adopted a variety of weapons of European, British and US design rather than proceeding with its planned Americanization.
Japan
Japan was politically disturbed both from the security threat to Japan because of the initial defeat of South Korea and from left-wing activities in support of North Korea and aiming to bring about a revolution in Japan. Additionally, as American occupation armies were dispatched to Korean peninsula, Japan's security became problematic. Under United States' guidance Japan established Reserved Police, later developed to the Japan Self-Defense Forces (自衛隊). The signing of the Treaty of Peace with Japan (日本国との平和条約; popularly known as the Treaty of San Francisco) was also hastened to return Japan back into international communities. In the eyes of some American policy makers, the non-belligerency clause in the constitution was already being considered a "mistake" by 1953.
Economically, Japan was able to benefit vastly from the war. American requirements for war material were organized through a Special Procurements system, which allowed for local purchases without the complex Pentagon procurement system. Over $3.5 billion was spent on Japanese companies, peaking at $809 million in 1953 and the zaibatsu went from being distrusted to being encouraged. Among those who thrived not only on orders from the military but also through American industrial experts, including W. Edwards Deming were Mitsui, Mitsubishi, and Sumitomo. Japanese manufacturing grew by 50% between March 1950 and 1951 and by 1952, pre-war standards of living were reached and output was twice the level of 1949. Becoming an independent country due to the Treaty of San Francisco also saved Japan from the burden of expense of the occupation forces.
Europe
The outbreak of the war convinced Western leaders of the growing threat of international communism. The United States began to encourage Western European countries, including West Germany, to contribute to their own defense, though this was perceived as a threat by its neighbours, especially France. As the war continued, however, opposition to rearmament lessened and China's entry in the war caused France to revise its position towards German rearmament. To contain the situation French officials proposed the creation of the European Defence Community (EDC), a supranational organisation, under the leadership of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO).
The end of the war reduced the perceived communist threat, and thus reduced the necessity of such an organisation. The French Parliament postponed the ratification of the EDC Treaty indefinitely. This rejection in the French Parliament was caused by Gaullist fears that the creation of the EDC threatened France's national sovereignty. The EDC was never ratified, and the initiative collapsed in August, 1954.
- See also British Commonwealth Forces Korea
Soviet Union
The war was a political disaster for the Soviet Union. Its central objective, the unification of the Korean peninsula under the Kim Il-Sung regime was not achieved. Boundaries of both parts of Korea remained practically unchanged. Furthermore, relations with then Communist ally People's Republic of China was seriously and permanently spoiled, leading to the Sino-Soviet split that lasted until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. The war meanwhile united the countries within the capitalist bloc: the Korean war accelerated the conclusion of a peace agreement between the USA and Japan, the warming of Germany's relations with other western countries, creation of military and political blocs ANZUS (1951) and SEATO (1954). However, the war was not without their pluses for the Soviet Union: the authority of the Soviet State seriously grew, which showed in its readiness to interfere in developing countries of the third world, many of which after the Korean war went down the socialist path of development, after selecting the Soviet Union as their patron.
The war was a heavy burden on the national economy of the Soviet Union, which was still suffering from the effects of World War II. Expenditures for defense grew sharply. However, despite all these expenses approximately thirty thousand Soviet soldiers in one way or another, obtained the priceless experience of waging local wars. The war also allowed them the opportunity to test several newest forms of armaments, in particular the MiG-15 combat aircraft. Furthermore, numerous models of American military equipment were seized, which made possible for Soviet engineers and scientists to use American experience for development of new forms of armaments.
Turkey
Although not on as large a scale as the countries above, the Republic of Turkey was one of the countries that were affected greatly by the Korean War, despite the large distance between Turkey and the warzone. During World War II, Turkey maintained a neutral stance until 1945, as it was decided by Roosevelt, Churchill and İnönü at the Second Cairo Conference that maintaining Turkey's neutrality would serve the Allies' interests by blocking the Axis from reaching the strategic oil reserves of the Middle East. Although Turkey eventually declared war on the Axis Powers in 1945, this action did not prevent the country from being left isolated in the diplomatic arena. At the beginning of the 1950s, Turkey was under constant pressure from the Soviet Union on territorial issues, particularly regarding the control of the Turkish Straits. Looking for an ally against the Soviets, Turkey sought to join the NATO alliance. The Korean War was viewed as a perfect opportunity to show the West a sign of good faith.
Turkey was one of the largest participants in the UN alliance, committing nearly 5500 troops. The Turkish Brigade which operated under the US 25th Infantry Division assisted in protecting the supply lines of UN forces which advanced towards North Korea. However, it was the Battles of Kunu-ri and Kumyanjangni that earned the Turkish Brigade a reputation and the praise of UN forces. Because of their heroic actions and sacrifice in these battles, a monument was created in Seoul in the memory of the Turkish soldiers that fought in Korea. Their actions on the battle field may explain the reason why many South Koreans, still today, feel warmth towards the Turkish people, which was vividly demonstrated during the 2002 FIFA World Cup organized by South Korea and Japan.
However, it should be noted that the Korean War still remains a controversial topic in Turkey. While sending troops to Korea earned Turkey the respect of the West, it was also the beginning of clashes with the Eastern Bloc. The Prime Minister of Turkey was criticized for sending troops without asking the parliament first. Although Turkey's entrance to the Korean War is considered by many as one of the most noble episodes of the country's recent history, some believe that it was one of the most misguided foreign policy decisions ever made by the Turkish Republic, sending the country's soldiers to die for the interests of the "imperialist powers". Nevertheless, because her entrance to the war as part of the UN command earned her a place in NATO, Turkey can be considered a country which benefited from the Korean War.
Depictions
Artist Pablo Picasso's painting Massacre in Korea (1951) depicted violence against civilians during the Korean War. By some accounts, killing of civilians by U.S. forces in Shinchun, Hwanghae Province was the motive of the painting. In South Korea, the painting was deemed to be anti-American, a longtime taboo in the South, and was prohibited for public display until the 1990s.
In the U.S. far and away the most famous artistic depiction of the war is M*A*S*H, originally a novel by Richard Hooker (pseudonym for H. Richard Hornberger) that was later turned into a successful movie and television series. All three versions depict the misadventures of the staff of a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital as they struggle to keep their sanity through the war's absurdities through ribald humour and hijinks when not treating wounded.
Ha Jin's War Trash contains a vivid description of the beginning of the war from the point of view of a Chinese soldier.
Films
- Fixed Bayonets (1951). U.S. soldiers in Korea surviving the harsh winter of 1951. Directed by Samuel Fuller.
- The Steel Helmet (1951). A squad of U.S. soldiers holes up in a Buddhist temple. Directed by Samuel Fuller.
- Battle Circus (1951). A love story of a hard-bitten surgeon and a new nurse at a M.A.S.H. unit. It starred Humphrey Bogart and June Allyson and was directed by Richard Brooks.
- Men of the Fighting Lady a.k.a. Panther Squadron (1954). Fictional account of U.S. Navy pilots flying F9F Panther fighter jets on hazardous missions against ground targets. Directed by Andrew Marton and starring Van Johnson.
- Prisoner of War (1954). An American army officer volunteers to investigate conditions inside North Korean POW camps. He parachutes behind enemy lines and infiltrates a group of G.I.s being marched to one of these camps. There, he witnesses scenes of G.I.s being brainwashed, beaten, subjected to mock executions, deprived of food and water, and tortured in a variety of ways under the supervision of a Russian colonel. Starring Ronald Reagan.
- The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1955). A U.S. Navy Reserve pilot flying attack missions over North Korea, from the novel by James Michener. Directed by Mark Robson and starring William Holden. Winner of the 1955 Academy Award for Best Special Effects.
- Target Zero (1955). U.S., British and South Korean troops are trapped behind enemy lines.
- Shangganling Battle (Shanggan Ling, Chinese: 上甘岭, BW-1956),in the Korean war in early 1950s, a group of Chinese People's Volunteer soldiers are blocked in Shangganling mountain area for several days. Short of both food and water, they hold their ground till the relief troops arrive. d: Meng Sha, Lin Shan; C: Gao Baocheng, XuLIinge, Liu Yuru; M: changchun.
- Battle Hymn (1956). Based on the autobiography of Colonel Dean E. Hess, an American clergyman and World War II veteran fighter pilot who volunteers to return to active duty to train the fighter pilots of the South Korean Air Force. Starring Rock Hudson as Hess.
- Pork Chop Hill (1957). A true account based on the book by S. L. A. Marshall. US soldiers attempt to retake the top of a hill. Nothing goes according to plan and the peace talks at Panmunjeom are stalled over the battle's outcome. Directed by Lewis Milestone and starring Gregory Peck.
- The Hunters (1958). Robert Mitchum and Robert Wagner as US Air Force F-86 pilots in an adaptation of the novel by James Salter, who was himself an F-86 pilot in the Korean War.
- The Manchurian Candidate (1962). The principal characters in the film are captured and brainwashed during the war. (The 2004 remake of the movie used the Persian Gulf War of 1991 instead ).
- War Hunt (1962). Recruits head to the front lines towards the close of the Korean War. The interaction between two of the soldiers...an idealistic newcomer and a psychotic who goes on one-man patrols slitting enemy throats under cover of night...and the orphan boy who comes between them is examined. The Cease-Fire brings the three to a final resolution. Robert Redford in his first silver screen role.
- MASH (1970), about the staff of a U.S. Army field hospital who use humor and hijinks to keep their sanity in the face of the horror of war. Directed by Robert Altman.
- M*A*S*H (1972-1983) was also a long-running television sitcom, inspired by the movie, featuring Alan Alda. The television series lasted more than three times longer than the war.
- Inchon (1981). The movie portrays the Battle of Incheon, a turning point in the war. Controversially, the film was partially financed by Sun Myung Moon's Unification Movement. It became a notorious financial and critical failure, losing an estimated $40 million of its $46 million budget, and remains the last mainstream Hollywood film to use the war as its backdrop. The film was directed by Terence Young, and starred an elderly Laurence Olivier as General Douglas MacArthur. According to press materials from the film, psychics hired by Moon's church contacted MacArthur in heaven and secured his posthumous approval of the casting.
- Joint Security Area (film) (Gongdong gyeongbi guyeok JSA) (2000). In the DMZ (Korean Demilitarized Zone) separating North and South Korea, two North Korean soldiers have been killed, supposedly by one South Korean soldier. The investigating Swiss/Swedish team from the neutral countries overseeing the DMZ (Korean Demilitarized Zone) suspects from evidence at the crime scene that another, unknown party was involved. Major Sophie E. Jean, the investigating officer, suspects a cover-up is taking place, but the truth is much simpler and much more tragic. It unravels as the story follows the development of a relationship between two North Korean and two South Korean soldiers that hang out together in an empty building in the Joint Security Area. Starring Lee Young Ae, Lee Byung-Hun, Song Kang-ho, Kim Tae-woo, and Shin Ha-kyun. Directed by Park Chan-wook.
- Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War (2004). When two Korean brothers are drafted into the military to fight in the war, the older brother tries to protect the younger by risking his own life in hopes of sending his brother home. This results in an emotional conflict that wears away at his own humanity. Epic in scope, the movie has a touching family story backdropped by a brutal war. Directed by Je-Kyu Kang or Kang Je-gyu.
- Welcome to Dongmakgol (2005). During the height of the war, three North Korean soldiers, two South Korean soldiers and a U.S. Navy pilot accidentally get stranded together in a remote and peaceful mountain village paradise called Dongmakgol. All three wayward factions learn that the village is naively oblivious to the raging war outside. These newcomers must somehow find a way to coexist with each other for the sake and preservation of the village they all learn to love and respect. Directed by Park, Gwang-hyeon.
Games
- Sabre Ace : Conflict Over Korea (1997-Eagle Interactive) Players use a US F-86 Sabrejet in the Korean War.
- Korea : Forgotten Conflict (2003-Plastic Reality) A squad based strategy game. Players take command of a UN unit consisting of several specialists such as a Ranger, Medic, Demolitions Expert, Sniper, or Korean to fight against the communist forces.
- Rise of Nations: Thrones and Patriots (2004-Big Huge Games) The player fights the Korean War in the Cold War campaign, in which he or she is also given the choice to extend the war after 1953.
Names
The most common English term for the war is "Korean War".
The following are terms used by the participants of the Korean War:
- Australia: Korean War
- Canada: Korean War
- Belgium: Korean War (French: Guerre de Corée - Dutch: De Koreaanse Oorlog)
- Britain: Korean War
- France: Template:Fr Guerre de Corée
- United States: Korean Conflict, Korean War, President Truman referred to the conflict as a "Police Action", but the term is seldom used in military or official circles.
- Greece: War of the Koreas (Πόλεμος της Κορέας)
- Turkey: Korean War (Kore Savaşı)
- North Korea: Fatherland Liberation War (조국해방전쟁; 祖國解放戰爭)
- South Korea: June 25 Incident (육이오 사변; 六二五 事變) , Korean War (한국전쟁; 韓國戰爭), June 25 War (육이오 전쟁; 六二五 戰爭)
- People's Republic of China: The War of Resisting the US & Aiding Korea (抗美援朝战争; kàng měi yuán cháo zhànzhēng) usually used colloquially "Korean War" (朝鲜战争; 朝鮮戰爭; cháoxiǎn zhànzhēng) usually used officially
- Other Chinese-speaking communities: Korean War (韩战; 韓戰; hán zhàn) abbreviation of Korean War
Notes
- On This Day 30 December 1950 from The BBC
- The Korean War at \/37124/v5 Affairs Canadaa w
- at Korean-War.com
- French Participation in the Korean War Embassy of France, Retrieved October 31, 2006
- The Turks in the Korean War
- http://english.people.com.cn/english/200010/26/eng20001026_53620.html
- Dankwart A. Rustow, The Changing Global Order and Its Implications for Korea's Reunification, Sino-Soviet Affairs, Vol. XVII, No. 4, Winter 1994/5, The Institute for Sino-Soviet Studies, Hanyang University
- Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 1: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945–1947 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981)
- Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War, 1981
- Gregory Henderson, Korea: The Politics of the Vortex, Harvard University Press, 1968; Lee Chong-sik, Korean Workers' Party, Hoover Institute Press, 1978.
- Dean Acheson, , "THE THEME OF CHINA LOST", Present at the Creation: My Years at the State Department (1969), pp. 355-358.
- The North claimed ROK (= South Korean) troops under the "bandit traitor" Syngman Rhee had crossed the border first. Later research establishes that the South had launched limited attacks across the 38th parallel in places such as Ongjin, but them North started the civil war that day.
- Appleman, South to the Naktong ch. 2; On the North Korean army the best study is Korea Institute of Military History, The Korean War (1998), vol 1.
- Appleman, South to the Naktong p. 15
- 1950 Colliers Yearbook
- LaFaber
- Appleman, South to the Naktong ch. 26, pp 381, 545
- James F. Schnabel. United States Army In The Korean War: Policy And Direction: The First Year (1972) ch 9-10; Korea Institute of Military History, The Korean War (1998) 1:730
- Schnable p 212; Robert J. Donovan, Tumultuous Years (1982) p 285.
- Eliot A. Cohen and John Gooch, Military Misfortunes: The Anatomy of Failure in War (1990), pp 165-95.
- William Hopkins One Bugle, No Drums: The Marines at Chosin Reservoir (1986).
- Schnabel p. 304; Doyle James H., and Arthur J. Mayer. "December 1950 at Hungnam." Proceedings, U.S. Naval Institute 105 (April 1979): 44-65.
- Korea Institute of Military History, The Korean War (2001) 2:512-29
- Actions Necessary; S. V. Hasbrouck, memo to file (Nov. 7, 1951), G-3 Operations file, box 38-A, Library of Congress; Army Chief of Staff, memo to file (Nov. 20, 1951), G-3 Operations file, box 38-A, Library of Congress. See also James F. Schnabel et al., The Korean War, vol. 3 of History of The Joint Chiefs of Staff (Wilmington, Del.: Michael Glaizer Inc., 1979), part 1, p. v; part 2, p. 614; Commanding General, Far East Air Force to 98th Bomb Wing Commander, Okinawa (Oct. 13, 1951), and Resumé of Operation (Sept. 30, 1951), Record Group 349, Far East Command G-2 Theater Intelligence, box 752.
- FEAF/UN Aircraft Used in Korea and Losses by Type at Korean-War.com
- Korean War Aces
- "Harrison R. Thyng". Sabre Jet Classics. Retrieved 24 Dec.
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suggested) (help) - Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 1: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945–1947 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981)
- Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 1: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945–1947 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981)
- Jon Halliday and Bruce Cumings, Korea: The Unknown War, Viking Press, 1988, ISBN 0-670-81903-4
- Jon Halliday and Bruce Cumings, Korea: The Unknown War, Viking Press, 1988, ISBN 0-670-81903-4
- http://www.fawm.gov.au/encyclopedia/pow/korea/index.htm
- Monique Chu, NGO celebrates World Freedom Day, Taipei Times, February 3, 2002
- Kathleen T. Rhem, Korean War Death Stats Highlight Modern DoD Safety Record, June 8, 2000
- Canadians in Korea, 1950-1953 at Korean-War.com. Accessed 23 Jun 2006.
- Canada played a minor role in the fighting in Cyprus in 1974 and in the Balkans at Medak Pocket in the 1990s.
Bibliography
References
- Brune, Lester and Robin Higham, eds., The Korean War: Handbook of the Literature and Research (Greenwood Press, 1994)
- Edwards, Paul M. Korean War Almanac (2006)
- Foot, Rosemary, "Making Known the Unknown War: Policy Analysis of the Korean Conflict in the Last Decade," Diplomatic History 15 (Summer 1991): 411-31, in JSTOR
- Kaufman, Burton I. The Korean Conflict (Greenwood Press, 1999).
- Knightley, P. The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero, Propagandist and Myth-maker (Quartet, 1982)
- Korea Institute of Military History, The Korean War (1998) (English edition 2001), 3 vol, 2600 pp; highly detailed history from South Korean perspective, U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-7802-0
- Leitich, Keith. Shapers of the Great Debate on the Korean War: A Biographical Dictionary (2006) covers Americans only
- James I. Matray, ed., Historical Dictionary of the Korean War (Greenwood Press, 1991)
- Millett, Allan R, “A Reader's Guide To The Korean War” Journal of Military History (1997) Vol. 61 No. 3; p. 583+ full text in JSTOR; free online revised version
- Millett, Allan R. "The Korean War: A 50 Year Critical Historiography," Journal of Strategic Studies 24 (March 2001), pp. 188-224. full text in Ingenta and Ebsco; discusses major works by British, American, Korean, Chinese, and Russian authors
- Summers, Harry G. Korean War Almanac (1990)
- Sandler, Stanley ed., The Korean War: An Encyclopedia (Garland, 1995)
- Masatake, Terauchi (1910-08-27). "Treaty of Annexation". USC-UCLA Joint East Asian Studies Center. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
Combat studies, soldiers
- Appleman, Roy E. South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu (1961), Official US Army history covers the Eighth Army and X Corps from June to November 1950
- Appleman, Roy E.. East of Chosin: Entrapment and Breakout in Korea (1987); Escaping the Trap: The U.S. Army in Northeast Korea, 1950 (1987); Disaster in Korea: The Chinese Confront MacArthur (1989); Ridgway Duels for Korea (1990).
- Blair, Clay. The Forgotten War: America in Korea, 1950-1953 (1987), revisionist study that attacks senior American officials
- Field Jr., James A. History of United States Naval Operations: Korea, University Press of the Pacific, 2001, ISBN 0-89875-675-8. official U.S. Navy history
- Farrar-Hockley, General Sir Anthony. The British Part in the Korean War, HMSO, 1995, hardcover 528 pages, ISBN 0-11-630962-8
- Futrell, Robert F. The United States Air Force in Korea, 1950-1953, rev. ed. (Office of the Chief of Air Force History, 1983), official U.S. Air Force history
- Hallion, Richard P. The Naval Air War in Korea (1986).
- Hamburger, Kenneth E. Leadership in the Crucible: The Korean War Battles of Twin Tunnels and Chipyong-Ni. Texas A. & M. U. Press, 2003. 257 pp.
- Hastings, Max. The Korean War (1987). British perspective
- Hermes, Jr., Walter. Truce Tent and Fighting Front (1966), Official US Army history on the "stalemate" period from October 1951 to July 1953.
- James, D. Clayton The Years of MacArthur: Triumph and Disaster, 1945-1964 (1985)
- James, D. Clayton with Anne Sharp Wells, Refighting the Last War: Command and Crises in Korea, 1950-1953 (1993)
- Johnston, William. A War of Patrols: Canadian Army Operations in Korea. U. of British Columbia Press, 2003. 426 pp.
- Kindsvatter, Peter S. American Soldiers: Ground Combat in the World Wars, Korea, and Vietnam. U. Press of Kansas, 2003. 472 pp.
- Millett, Allan R. Their War for Korea: American, Asian, and European Combatants and Civilians, 1945-1953. Brassey's, 2003. 310 pp.
- Montross, Lynn et al., History of U.S. Marine Operations in Korea, 1950-1953, 5 vols. (Washington: Historical Branch, G-3, Headquarters, Marine Corps, 1954-72),
- Mossman, Billy. Ebb and Flow (1990), Official US Army history covers November 1950 to July 1951.
- Russ, Martin. Breakout: The Chosin Reservoir Campaign, Korea 1950, , Penguin, 2000, 464 pages, ISBN 0-14-029259-4
- Toland, John. In Mortal Combat: Korea, 1950-1953 (1991)
- Varhola, Michael J. Fire and Ice: The Korean War, 1950-1953 (2000)
- Watson, Brent Byron. Far Eastern Tour: The Canadian Infantry in Korea, 1950-1953. 2002. 256 pp.
Origins, politics, diplomacy
- Chen Jian, China's Road to the Korean War: The Making of the Sino-American Confrontation (Columbia University Press, 1994),
- Cumings, Bruce. The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 1: Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes, 1945-1947, (1981), ISBN 0-691-10113-2; The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. 2: The Roaring of the Cataract, 1947-1950, Princeton University Press, 1990, ISBN 0-691-07843-2, prewar; stress on internal Korean politics
- Goncharov, Sergei N., John W. Lewis; and Xue Litai, Uncertain Partners: Stalin, Mao, and the Korean War, Stanford University Press, 1993, ISBN 0-8047-2521-7, diplomatic
- Kaufman, Burton I. The Korean War: Challenges in Crisis, Credibility, and Command. Temple University Press, 1986), focus is on Washington
- Matray, James. "Truman's Plan for Victory: National Self Determination and the Thirty-Eighth Parallel Decision in Korea," Journal of American History 66 (September, 1979), 314-33. Online at JSTOR
- Millett, Allan R. The War for Korea, 1945–1950: A House Burning vol 1 (2005)ISBN 0-7006-1393-5, origins
- Schnabel, James F. United States Army in the Korean War: Policy and Direction: The First Year (Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History, 1972). official US Army history; full text online
- Spanier, John W. The Truman-MacArthur Controversy and the Korean War (1959).
- Stueck, William. Rethinking the Korean War: A New Diplomatic and Strategic History. Princeton U. Press, 2002. 285 pp.
- Stueck, Jr., William J. The Korean War: An International History (Princeton University Press, 1995), diplomatic
- Zhang Shu-gang, Mao's Military Romanticism: China and the Korean War, 1950-1953 (University Press of Kansas, 1995)
Primary sources
- Bassett, Richard M. And the Wind Blew Cold: The Story of an American POW in North Korea. Kent State U. Press, 2002. 117 pp.
- Bin Yu and Xiaobing Li, eds Mao's Generals Remember Korea , University Press of Kansas, 2001, hardcover 328 pages, ISBN 0-7006-1095-2
- S. L. A. Marshall, The River and the Gauntlet (1953) on combat
- Matthew B. Ridgway, The Korean War (1967).
See also
- Korean War order of battle
- Battles of the Korean War
- Korean People's Army
- North Korean Air Force
- North Korean Navy
External links
- The Center for the Study of the Korean War
- Korean Children's War Memorial
- Pres. Truman Library documents on his Wake Island meeting with Gen. MacArthur
- Calvin College on the Impact of the War on the Korean People
- Facts and texts on the War
- BBC: American Military Conduct in the Korean War
- Atrocities against Americans in the Korean War
- Atrocities by Americans in the Korean War
- Quicktime sequence of 27 maps adapted from the West Point Atlas of American Wars showing the dynamics of the front.
- A Korean War Stat Lingers Long After It Was Corrected
- Animation for operations in 1950
- Animation for operations in 1951
- POW films, brainwashing and the Korean War
- Maps of the Korean War from the US Military Academy West Point
- Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and the Cold War (Korean War)
- CBC Digital Archives - Forgotten Heroes: Canada and the Korean War
- Korean War Commemoration
- FAQ from a Chinese perspective
- Chinese 50th Anniversary Korean War Memorial
- www.roll-of-honour.com - Searchable database of British Casualties during the Korean War 1951-1953
- http://www.acepilots.com/russian/rus_aces.html
- US Casualites in Korea by State
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