A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE KOREAN WAR
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        PACIFIC STARS & STRIPES
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			[Editor’s Note: The following verbatim, but only partial (June 25, 1950-March 30, 1953), 
        history of the war in Korea was published in a special edition of Pacific Stars and Stripes. The credit 
        for the content of "The War in Korea" article goes to that magazine.]  
		THE WAR IN KOREA - JUNE 25, 1950 TO MARCH 1953
        The Korean War, touched off on June 25, 1950, by the sudden, treacherous attack upon the tiny Republic of 
        Korea by Communist North Korean forces, brought together forces of more than a score of free countries under the 
        battle flag of the United Nations. For more than two and a half years, these land, sea, and air forces have 
        fought the Communists on the divided Korean peninsula as part of the United Nations Command. 
        First United States troops rushed to the battle zone from Japan in early July, 1950, were from the 24th 
        Infantry Division. "Task Force Smith," commanded by Lt. Col. Charles B. Smith, consisting of elements of 
        Companies B and C, 21st Infantry Regiment, a battery of 105 howitzers from the 52d Field Artillery Battalion, 
        plus some mortars, 2.36-inch bazookas, and recoilless rifles, reached Pusan on July 2, 1950, and moved up to 
        meet the Korean Communist forces pouring down from the north. Overwhelming numbers of well-armed, well-trained 
        North Korean soldiers, spearheaded by Russian-made T-34 tanks, hit the small U.S. force on the morning of July 5 
        and forced a withdrawal. By this time, other elements of the 24th had reached Korea and joined "Task Force 
        Smith" in its efforts to halt the North Korean advance.  
        The enemy was demonstrating surprising strength by this time. He had plenty of tanks, artillery, and mortars; 
        his infantry was well-trained, tough, and aggressive, and his tactics were well-planned and executed. In the 
        face of this superiority in numbers and offensive weapons, U.S. troops fought back valiantly, withdrawing only 
        when threatened with encirclement and making the enemy pay for every inch of yielded ground.  
        These delaying tactics gained time for the arrival of other U.S. units in Korea, and while the enemy was not 
        stopped, he was forced to slow down his timetable, which called for seizure of the entire peninsula within weeks 
        of his first break across the 38th parallel.  
        On July 7, 1950, the commanding general of Eighth Army, Lt. Gen. Walton H. Walker, arrived in Taejon. On July 
        12, Gen. Walker was named by General of the Army Douglas MacArthur as ground commander in Korea, and on July 13, 
        EUSAK—Eighth United States Army Korea—was established. Before that date, the United States Army Forces in Korea 
        (USAFIK) was commanded by Maj. Gen. William F. Dean, commander of the 24th Division. On July 24, 1950, Gen. 
        MacArthur, with the authority vested in him by President Truman in response to a resolution of the United 
        Nations Security Council, established the United Nations Command with headquarters in Tokyo.  
        Meanwhile, other U.S. divisions were being dispatched to Korea. By July 15 all combat elements of the 25th 
        Division were either in or going to Korea. The 1st Cavalry Division landed at Pohang-dong on the east coast of 
        Korea on July 18, 1950, to join the fighting.  
        The North Koreans crossed the Kum River despite all efforts to stop them and, on July 20, the key city of 
        Taejon fell into enemy hands.  
        Gen. Dean, who was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his part in this fight, was wounded and taken 
        prisoner while defending Taejon. U.S. and Republic of Korea forces were able to blast the enemy’s tank 
        spearheads with the newly-arrived 3.5 inch-bazooka and resist frontal attacks, but the enveloping and 
        infiltration tactics skillfully employed by the enemy kept compressing the defending troops into a smaller and 
        smaller area.  
        The desperate stand by U.S. and R.O.K. units during this period was marked by innumerable acts of individual 
        heroism and sacrifice. And time was running out for the North Koreans. With each day of battle that passed, 
        their chances of driving the defenders of freedom into the sea lessened, for reinforcements and new weapons were 
        on their way to embattled Eighth Army.  
        Two battalions of the 29th Infantry Regiment arrived in Korea from Okinawa on July 25 and were thrown into 
        the line against the Reds. Six days later, the 5th Regimental Combat Team came from Hawaii. A full strength, 
        battle-ready division, the 2d Infantry, was on its way from the ZI, while the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade was 
        also headed for the Korean battlefront.  
        In order to establish stronger defensive positions, the Eighth Army broke contact with the enemy on the night 
        of July 31 and withdrew to positions inside the natural defenses offered by the Naktong River. By August 4, the 
        withdrawal was complete. The 25th Division took up positions on the left south flank of the line in the Masan 
        area. The 24th Division extended from the Naktong-Nam River junction to the north. The 1st Cavalry was on the 
        right of the 24th, its right flank west of Taegu. From there the line curved to the north and then east, 
        anchoring on the coast at Yongdok. The ROK 1st, 6th, 8th, Capitol, and 3d Divisions held the northern sector in 
        that order. It was on this line, known as the Pusan Perimeter, that Gen. Walker issued his famed "Stand or Die" 
        ultimatum.  
        The six weeks that the Eighth Army spent inside the Pusan Perimeter was a period of fighting brush fires with 
        an inadequate number of firemen. The forces under Gen. Walker’s command were too small even to man the defense 
        lines completely. To offset this situation and to put out the fires along the perimeter, great mobility was 
        required. This mobility was provided by a rail and road net maintained and operated by U.S. service troops.  
        The enemy’s main effort against the Pusan Perimeter was made along the Taejon-Taegu axis. A diversionary 
        attack was ordered toward Chinju to ease the pressure on Taegu and on Aug. 7, "Task Force Kean," led by Maj. 
        Gen. William H. Kean and composed of elements of his 25th Division; the newly arrived 1st Provisional Marine 
        Brigade, and the 5th RCT, undertook the first U.S. and ROK offensive of the war. Although hampered by enemy 
        infiltration, the task force nevertheless pushed the North Koreans back to Chinju by Aug. 11, defeating the 
        North Korean 6th Division and eliminating a serious threat to the U.N. command.  
        A series of climatic, fanatic, never quite successful attacks by the North Koreans continued throughout the 
        entire period as Eighth Army clung desperately to its last toe hold on the Korean peninsula. The enemy forced a 
        crossing of the Naktong in the 24th Division area but was contained and finally forced back on August 17 by 
        efforts of the 24th Division, the 9th Regiment of the 2d Division, and the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade. 
        Fierce fighting raged on the north flank as the ROK divisions lost, then regained, Pohang-gong. Taegu was 
        threatened in mid-August when the North Koreans attempted to storm down the "Bowling Alley," as the straight 
        stretch of valley from Waegwan to Taegun became known. The 1st Cavalry Division assisted by the 27th Infantry 
        Regiment, 25th Division, beat back all the furious enemy assaults down the "Bowling Alley" and by Aug. 23 this 
        threat to Taegu was removed. The British 27th Brigade, which had arrived in Pusan on August 29 from Hong Kong, 
        went into the line on the left of the 1st Cavalry Division.  
        This brigade, the 1st Cavalry Division, the 24th Division, and the ROK 1st Division were organized as the 
        U.S. I Corps. The heaviest attack of all the North Korean efforts to push the U.N. into the sea hit the 
        perimeter on the night of August 31 and continued during the next week of September. This all-out attempt was 
        launched in two phases—a drive on the extreme left flank on Aug. 31 and on the extreme right of the Eighth Army 
        on the night of September 3. The enemy threw everything he had left, but by masterly use of reserves, and by 
        sheer courage and determination, the U.N. forces withstood the enemy offensiveness. Time ran out for the North 
        Korean Communists in mid-September.  
        The U.N. Takes the Offensive
        On September 15, 1950, in one of the most successful and certainly the most delicately timed amphibious 
        operations ever conducted, U.S. Marines of the 1st Marine Division, following in the wake of a terrific naval 
        bombardment, stormed ashore deep in enemy territory at Inchon. Enemy defenses were no match for the terrific 
        concentration of naval, air, and infantry power, and within hours the port of Inchon fell. By Sept. 17, the 
        entire 1st Marine Division was ashore and the 7th Infantry Division was being landed. Under the command of Maj. 
        Gen. Edward M. Almond, ground elements, now designated X Corps, rapidly consolidated the entire area. On the 
        morning of Sept. 24, regiments of the 1st Marines and the 7th Division pushed across the Han River against 
        fierce enemy resistance and forced their way into the streets of Seoul. The battle for Seoul raged until Sept. 
        26 when Gen. MacArthur announced the fall of the city, formally restoring the battered capital to South Korean 
        President Rhee on Sept. 29.  
        A coordinated overland drive by Eighth Army, free now from the Pusan Perimeter, netted thousands of enemy 
        prisoners. It had a large area to capture, but by Sept. 22 the principal enemy resistance was overcome and all 
        units began to fan out rapidly. On that date, too, IX Corps became operational, taking over the U.S. 2d and 25th 
        Divisions. A task force from the 1st Cavalry Division, racing northward through enemy territory, made contact 
        with elements of the 7th Division from X Corps on the evening of Sept. 26 slightly south of Suwon. This juncture 
        of forces sealed the fate of North Korean forces to the south and resulted in the breaking of organized enemy 
        resistance generally south of Seoul.  
        By the end of September, the enemy had relinquished control of practically all territory south of the 38th 
        parallel. The retreat of the North Korean army had degenerated gradually into a rout; the U.N. forces by the end 
        of the month controlled a territory over four times greater than they had held at the time of the Inchon 
        landing. During the latter part of September, Eighth Army was reinforced by a battalion each of Philippine and 
        Australian troops, and early in October the U.S. 3d Infantry Division arrived in the Far East Command.  
        U.N. forces drove north of the 38th Parallel in early October, with the ROK 3d Division crossing on the east 
        coast on Oct. 1 and the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division penetrating North Korean territory above Kaesong on Oct. 9. A 
        planned amphibious encirclement to be launched at Wonsan resulted in the withdrawal of X Corps forces from the 
        ground action in early October, with Eighth Army taking over across the entire peninsula. Advances during 
        October were so rapid that Pyongyang, the enemy capital, fell on Oct. 19. The day after Pyongyang fell, U.N. 
        forces made the first paratroop attack of the war, when the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team dropped at 
        Sukchon and Sumchon, 25 miles north of Pyongyang.  
        ROK forces advancing up the east coast had made phenomenal gains, capturing the port of Wonsan on Oct. 10 and 
        taking Hamhung and Hungnam on Oct. 18. These victories changed the planned assault landing at Wonsan to an 
        administrative-type landing and on Oct. 26, U.S. Marines landed at Wonsan against no resistance. Three days 
        later the U.S. 7th Division went ashore at Iwon under similar conditions. All units drove inland or northward: 
        the Marines striking toward the Choshin [sic] reservoir, the 7th Division to the northwest, while the Capitol 
        and ROK 3d Divisions swept toward the Manchurian border. By the morning of Nov. 21, a small task force of the 
        17th Infantry Regiment, 7th Division, had reached the Yalu River at Hyesanjin. Three weeks earlier, the 7th 
        Regiment of the ROK 6th Division had reached the Yalu at Chosan [sic].  
        Elsewhere in Korea, units of Eighth Army by mid-November had moved northward across the western half of Korea 
        and were within striking distance of the Yalu. An attack was under preparation for Nov. 24. In the mountainous 
        and rugged east coast areas, units of X Corps, the 1st U.S. Marine Division, the 7th Division, the newly arrived 
        3d Division, and ROK divisions were cutting their way toward the northernmost borders of Korea.  
        The Chinese Attack
        During the latter part of October and throughout November, reports had been received of Chinese troops 
        operating within Korea as "volunteers." It was known that these troops were crossing the Yalu in increasing 
        numbers, but it was believed that they were merely a token force and that the Chinese Communist forces, known to 
        be present in Manchuria, would not intervene on a large scale.  
        The U.N. attack of Nov. 24 forced the Chinese hand. They struck at advancing Eighth Army and X Corps troops 
        in full force. By Nov. 28, 30 Chinese Communist divisions had slammed into U.N. forces across the entire front. 
        So great was their numerical strength—literally hundreds of thousands of fresh, well-equipped troops—that U.N. 
        divisions were forced to fall back to avoid complete encirclement and destruction. On the east coast, X Corps 
        came under heavy attack by 12 Chinese divisions, compelling it to withdraw all its units into a bridgehead area 
        around Hamhung and Hungnam. This left Eighth Army’s right flank unprotected and presented the grave danger of 
        CCF moving around it to cut off all escape routes to the south. It was a new war.  
        In the face of these developments, Eighth Army withdrew rapidly and broke contact with the new enemy. At 0630 
        on Dec. 5, the Royal Ulster Rifles Battalion of the United Kingdom 39th Brigade—the last friendly unit to 
        evacuate Pyongyang—fell back across the Taedong River running through that city and continued rear guard action. 
        Every effort was made to destroy supplies and equipment north of the Taedong which could not be brought with the 
        retreating forces.  
        While Eighth Army had been withdrawing, X Corps had been making preparations for evacuation by water from 
        their precarious positions around Hamhung. The U.S. 1st Marine Division, which had been trapped by large Chinese 
        forces, made a valiant fighting debauchment during the bitter sub-zero weather of early December. They were 
        joined by elements of the U.S. 7th Division, also fighting off entrapment. Together these forces fought their 
        way south through the swarming Chinese to Hamhung.  
        It was one of the most dramatic actions of the war, provoking the now famous retort of Marines’ commander, 
        Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Smith, "Retreat, hell! We’re only attacking in another direction."  
        With the U.S. 3d Division holding the final perimeter, and land and naval gunfire hitting the attacking 
        enemy, X Corps completed the evacuation of 105,000 military personnel, 91,000 civilian refugees, 17,500 vehicles 
        and 350,000 tons of equipment by Dec. 24.  X Corps was placed under control of Eighth Army upon its debarkation 
        in South Korea. Final elements of this Corps closed in South Korea on Christmas Day.  
        Gen. Walker, Eighth Army commander, was killed in a jeep accident on Dec. 23. He was replaced by Lt. Gen. 
        Matthew B. Ridgway, who arrived in Korea to assume command of Eighth Army on Dec. 26, 1950.  
        Although Eighth Army had extricated its forces from the threat of envelopment by falling back 150 miles and 
        had taken up positions across the peninsula south of the 38th parallel, the situation was still dangerous. There 
        weren’t enough troops to span the peninsula, and the enemy was building up for an all-out attack to smash Eighth 
        Army.  
        Late on New Year’s eve, the enemy’s long awaited general offensive began with a series of attacks against the 
        ROK 6th Division south of Yonchon. The enemy gathered momentum and forced the Eighth Army back all along the 
        front. Seoul fell to the Chinese on Jan. 4. For the rest of the month it was touch and go, with the U.N. 
        fighting men stiffening their resistance daily and with desperate battles for such key communications centers as 
        Wonju marking the first weeks of the new year. But Eighth Army held, and the enemy was unable to achieve his 
        objectives.  
        Despite the many tactical reverses they had suffered since the entry of CCF units into the Korean War, the 
        fighting spirit of U.N. troops never wavered. That spirit was strengthened and increased with each yielded foot 
        of ground until, by mid-January, 1951, Eighth Army’s men and officers were more determined than ever before to 
        attack rather than withdraw and to carry the fight to the enemy. The Chinese had suffered enormous casualties; 
        their supply lines were under constant attack by U.N. air. For them, as for the North Koreans six months before, 
        time was running out.  
        Gen. Ridgway, Eighth Army commander, set the stage for the next months of combat operation by his army when 
        he said, in initiating the first coordinated offensive by forces under his command, "We are not interested in 
        real estate. We are interested only in inflicting maximum casualties to the enemy with minimum casualties to 
        ourselves. To do this we must wage a war of maneuver—slashing at the enemy when he withdraws and fighting 
        delaying action when he attacks."  
        Eighth Army did just that. And with great success. During the 18 days of this first new offensive until the 
        Han River line was regained on Feb. 12, Eighth Army inflicted an estimated 70,000 casualties on the enemy. But 
        casualties notwithstanding, the enemy was still a formidable fighting machine. On Feb. 11, in sub-zero weather, 
        the Chinese struck hard at the central sector toward Wonju, which was held by the 187th RCT: a battalion of the 
        17th Infantry, 7th Division; and the ROK 18th Regiment, ROK 3d Division, attempting to force that strong point 
        and split the U.N. forces down the center. To the west of this point they struck also at Chipyongni, an isolated 
        pocket manned by the 2d Division’s 23d RCT and the French battalion. Attack after attack against these areas was 
        beaten back through the heroic efforts of the gallant men of these units. The Air Force gave outstanding aid to 
        the ground troops by air drops and by night and day tactical support. The key area was held, and Chinese units 
        in the fight were annihilated.  
        Taking full advantage of the enemy’s weakened condition after their abortive assault, Gen. Ridgway ordered 
        his forces forward along the entire front in "Operation Killer." This operation swept the Chinese and North 
        Koreans back, taking a great toll of their men and equipment. By the end of February, Eighth Army was back on a 
        line overlooking the Han River and preparing to advance again.  
        Throughout March, U.N. forces continued to gain ground methodically as the enemy retired in disorder, making 
        an occasional stand, but losing heavily in men and supply. On Mar. 15, the 15th Regiment of the ROK 1st Division 
        sent patrols into Seoul and raised the flag of the Republic of Korea over the capitol. The 8th Cavalry Regiment, 
        1st Cavalry Division, pushed into Chunchon on Mar. 22, and the following day the 187th RCT jumped into the 
        Munsan area in an attempt to cut off any enemy forces still south of the river. The enemy, scurrying northward, 
        was becoming hard to find, and by the end of March some U.N. units had again crossed the 38th Parallel.  
        The absence of enemy contact was taken as an indication that the enemy was merely licking his wounds and that 
        he was building up for a counter-offensive at the first opening. This obvious build-up in rear areas made it 
        imperative to keep him off balance by establishing a strong line from which punishing sorties could be made. 
        Gen. Ridgway, therefore, ordered his troops to move forward to a line running along the commanding terrain just 
        north of the 38th Parallel. This line, approximately 115 miles long, included 14 miles of tidal area on its left 
        flank and a 12-mile expanse of the Hwachon Reservoir in the center. The terrain on the right flank was extremely 
        rugged, practically devoid of roads and difficult for both friend and foe to traverse. This shortened the line 
        and permitted greater depth for U.N. attack or defense operations.  
        Once this line was gained, in a series of steady, unspectacular gains with maximum casualties being inflicted 
        on the Reds, an operation was initiated to continue the Army’s offensive in the west. This operation was 
        calculated to neutralize the famed "Iron Triangle," an enemy supply and communications center enclosed within a 
        triangular area formed by the three cities of Chorwon-Pyonggang-Kumhwa. The fight toward Chorwon by Eighth Army 
        was a foot-by-foot, hand-to-hand struggle. Determined enemy delaying forces were overcome with grenades and 
        bayonets in close-in fighting as the advance on the "Iron Triangle" continued. In the center of the line, U.N. 
        forces fought to Hwachon and captured the reservoir. Before withdrawing, the Chinese opened the flood gates in a 
        fruitless effort to swell the Pukhan River and thereby form a water barrier in the west-central sector.  
        By April 20, U.N. forces had reached a pre-designated phase line immediately south of the triangle, and 
        Eighth Army troops in the center and on the east coast began coming up on the line. Enemy supply installations 
        within the triangle were neutralized and destroyed.  
        On Apr. 11, Gen. Ridgway had been named Commander in Chief, United Nations Command, taking over from Gen. 
        MacArthur, and Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet had succeeded him as Eighth army commander. The Korean conflict 
        continued to be fought with the tactics perfected during the winter months, and U.N. forces continued to move 
        slowly but relentlessly forward with greatest possible lateral security, inflicting heavy losses on the enemy. 
        But the Reds were far from being whipped.  
        On Apr. 22, 1951, Gen. VanFleet held his first press conference. In discussing the enemy’s capabilities, he 
        said, "The enemy is closer and in greater numbers than ever before. We can expect the attack at any minute." 
        That night the Communists struck with full force. So great was the initial power of the enemy’s attack that a 
        deep penetration of U.N. lines in the west-central section was achieved in its early stages, forcing Eighth Army 
        to withdraw as much as 40 miles to maintain maximum security of forces. The enemy was never able to exploit his 
        gains, however, and, in the face of coldly efficient killing tactics employed by a rejuvenated Eighth Army, each 
        enemy threat was reduced and overcome. When the enemy attack sputtered out on Apr 29, the U.N. lines formed an 
        arc just north of Seoul, stretching due east for 20 miles, then northeast to the coast near Yangyang. This 
        offensive, which the enemy loudly proclaimed as his Fifth Phase offensive, had failed, but Red capabilities were 
        still considerable.  
        The Eighth Army had met an attack by a quarter of a million Communist troops, but by a combination of air 
        support, tank and artillery fire, and infantry tenacity, had inflicted 20,000 enemy casualties and maintained 
        its lines intact. For the next week, strong patrols roamed 10 to 12 miles in front of U.N. lines, attempting to 
        contact the enemy, generally with negligible results. By early May, limited offensives were again being 
        conducted by Eighth Army and steady methodical advances were made against enemy delaying forces who resisted 
        fanatically one day and vanished the next.  
        Again, this lack of general enemy contact and the tenor of incoming intelligence reports indicated that the 
        enemy was still hopeful of driving the U.N. out of Korea with another surge of its Fifth Phase offensive. On May 
        16, the Chinese made their final play. Five CCF armies struck along the boundary of U.S. X Corps and ROK III 
        Corps. The impact of the enemy’s blow wedged his troops between these units and created a situation which for 
        several days was precarious. The penetration along the Corps boundaries subjected the U.S. 2d Division to attack 
        from two sides, severed the MSR, and established a roadblock behind its 23d and 38th Regiments. The 9th Regiment 
        of the 2d Division plunged northward to reduce the roadblock, and the two sister regiments with their attached 
        French and Netherlands Battalions fought southward along the MSR, broke the trap, and organized a defense line 
        south of Hangye—a line which the enemy was never able to breach. On other sectors of the front, lesser enemy 
        attacks were contained more easily until the enemy, exhausted, casualty ridden, and in serious supply 
        difficulties, reduced the pressure of his attack, then began to withdraw. An immediate Eighth Army counterattack 
        which developed into a pursuit, caught the enemy in his withdrawal, disorganized his forces, and caused him 
        tremendous losses in personnel. The much-vaunted Fifth Phase offensive ended in a smashing defeat for the 
        Communists and broke their offensive power for months to come.  
        By May 27, Inje and Hwachon were again in U.N. hands and the enemy’s main escape route from the area south of 
        the Hwachon reservoir was severed. But a combination of rain, mud, and enemy delaying action impeded the closing 
        of many other escape routes and prevented the complete destruction or seizure of the enemy’s supply bases.  
        Nevertheless, the initiative on the field of battle was now with the Eighth Army and remained there for the 
        rest of 1951. By the end of May, all ground lost as a result of enemy drives had been retaken and it had been 
        clearly demonstrated that the Communists did not have the power to defeat the Eighth Army. Nevertheless, the 
        enemy resisted stubbornly wherever his supply installations or routes were threatened. The Eighth Army was able 
        to advance with comparative ease, however, in those areas where withdrawal cost the enemy nothing more than 
        Korean real estate.  
        On June 13, two tank-infantry task forces, one from the U.S. 3d Division, another from the 25th Division, 
        advanced from Chorwon and Kumhwa, respectively, and effected a link-up in the city of Pyonggang that afternoon. 
        Except for a few rounds of mortar fire along the Kumhwa-Pyonggang road, no enemy activity was encountered. It 
        was evident that the enemy had evacuated his supplies and equipment and, in keeping with his tactical doctrine, 
        had relinquished the territory to Eighth Army.  
        Negotiation
        Coincidentally with the reversal of Communist fortunes on the field of battle in Korea, came a strong 
        indication that the enemy was prepared to settle the problem of a unified Korea through negotiation rather than 
        through fighting. In a radio speech, Russian delegate to U.N., Jacob A. Malik, on June 14, 1951, hinted that the 
        Soviet Union favored settlement in Korea through arbitration. Since the United Nations was also of the opinion 
        that solution through conference was immeasurably better, if it could be achieved, than continued waste of human 
        lives, and since it was hoped there might be some grain of sincerity behind the Communist offer, arrangements 
        were made for a meeting of representatives of both sides with the mission of settling by arbitration an issue 
        which one year of bitter combat had failed to resolve.  
        On July 10, 1951, the first plenary session of delegates from the U.N., headed by Adm. C. Turner Joy, 
        Commander Naval Forces Far East, and from the Chinese and North Korean Communists, headed by North Korean Gen. 
        Nam Il, met at the city of Kaesong. Since that date, in the face of all efforts and concessions made by the 
        United Nations Command, the Communists have succeeded in delaying and stalling on the negotiations until, in the 
        final analysis, no armistice was possible. Employing every deceitful device in their well-stocked bag of tricks, 
        the Communist negotiators have falsified, equivocated, propagandized, threatened, pouted, and raged. Not once in 
        over 100 plenary sessions at Kaesong and later at Panmunjom did they demonstrate the slightest concrete evidence 
        of good faith in the negotiations or of a real willingness to bring an end of the conflict on any but their own 
        terms. Certain superficial agreements they made were forced on them or obtained by the U.N. through concession.
         
        When all else failed and it appeared that the pressure of world-wide public opinion might force the Reds to 
        come to an agreement, they took refuge behind a vociferous refusal to condone the U.N.’s humanitarian policies 
        with regard to repatriation of prisoners of war, a sandbar in the river of agreement. Belying their loudly 
        professed regard for the welfare of these prisoners, the Communists until March, 1953, insisted that prisoners 
        must be forced to return to their control without regard for the individual’s wishes in the matter, a principle 
        which the U.N. would not tolerate. Their patience stretched to the breaking point, Allied delegates, then headed 
        by Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, on Oct. 8, 1952, notified their Communist counterparts that they would attend 
        no more meetings until the Reds agreed with the U.N. plan calling for prisoner repatriation according to each 
        POW’s wishes, or until the Communists came up with some other acceptable plan.  
        During the ensuing deadlock, the Western world’s concern for human misery and individual rights further 
        manifested itself on Dec. 13, 1952, when the League of Red Cross Societies in Geneva urged both sides in the 
        conflict to exchange seriously sick and wounded POWs—a move repeatedly requested by the U.N. delegates to the 
        peace talks in the past. Gen. Mark W. Clark followed up the Red Cross action when he wrote the Red leaders in 
        Korea on Feb. 22, 1953, that the UNC was prepared to make the suggested exchange. But before Gen. Clark’s letter 
        was answered, the world’s newspapers were filled with the story of Soviet Premier Josef Stalin’s death and the 
        subsequent re-arranging of the USSR hierarchy. Then, on Mar. 28, 1953, North Korean Premier Gen. Kim Il Sung and 
        Chinese Gen. Peng Tch-huai answered Gen. Clark’s letter with one of their own in which they agreed to the 
        exchange of sick and wounded war prisoners.  
        They also hinted that the exchange might pave the way to a smooth settlement of the entire POW question. 
        Communist China’s foreign minister Chou En-lai, just returned from Stalin’s funeral at Moscow, further raised 
        hope for removing the POW-return roadblock by announcing that China might be willing to compromise on the 
        forcible repatriation issue. He suggested that those prisoners who did not want to return to their homelands 
        might be sent to a "neutral" country.  
        Hope for an early settlement again rose in the opposing armed camps, and the recent bitter fighting for such 
        terrain promontories as Old Baldy and Vegas Hills subsided again to patrol action. During the period from the 
        beginning of armistice negotiations in July, 1951, until April, 1953, no major ground offensives were launched 
        by either side. Both sides, however, initiated limited offensives for key terrain features, resulting in some of 
        the fiercest and bloodiest battles of modern history. Such actions as Bloody and Heartbreak Ridge, the see-saw 
        battles for T-Bone, Vegas, Old Baldy, Kelly Hills and dozens of other localized combat operations since July, 
        1951. Taking advantage of the comparative respite induced by the negotiations, the Communists built up their 
        depleted ground forces, strengthened their defenses, created vast stocks of supplies, and made great strides in 
        increasing their artillery and air potentials.  
        The phenomenal development of the Republic of Korea Army from its not-encouraging beginnings in 1950 to the 
        remarkably efficient and determined fighting machine it is today is an encouraging sign of things to come.  
        In December, 1951, action was begun to move to Korea two fresh U.S. divisions, the 40th and the 45th 
        Divisions, National Guard units which had been training in Japan. The new units were placed in the line by 
        increment, with the 45th completely replacing the 1st Cavalry Division by Dec. 29, 1951, and the 40th Division 
        taking over from the 24th Division by Feb. 3, 1952 Both the 1st Cavalry and the 24th were returned to Japan.  
        Gen. VanFleet relinquished command of his beloved Army to an old comrade-in-arms, Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, 
        on February 11, 1953.  
        The U.N. Fighting Team
        Member nations of the United Nations other than the United States furnished troops to the United Nations 
        Command throughout the campaign.  
        The British Commonwealth 27th Brigade was the first non-U.S., non-ROK unit to arrive and see action in Korea. 
        It landed on Aug. 29, 1950, and went into the line on the Naktong River west of Taegu. The 3d Battalion, Royal 
        Australian Regiment, reached Korea on Sept. 28, 1950, and was attached to the 27th Brigade. The United Kingdom 
        29th Brigade, which arrived in November, 1950, covered the January, 1951, evacuation of Seoul and 
        counter-attacked vigorously before being ordered back across the Han. Canada’s 2d Battalion, Princess Patricia’s 
        Canadian Light Infantry, landed on Dec. 18, 1950, joining the 27th Brigade in February on the west central 
        front. In May, 1951, additional units from Canada arrived and the Canadian 25th Infantry Brigade Group entered 
        combat in Korea. Also present from Commonwealth forces was the New Zealand Artillery Battalion, which had 
        arrived on Dec. 31, 1950. The 28th Infantry Brigade replaced the 27th Brigade in April, 1951. In late July, 
        1951, all units of the British Commonwealth were united to form the Commonwealth 1st Division.  
        The Philippine Expeditionary Force—a battalion combat team—reached Korea on Sept. 19, 1950, and is presently
        [Editor’s Note: Remember, this history covers only to March, 1953.] attached to the 
        U.S. 45th Division. The Turkish Brigade was first committed east of Kunu-ri when the Chinese attacked in late 
        November. The Thailand Battalion landed on Nov. 7, 1950, and on Nov. 24, moved to the Pyongyang area where it 
        was attached to the 187th RCT and later to the 1st Cavalry Division and U.S. 2d Division. The Netherlands 
        Battalion arrived on Nov. 23, 1950, and saw its first engagement early in January with the U.S. 38th Regiment at 
        Wonju. The French Battalion arrived on Nov. 29 and with the U.S. 23d Regiment fought valiantly at Chipyong-ni. 
        The Greek Battalion landed on Dec. 9, 1950, and went into action on the western front during the first week of 
        February, 1951, with the 1st Cavalry Division. A battalion from Belgium and Luxembourg arrived on Jan. 31, 1950, 
        and was attached to the United Kingdom’s 29th Brigade and are now fighting with the U.S. 3d Division. The 
        Ethiopian Battalion arrived on May 6, 1951, followed a month later by the Colombian Battalion which disembarked 
        in Korea on June 14, 1951, and both were attached to the 7th Division. 
        A recapitulation of United Nations forces furnished by member nations of the U.N. other than U.S. or R.O.K. 
        follows: 
        
          Ground Forces
          
            - Australia
 
            - Belgium
 
            - Canada
 
            - Colombia
 
            - Greece
 
            - Luxembourg
 
            - France
 
            - Netherlands
 
            - New Zealand
 
            - Philippines
 
            - Ethiopia
 
            - United Kingdom
 
            - Turkey
 
            - Thailand
 
           
          Air Force Units
          
            - Australia
 
            - Greece
 
            - Thailand
 
            - Union of South Africa
 
           
          Naval Units
          
            - Australia
 
            - Canada
 
            - Colombia
 
            - France
 
            - Netherlands
 
            - New Zealand
 
            - Thailand
 
           
          Medical Units
          
            - Denmark
 
            - India
 
            - Italy (not U.N. member)
 
            - Norway
 
            - Sweden
 
           
         
           | 
       
      
        
        The Navy in the Korean Waters
         | 
       
      
        
        Prepared by Pacific Stars & Stripes
        When the North Korean Communists invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950, only a few undermanned warships were 
        in the Far East. There was one cruiser—the Juneau—and four destroyers—the Mansfield, Dehaven, Collett and 
        Swenson—in Japanese waters. The Seventh Fleet at that time operating out of the Philippines under the command of 
        Vice Adm. Arthur D. Struble, consisted of the Essex class carrier Valley Forge, the heavy cruiser Rochester, a 
        squadron of eight destroyers, three submarines, and some auxiliary vessels. About 10 British Commonwealth ships 
        were in Japanese ports at the time. In a matter of weeks, however, this force was expanded to about 400 vessels.
         
        A unit of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, the Seventh Fleet is assigned to the area commander, at present Gen. Mark 
        W. Clark. Vice Adm. Robert P. Briscoe, commander of naval forces in the Far East, exercises operational control 
        of the fleet while the Seventh Fleet commander, Vice Adm. Joseph J. Clark, exercises tactical control. This 
        control is further broken down by giving on-the-spot tactical control to the task force commanders within the 
        fleet.  
        The major task forces are Task Force 77, the fast carrier force; Task Force 90, the amphibious force; Task 
        Force 95, the blockading and escort force, and the logistic support force, which includes the tankers and 
        tenders and other support craft. The support force, which numbers nearly a hundred ships, provides the fuel, 
        ammunition, food, and the thousands of other items needed to carry a war to the enemy. Fighting ships are 
        replenished as near the scene of action as possible.  
        Primary mission of the carrier force is to smash the enemy supply lines and provide close air and naval 
        gunfire support for the ground forces. Targets for the planes depend largely on the ground fighting. If ground 
        activity is slack, emphasis is placed on interdiction. Conversely, if the ground forces are under heavy 
        pressure, Navy planes are used for close air support.  
        The blockade and escort force prevents the enemy from providing logistical support to his forces by sea, and 
        furnishes escorts for our own support force ships. The duties of this force are more varied than those of any 
        other part of the fleet. Its commander has assigned to him escort carriers, cruisers, destroyers, destroyer 
        escorts, frigates, tenders, and the mine sweepers. Such a force of ships obviously can perform a wide variety of 
        tasks.  
        The amphibious forces with their attack transports, landing ships (some equipped to launch rockets), patrol 
        craft, and special groups like the naval beach groups, underwater demolition teams, and boat units, have been an 
        important factor in determining naval strategy. This force at present is commanded by Rear Adm. W.E. Moore. 
        The Formosa force, which had as its mission the neutralization of Formosa, continues as an effective force 
        with a revised mission. Navy land-and-sea-based patrol squadrons serve as the eyes of the fleet with almost 
        daily reconnaissance missions over wide areas of the Far East.  
        Of vital importance to ship movements along both coasts of Korea have been the incomparable mine sweepers, 
        the "lightweights" of the fleet. Often close inshore under the muzzles of Red shore batteries, they have slugged 
        it out with the enemy guns while clearing coastal waters. At Wonsan during the early days of the campaign, one 
        ship was lost for every 25 mines swept.  
        Many other ships and men have performed their duties with valor and brilliance. Navy corpsmen have slogged 
        with the infantry and the hospital ship has truly been a haven for the wounded.  
        Outstanding Events of the First Year
        The first naval punch at the enemy invaders was delivered by the cruiser Juneau against positions near 
        Samchok on June 28, 1950, only three days after the invasion. A few days later, an Australian air unit and a 
        British fleet unit joined U.S. and ROK forces in Korea.  
        Task Force 77 launched its first planes of the war from the carrier Valley Forge on July 3, marking the first 
        time in history that carrier jet aircraft were used in combat. These first sorties blasted an airfield and its 
        facilities at the North Korean capital city of Pyongyang and damaged or destroyed a dozen enemy planes. This 
        force was commanded by Rear Adm. John M. Hoskins, who lost his right leg along with his ship, the carrier 
        Princeton, off Leyte during World War II.  
        On July 19, the fleet supported an unopposed landing of the 15th Infantry Division and the 1st Cavalry 
        Division, conducted at Pohang-dong—by Task Force 90.  
        By the end of July, naval forces from Australia, The Netherlands, France, Canada, and New Zealand had joined 
        those of the U.S., ROK, and the United Kingdom. Colombian, Thailand, and Denmark units were to join later. The 
        carrier Philippine Sea had joined the Valley Forge by this time, and the carriers, as part of Task Force 77, 
         joined the surface ships to roam the Korean coasts, slashing supply lines, front-line enemy positions, and 
        supply build-ups. The steady and methodical pounding of enemy targets by naval elements continued throughout 
        August and into September.  
        On September 11, Joint Task Force 7 was formed under the command of Adm. Struble with the task of seizing by 
        amphibious assault, occupying, and defending a beachhead in the Inchon area. Further, the task force would 
        transport, land, and support the seizure by X Corps of Inchon, Kimpo airfield, and Seoul.  
        On September 13, the pre-invasion bombardment force, consisting of the U.S. cruisers Rochester and Toledo, 
        British cruisers Jamaica and Kenya, plus the U.S. destroyers Mansfield, Dehaven, Gurke, Swenson, Collett, and 
        Henderson, rendezvoused off Inchon. Shortly after midday, planes of Task Force 77, under the command of Rear 
        Adm. E.C. Ewen, struck Wolmi-do, a wooded island in the entrance to Inchon harbor. Then the cruisers and 
        destroyers opened up on the beach. Carrier planes, cruisers, and destroyers hurled shells and bombs into enemy 
        positions most of the next day.  
        Then on Sept. 15—after a rendezvous with the attack force commander—with Rear Adm. J.R. Doyle in the 
        amphibious command ship Mount McKinley brilliantly conducting the amphibious aspects of the operation, the 
        bombardment group went into Inchon. Douglas MacArthur was aboard the McKinley. The bombardment group opened up 
        again at 545 a.m. and stopped firing at 628. The first U.S. Marines hit the beach at 632 and by 704 a.m. the 
        landing was reported successful.  
        Wolmi-do island was secured by 750 a.m. and Inchon city was attacked throughout the day. The first waves of 
        Marines hit the main beach at 531 p.m. A little over an hour later, the first landings ad been completed 
        successfully on all three beaches. There were 261 ships, representing seven U.N. countries, in the landing or in 
        support.  
        The six destroyers in the Inchon operation played a vitally important part in making it the great success it 
        was. Wolmi-do, which blocked the entrance to the harbor, was the key to the operation. Wolmi had to be taken 
        first "at any cost" the orders said. The destroyers were sent in to feel out Wolmi.  
        On Sept. 13, the six ships, moving in column, sailed slowly into the narrowing channel leading past Wolmi to 
        Inchon. Their mission was to try to draw fire from the island. The destroyers were sitting ducks, juicy targets, 
        all of them less than a mile from the beach. Wolmi, in the brilliant sunshine, looked quiet, verdantly green, 
        and serene.  
        Suddenly the North Koreans made a wonderful blunder. From around the waist of the island came the flash of 
        enemy guns. The destroyers were quick to answer, exchanging shot for shot as the firing tempo increased. Flashes 
        came from everywhere in Wolmi. Three of the ships were hit—the Collett, Gurke, and Swenson—but they had saved 
        the day.  
        They had tempted the enemy to reveal his hidden shore batteries for the bigger Allied guns and the swarms of 
        planes to hammer. If the guns had not been discovered, it is hard to say what might have happened to the 
        transports and the little landing craft when they came in for the assault two days later.  
        One day preceding the assault on Inchon, the 58,000-ton battleship Missouri, the first battleship to enter 
        the Korean War, joined the gunfire group off the Korean east coast on Sept. 14 and made her first bombardment 
        against targets at Samchok.  
        Task Force 95, the U.N. blockading and escort force, was put into effect on Sept. 12, with Rear Adm. Allan E. 
        Smith as its commander.  
        Joint Task Force 7 was formed again under Adm. Struble with instructions to conduct mine sweeping operations, 
        reconnaissance, air and surface bombardment of shore defenses, and to seize control of the Wonsan area by 
        amphibious assault in order to assist in the destruction of North Korean forces.  
        Chongjin, an important North Korean industrial city 35 miles south of the Manchurian border, was hit on Oct. 
        12, 1950, for the first time by the largest east coast naval bombardment since the start of Korean hostilities. 
        The Missouri, which poured out more than 800,000 pounds of explosives in less than an hour, led the strike on 
        the city. Other ships in the attack included the carriers Philippine Sea and Valley Forge, the heavy cruisers 
        Helena, Toledo, and Rochester, as well as the light cruiser Worcester.  
        Still other vessels active against the enemy during this period included the British carrier Theseus, 
        cruisers Kenya and Ceylon, and the destroyers Constance, Cockade, Charity, and Concord. The U.S. carriers Boxer 
        and Leyte were also launching strikes against the Reds.  
        Then, on Oct. 25, naval forces commenced an unopposed landing of X Corps at Wonsan, the same Army Corps they 
        had landed at Inchon less than a month before. The landing marked the first time in naval history that an army 
        with all of its equipment was landed on one coast of a country, picked up again after securing its objective, 
        and re-landed on the opposite coast of that country within a period of one month.  
        By Nov. 5, with the entry of the Chinese Red army into the battle, the primary mission of the Seventh Fleet 
        became the destruction of enemy forces and installations by exerting maximum air pressure. However, on Dec. 12, 
        when the Chinese poured down the peninsula, its mission changed abruptly to provide close air support and air 
        cover for forces in embarkation areas around Hungnam on the east coast.  
        Witb naval guns laying down a steel curtain of fire around the Hungnam beachhead for several days prior to 
        the evacuation, and Task Force 77 carriers, now under the command of Rear Adm. Ralph A. Ofstie, filling the 
        skies around the beachhead with dive bombers and jets, the last group of friendly forces, in addition to X 
        Corps, and most of its equipment, plus some 90,000 North Korean civilians, were evacuated from Hungnam on Dec. 
        24, 1950.  
        The British Admiralty had announced earlier in the month the evacuation by sea of a force of 7,000 soldiers 
        and civilians from the Pyongyang area under cover of an Allied naval force. Wonsan had been evacuated by Dec. 9, 
        after a five-day bombardment of the city. 
        After the Hungnam pull-out, the mission of Task Force 77 changed on Jan. 7, 1951, to provide air support on 
        the east coast, to support friendly ground operations, and to interdict enemy supply lines. On Jan. 29, 1951, 
        the Missouri and elements of the Seventh Fleet were assigned to deliver a pre-invasion bombardment and simulated 
        amphibious assault on the east coast near Kansong in order to disrupt enemy plans and force re-deployment of 
        enemy forces.  
        Navy ships and planes, meanwhile, continued to hurt the enemy with surface bombardment and air attacks on 
        both sides of the peninsula. Bombarding ships along the east coast areas operated in heavily mined waters and 
        were under heavy fire from shore batteries.  
        The now historic siege of Wonsan began on Feb. 16, 1951, when the destroyers Lind and Ozbourn steamed into 
        the harbor and sent their 5-inch shells crashing into the city. It has continued for more than two yeas. More 
        than 8,000 Reds became casualties in the city during the first few months and rail and highway bridges and vital 
        buildings were damaged extensively.  
        During almost the entire campaign, a tight blockade of both Korean coasts had been maintained by patrol 
        vessels. Enemy supply efforts by sea were halted when the blockade began in early July, 1950. Allied warships, 
        nosing in and out of North Korea’s bays and inlets, kept a tight stranglehold on the peninsula.  
        The battleship New Jersey reported to the fleet on May 12, 1951, and became the flagship of Adm. Martin, who 
        took over the helm of the fleet on Mar 28. The New Jersey fired her first bombardment mission at Kosong on May 
        20 and later in the day moved up to Wonsan to better than city.  
        Next day the New Jersey received two hits from an enemy shore battery at Wonsan, which caused minor 
        structural damage and marked the first hit on a battleship in the Korean War. One crewman was killed and five 
        others wounded.  
        The Second Year
        Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, naval leader in the Far East for nearly three years, became senior U.N. delegate to 
        the military armistice conference in July. He continued to make important high policy decisions affecting the 
        Navy, but Vice Adm. Ralph A. Ofstie, then Adm. Joy’s chief of staff with the rank of rear admiral, ably handled 
        all other matters from naval headquarters in Toyko.  
        For the rest of the year, Navy ships and planes kept up a daily and incessant pounding of North Korea. 
        Carrier planes from such carriers as the Bon Homme Richard, Boxer, Bataan, Bairoko, Princeton, Essex, Sicily, 
        Rendova, Antietam, Glory, and Sydney, clawed at entrenched Communists in the frontlines and in the rear areas. 
        The battleship New Jersey and the cruisers Manchester, Los Angeles, Toledo, Helena, Ceylon, and Belfast sent 
        their 16-8-and 5-inch projectiles whistling into the Red coastline. Dozens of destroyers added their sting. 
        Duels with Red shore batteries were frequent and ships and planes belted and mauled the Reds all over North 
        Korea. The battleship Wisconsin had arrived on Nov. 22, and became the flagship of the Seventh Fleet.  
        The striking power of naval elements in the Far East increased in 1952. At times, four carriers operated 
        against enemy targets. Battleships, cruisers, destroyers, frigates, and rocket ships pummeled the Reds with 
        bombs, shells, and rockets. In the first five months of 1952, naval forces slashed more than four times as many 
        rails as in the previous 12 months.  
        At the same time, enemy shore batteries became increasingly troublesome. Red shore gunners started to use 
        bigger guns more frequently and more accurately than ever before. The most common types of enemy guns were the 
        76-mm. And 122-mm., although some ships encountered larger types.   
        Wonsan, where U.N. naval casualties have been heavier than anywhere else in the Korean War, remained under 
        constant aerial and surface attack.  
        On Mar. 3, 1952, Vice Adm. Robert P. Briscoe became Seventh Fleet commander. He, in turn, was relieved by 
        Vice Adm. Joseph J. Clark on May 20. Then, on June 4, Adm. Briscoe was moved up to lead all the naval forces in 
        the Far East.  
        Previously, on Mar. 31, the Seventh Fleet flag was moved again to the battleship Iowa, which conducted her 
        first bombardment against the Chaho-Songjin sector on Apr. 7, 1952.  
        On Apr. 21, a fiery powder blast in one of the cruiser St. Paul’s 8-inch turrets killed 30 seaman while the 
        ship was shelling the east coast near Kojo. It was the worst naval disaster in 22 months of Korean warfare.  
        Several hundred planes of Task Force 77 demolished four of North Korea’s huge hydro-electric power complexes 
        on June 23-24 in conjunction with Marine and Air Force planes. One of the power complexes was Suiho, largest in 
        the Orient and the world’s fourth biggest.  
        The Third Year
        Navy planes, which had been carrying out almost daily strikes against east coast targets, carried out another 
        all-out attack in conjunction with Marine, Australian, and British planes against the North Korean capital city 
        of Pyongyang, a political and communications center, on July 11, 1952.  
        Another sea disaster on Aug. 6 took the lives of nine Navy men and injured others aboard the carrier Boxer as 
        roaring flames and explosions swept the hangar deck of the flattop. Some of the men died in gallant attempts to 
        rescue their shipmates.  
        Through the spring and summer months, carrier planes swarmed over North Korean coastal areas, flew far inland 
        to rip supply areas and transportation targets, while surface gunners daily leveled their booming rifles against 
        port cities and coastal strong points. Although naval elements during this period concentrated their destructive 
        power against rear areas, sometimes Allied infantrymen would call for Navy planes to come in and relieve enemy 
        ground pressure with close support missions, or would call in surface ships to blast the enemy. The weight of 
        bombs, rockets, napalm, and shells loosed on the Communists was considerable and made it difficult and extremely 
        hazardous for the enemy to move his supplies and equipment.  
        Carrier planes on Sept. 1, 1952, struck closer to Russian territory than at any other time during the war 
        when they severely damaged major Communist synthetic oil refineries at Hoem-dong (Aoje). The strike, made by 
        planes of the carriers Boxer, Essex, and Princeton, penetrated to within 12 miles of the Russian border.  
        The news broke on Sept. 18 that the carrier Boxer had been using guided missiles against Red targets since 
        Sept. 1. They were the first guided missiles ever employed against the enemy. During the first two weeks of 
        October, carrier planes shifted most of their strikes to hit specific targets in front of friendly ground 
        positions in direct support of the Eighth Army. More sorties were launched against the Communists during this 
        month than in any previous month of the campaign.  
        A huge naval amphibious force appeared to make ready on Oct. 15 to send in thousands of troops to take the 
        enemy-held territory near Kojo on the east coast. Enemy forces, feinted out of positions by the maneuver, were 
        caught out in the open by planes from six carriers and the big guns of the Iowa, four cruisers, and more than 30 
        destroyers. The whole coast along a 25-mile stretch had been hammered continuously for three days to make the 
        enemy believe an invasion was imminent.  
        Carriers in the operation were the Kearsarge, Bon Homme Richard, Essex, Princeton, Badoeng Strait, and 
        Sicily. Cruisers were the Juneau, Los Angeles, Helena, and Toledo. Reconnaissance flights the next day showed 
        the enemy on the beach had received a terrific pounding.  
        The Navy’s newest carrier, the Oriskany, joined Task Force 77 and launched her planes against the enemy for 
        the first time on Nov. 2. By the end of 1952, the Navy in Korea had hurled more aviation ordnance at the Reds 
        than they had thrown at the enemy in World War II. In so doing, 1,033 Navy and Marine planes had been lost, more 
        than half of them in operational accidents. The Navy lost 242 to enemy action and 310 in operational accidents 
        while the Marines lost 229 to the enemy and 252 in operational mishaps.  
        In addition, surface ships fired more than 3.75 million rounds ranging from the one ton 16-inch projectiles 
        to small arms fire. These shells weighed more than 70,000 tons. Navy and Marine aircraft had flown 210,000 
        combat sorties with a total of 730,000 runs-on-target. More than 600,000 bombs, with a total tonnage of 145,000, 
        had been dropped; 250,000 rockets and 61 million rounds of machine gun ammunition had been expended.  
        This vast amount of explosives had wiped out more than 100,000 Red soldiers, cut more than 4,000 bridges, 
        destroyed 50,000 buildings, 5,000 gun emplacements, 5,000 rail cars, 50 power plants, and had made 20,000 rail 
        cuts. Scores of other targets had been shattered by bombs and shells.  
        Operations as of February 1, 1953, had cost the Navy 364 lives. Eighty-two Navy men were missing in action 
        and 1,273 wounded. Ships hit by the enemy totaled 70, but only six—four mine sweepers and two tugs—were sunk.
         
        The Valley Forge, first carrier to launch planes against the North Koreans, roared back into action off Korea 
        on her fourth war cruise on Jan. 3, 1953, with Air Group 5 embarked. She joined the Essex and Kearsarge and the 
        three flattops sent their planes out to rake Red targets almost daily. The Oriskany, Philippine Sea, Glory, and 
        Bataan also launched planes against the enemy during this period. Active surface ships included the battleship 
        Missouri, cruisers Los Angeles, Toledo, Birmingham, Newcastle, Rochester, and dozens of destroyers.  
        On Feb. 16, 1953, following two years of continuous attacks by naval air and surface elements, Wonsan was a 
        blackened and charred mass, its inhabitants burrowed under the piles of rubble. The hapless city had been hit by 
        more than a dozen full-scale attacks and rocked with explosions almost daily.  Destroyers, cruisers, and 
        occasionally a battleship, had heaped explosives on the city. Today, it has probably had more of its land 
        ravaged than any other city in history. But still the Communists use the shambles for supply build-ups and as a 
        distribution point for supplies. Road networks from the front lines lead right to the city. Dozens of shore 
        batteries and antiaircraft guns still ring the port.  
        The siege of Wonsan, by far the longest sustained naval bombardment in American naval history, has made the 
        Reds keep 30,000 out of the front lines to guard against the constant threat of amphibious invasion. Thus, three 
        Red divisions which might otherwise be engaged in the fighting are kept immobilized and on watch to guard the 
        beach in that one area.   | 
       
      
        
        The Air Force Over Korea
         | 
       
      
        
        Prepared by Public Information Office Hqs., Far East Air Forces
        In two years and ten months of aerial warfare against the Communist enemy since South Korea was invaded in 
        June, 1950, Far East Air Forces aircraft have flown over 700,000 sorties to blast Red aircraft from the sky and 
        destroy equipment, installations, and troops on the ground.  
        FEAF aircraft mounted 732,350 sorties through mid-April, 1953, destroying 74,864 vehicles, knocking out 9,898 
        rail cars, demolishing more than 1,200 tanks and inflicting 180,628 enemy troop casualties. In 34 months of 
        conflict, FEAF planes sent 819 enemy aircraft to blazing and spinning destruction: 650 being swept-wing, 
        Russian-built MiG-15 jets. Of the 650 MiG total, 611 fell before U.S. Air Force F-86 Sabre jets. Seventy-nine 
        Sabres were lost in the air-to-air encounters.  
        In the early part of the war, close air support of the greatly-outnumbered friendly ground forces was FEAF’s 
        primary objective, thus affording time for reinforcement of U.N. ground strength. FEAF aircraft were 
        successfully employed as the bulwark of a protective screen when United Nations forces were backed into the 
        Pusan Perimeter, in September, 1950. As the strengthened group troops broke out of the perimeter, air power 
        figured heavily in the offensive into North Korea.  
        One of the significant aspects of U.N. air superiority has been continued denial to the Reds of air bases in 
        North Korea. As a result, Communist MiG’s have operated from their sanctuary in Manchuria north of the Yalu 
        River beyond which U.N. aircraft have not been allowed to go, even when in "hot pursuit" of fleeing Red jets.
         
        Without air bases on the Korean side of the Yalu, the enemy has never been able either to launch effective 
        air strikes against U.N. troops and installations, or to prevent massive, sustained assaults against his front 
        line positions, his supply-carrying vehicles and trains, his supply centers, and his many rear installations 
        which have taken a 34-month pounding from U.N. bombs, rockets, napalm, and machine gun fire.  
        MiG-15 jet fighters have consistently outnumbered the Sabres which fly protective screen for daily 
        fighter-bomber strikes, but despite the numerical superiority they have been unable to slow the mounting toll of 
        Fifth Air Force air victories.  
        Thirty Sabre jet pilots have qualified as jet aces, by destroying five or more Red jets in air action. 
        Several Sabre pilots have become "double aces," tallying 10 or more enemy aircraft apiece.  
        Two of the biggest victory days for the Sabres were July 4 and Sept. 4, 1952. On Independence Day, Sabre 
        pilots destroyed 13 MiGs, probably destroyed one, and damaged seven others; on Sept. 4, they killed 13 enemy 
        jets and damaged four.  
        Early in February, 1953, FEAF disclosed that F-94 all-weather jet interceptors were in active night 
        operations against the enemy. During the comparatively brief period in which they have seen action, these 
        radar-equipped fighters have scored one confirmed destruction and three damage tallies against Red night-flying 
        aircraft.  
        FEAF aircraft losses in air-to-air combat have been far fewer than to enemy ground fire. Overall losses to 
        ground guns were 619, compared to 106 air-to-air, as of mid-April, 1953. U.N. ground forces have remained 
        virtually free from enemy air attack, and installations in South Korea have not been hit by Communist aircraft 
        since the war’s early days.  
        During the first phase of the war, major enemy industrial plants were knocked out and have since been kept 
        neutralized. In the war’s second year, as peace talks proceeded, the need for ground support fell off and FEAF 
        shifted emphasis to distinctive strikes against Communist rail and vehicular transportation networks. These 
        interdiction attacks cost the enemy heavily in material, rolling stock, and trucks, restricting his ability to 
        move supplies to front line troops. He was forced to halt daylight traffic and to attempt an almost wholly 
        after-dark logistic flow.  
        As a result, U.N. airplanes often have intercepted long lines of bumper-to-bumper "sitting ducks" on Red 
        supply routes, at night, to leave burning vehicular wreckage along the highways of North Korea. Equal success 
        has been enjoyed against locomotives and rail cars by light bombers and fighter-bombers, which have destroyed 
        enemy rolling stock on rails or bottled it up in tunnels. Several B-26 light bomber pilots have qualified as 
        locomotive "aces" by knocking out five or more.  
        One of the heaviest attacks of the war by Fifth Air Force aircraft came during the period May 22-24, 1952, 
        when a Communist manufacturing, equipment repair, and supply center at Kiyang-ni, southwest of Pyongyang, was 
        virtually wiped out. The strikes saw 425 buildings destroyed and 150 others damaged. Another outstanding strike 
        was on May 8, 1952, when U.N. aircraft, in dawn-to-dusk destructive waves, hit a supply center near Suwan. They 
        leveled 225 supply buildings and damaged 90 more.  
        On Aug. 29-30, 1952, Fifth Air Force aircraft flew 1,350 sorties, highlighting a day-long, inter-service 
        attack against military targets at Pyongyang. Total FEAF sorties during that period, including Combat Cargo, 
        were 1,525 Both of these are record marks for a 24-hour period.  
        July and August of 1952 saw heavy one-day strikes against targets in the Pyongyang area. On July 11, three 
        waves of aircraft carried out massive strikes against ordnance and supply targets at the North Korean capital 
        city, while on Aug. 29 fighter-bombers hit 40 military targets in the area, leaving them in "smoking debris."
         
        In February, 1953, fighter bombers hurled 375 tons of bombs into a Communist tank and infantry school at 
        Kangso.  
        These are but a few of the air war highlights. Daily the jets and prop-driven planes have hit supply and 
        troop areas from the battle line to the Yalu River, have knocked out hand-grenade factories, coal and ore mines, 
        hydro-electric and pumping plants, oil and gasoline storage areas, military training establishments, munitions 
        factories, and many other such targets. They have slashed rails and cut roads and knocked out rail and road 
        bridges.  
        In front line attacks, they have blasted bunkers, knocked out gun positions, and destroyed supply buildups 
        just behind the front. Light bombers in daylight have hit similar targets and after dark have carried Intruder 
        strikes against supply traffic. The aircraft have also softened up front line positions. In the entire two years 
        and 10 months of air combat operations, there has never been a day when FEAF aircraft have failed to fly 
        operational sorties.  
        FEAF Bomber Command
        The long range B-29 Superfortress medium bombers have provided FEAF’s "heavy-punch" against the Communists 
        since the war’s outset. Targets for the mediums have included transportation facilities, marshaling yards, 
        storage areas, supply and manufacturing centers, troop centers, ore processing plants, repair depots, bridges, 
        and other varied targets.  
        First used as a strategic striking force, Bomber command methodically chopped away at its targets, finally 
        knocking out all factories, mills, and refineries of any tactical value in North Korea, and have since kept them 
        unserviceable and useless  
        On Mar. 25, 1952, Bomber Command mounted a 46-plane attack against twin by-pass bridges at Pyongyang. Three 
        nights later, 47 mediums hit rail bridges at Sinanju. On the night of July 11, 1952, 54 B-29s leveled 600 supply 
        buildings and damaged 125, in the northwest sector of Pyongyang. In all, 65 Superfortress hit enemy targets that 
        night.  
        A new Korean war record was set when 63 Superfortress hit a single target, the Oriental Light Metals Co., at 
        Yangsi on the Yalu river, July 30, 1952. That night, 68 B-29s hit Korean targets, also a new one-time, 
        after-dark record. Another outstanding effort was on Sept. 12, 1952, when 50 B-29s struck Red targets, with more 
        than 35 hitting the Suiho hydro-electric plant on the Yalu deep in northwest Korea.  
        Other standout targets have included an airfield and repair facility at Sinuiju, and an airfield and 
        communications center at Uiju—34 Superfortress hit these Yalu River installations in one night; the Namsan-ni 
        chemical plant, deep in Northwest Korea, 400 yards from the Manchurian border, hit in a 48-aircraft assault; a 
        major supply and storage concentration area at Sopo near Pyongyang; hydroelectric plants at Chosen; a cement 
        factory at Hokusen; ore processing plant at Cholson and Tokchon; a chemical plant at Bungham, an ore processing 
        plant at Choak-tong, and many others. The Superfortress, like other FEAF aircraft, have also consistently bombed 
        enemy battle line positions.  
        Combat Cargo
        The 315th Air Division (Combat Cargo), flying C-46s, C-47s, C-54s, C-119 Flying Boxcars, and the huge C-124 
        Globemasters, is charged with airlifting personnel and supplies between Japan and Korea, and evacuating U.N. 
        wounded and sick from Korea to Japan. This Korean airlift operation has been an important factor in the air and 
        ground war.  
        U.N. personnel at front line bases not only get fresh foods, but receive life-giving blood plasma, whole 
        blood, and other emergency medical supplies via Combat Cargo’s transports. U.N. personnel have been airlifted 
        daily from Korea to Japan on rest leaves.  
        Aircraft engines and parts, mail, vaccine, everything from earth-moving machines and huge radar vans to tiny 
        dental drills have made up Combat Cargo’s volume. Outstanding paratroop operations of this command included the 
        airlifting of 1,500 airborne soldiers in one day, with more than 100 transports making 160 round trips. More 
        than 4,000 paratroopers were also carried during practice combat maneuvers in South Korea.  
        Air Rescue
        Since the beginning of the war, units of the 3d Air Rescue Group, with headquarters in Japan, have helped 
        save the lives of 8,400 persons, as of Feb. 28, 1953. This included 940 picked up in enemy territory on and at 
        sea. Most of the others were wounded, evacuated to read area hospitals in Japan.  
        In Japan and surrounding areas, the 3d ARG has evacuated injured and sick from remote locations and from 
        stricken ships at sea, has searched for downed aircraft, and helped bring out survivors. Air Force rescue units 
        in such areas as Okinawa and Guam have also saved both military and civilian personnel in plane accidents, ship 
        wrecks, storms, and other emergencies.  
        Attached Units
        Supplementing the effort of U.S. Air Force aircraft in the Korean campaign are the fighter bombers and 
        fighter interceptors of four units attached to Fifth Air Force. In addition to the two-group 1st U.S. Marine Air 
        Wing, three other nations are represented with air units taking part in the U.N. effort. These are South Africa, 
        Australia, and the Republic of Korea. British Royal Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force pilots are also 
        flying with Fifth Air Force, on an exchange basis.  
        Marine aircraft began Korean operations in September, 1950, when shore-based Corsairs and Tigercats carried 
        out assaults against the enemy. Since then the 1st Marine Air Wing has added Skyraiders, Panther Jets, Banshees, 
        and the recently revealed F3d Skyknight, a night fighter in action as escort for night-flying B-29s.  
        The first South African air participation in Korea came in September, 1950. F-51 Mustangs were flown by the 
        SAAF pilots until early 1953, when the 2d South African Air Force Squadron started flying F-86 Sabre jets. Royal 
        Australian Air Force F-51s entered the Korean campaign in June, 1950, but the RAAF 77 Squadron now flies Meteor 
        jets. ROK Air Force units have been flying F-51 Mustangs against the Communists since October, 1951.   | 
       
      
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