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I. Introduction
Korean War, civil and military struggle that was fought on the Korea
Peninsula and that reached its height between 1950 and 1953.
The Korean War originated in the division of Korea into South Korea and
North Korea after World War II (1939-1945). Efforts to reunify the
peninsula after the war failed, and in 1948 the South proclaimed the
Republic of Korea and the North established the People's Republic of
Korea. In 1949 border fighting broke out between the North and the South.
On June 25, 1950, North Korean forces crossed the dividing line and
invaded the South. Soon, in defense of the South, the United States joined
the fighting under the banner of the United Nations (UN), along with small
contingents of British, Canadian, Australian, and Turkish troops. In
October 1950 China joined the war on the North's side. By the time a
cease-fire agreement was signed on July 27, 1953, millions of soldiers and
civilians had perished. The armistice ended the fighting, but Korea has
remained divided for decades since and subject to the possibility of a new
war at any time.
II. Division of Korea
The Korean War was the result of the division of Korea, a country with
a well-recognized, ancient integrity. Despite its long history as an
independent kingdom, Korea had been forcibly annexed by Japan in 1910.
Japan controlled Korea up to the end of World War II. Late on the night of
August 10, 1945, as World War II was coming to a close, the United States
made the decision that it would occupy the southern half of Korea. The
U.S. government did so out of fear that the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR, or Soviet Union)—which had joined the fight against
Japan in northern Korea a week earlier—would take control of the entire
Korea Peninsula. American planners chose to divide Korea at the 38th
parallel because it would keep the capital city, Seoul, in the
American-occupied southern zone; the USSR acquiesced to the division, with
no official comment.
Both the Soviet Union and the United States proceeded, with much help
from Koreans, to build regimes in their halves of Korea that supported
their interests. In so doing, they had to contend with major rifts between
Korean political factions representing left-wing and right-wing views.
These factions originally were united against Japan but had begun to split
as early as the 1920s. In the post-World War II era, the main conflict
centered around the left's call for—and the right's resistance to—a
thorough reform of Korea's land ownership laws, which had allowed a small
number of wealthy people to own most of the land. As a result, many Korean
farmers were forced to eke out an impoverished existence as tenant
farmers.
During its occupation of the South (1945-1948), the United States
responded to the left-right conflict by suppressing the widespread leftist
movement and backing Syngman Rhee. A 70-year-old expatriate who had lived
for decades in the United States, Rhee had solid anti-Communist
credentials and was popular with the right. In the North, the Soviet Union
threw its support to the left, embodied by 33-year-old Kim Il Sung, who
also received significant support from North Koreans and from China. Kim
was a Korean guerrilla who had fought with Chinese Communist forces
against the Japanese in Manchuria in the 1930s. Among Kim's first acts in
power was to force through a radical redistribution of land. By the end of
1946 the regimes of both North and South Korea were effectively in place,
although the division of the peninsula was not formalized until 1948. In
that year, the Republic of Korea (ROK), backed by the United States and
the United Nations, emerged in the South under Rhee, and the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) emerged in the North under Kim, backed
by the USSR and China.
III. Early Skirmishes
The southern government was barely inaugurated before it had to contend
with a left-wing guerrilla movement. Although this movement received
support from the North, it had its greatest strength in the South,
particularly in the southernmost provinces and on Cheju Island off the
southern coast. The ROK Army required the better part of 1948 and 1949 to
suppress the rebellion, and it did so with the support and often the
direction of a 500-man contingent of American advisers. By early 1950 the
guerrillas appeared to be defeated.
Although the Soviets withdrew their troops from the Korea Peninsula at
the end of 1948, the Americans, concerned about the rebellion in the South
and the potential of invasion from the North, delayed their withdrawal
until the end of June 1949. By this time, troops from both North and South
Korea were concentrated along the 38th parallel. In May 1949 border
fighting broke out and continued, on and off, through December. Thousands
of troops were involved. According to formerly classified American
reports, the South provoked the majority of the 1949 border fights,
prompting American advisers to try to restrain the South. After a U.S.
request, military observers from the United Nations were dispatched to
Korea. In addition, the United States denied the ROK Army's requests for
combat airplanes and tanks. At about the same time, U.S. Secretary of
State Dean Acheson delivered what became known as the "Press
Club" speech in Washington, D.C., in which he was ambiguous about
whether the United States would defend the ROK in a war.
Although Kim Il Sung would be eager to fight in 1950, he was not ready
in the summer of 1949. Large contingents of his best North Korean soldiers
were still in China, fighting on the side of the Communists in that
country's civil war. In the early months of 1950, however, tens of
thousands of these soldiers returned to the DPRK, including the 6th
Division under General Pang Ho-san, which had a distinguished record in
China. In May 1950 Kim perched this division just above the 38th parallel.
He hoped that the summer of 1950, like the summer of 1949, would bring
South Korean provocations, which he could use to justify an invasion by
the North. Kim claimed he got his provocation with a minor lunge by the
South across the parallel in the early morning hours of June 25, 1950.
Whether or not the South lunged across the parallel still awaits further
evidence, but the North bears the major responsibility for escalating a
minor skirmish to the level of massive conventional warfare.
IV. The War
Begins: Soviet, Chinese, and U.S. Support
Throughout 1949 the Soviet Union feared the consequences that an
invasion by North Korea would have on U.S.-Soviet relations. Consequently,
for months Soviet leader Joseph Stalin declined to support Kim's plans for
war. In early 1950, however, Stalin appeared to give his endorsement to
Kim; he also suggested that Kim seek support from Chinese leader Mao
Zedong. The reasons for Stalin's shift are still not clear but may have
been related to American plans for a major Cold War military buildup. The
Chinese response to Kim's entreaty is also still unknown, but it seems
unlikely that the Chinese did not know of Kim's plans. Indeed, they sent
many experienced Korean soldiers back to Korea from China just before the
war erupted.
The United States maintained throughout 1949 and 1950 that it would not
support an invasion of the North by the South. As early as 1947, however,
Acheson and his advisers had come to see South Korea as important to the
revival of the Japanese industrial economy, which provided goods and
services to Korea. From that time on, U.S. policymakers were privately
committed to extending the Truman Doctrine, which called for the
containment of Communism, to South Korea. Even after U.S. combat troops
left South Korea in 1948, a large military advisory group remained in the
ROK, and the United States gave the republic great amounts of economic
aid. When the Soviet-backed North invaded unprovoked, in the perception of
the U.S. government Acheson and President Harry S. Truman led the United
States into the war, despite objections from many U.S. military commanders
who thought Korea was the wrong place to make a stand against Communism.
V. North Korean Victories
During the summer of 1949, South Korea had expanded its army to about
90,000 troops, a strength the North matched in early 1950. The North had
about 150 Soviet T-34 tanks and a small but effective air force of 70
fighters and 62 light bombers weapons either left behind when Soviet
troops evacuated Korea or bought from the USSR and China in 1949 and 1950.
By June 1950 American data showed the two armies at about equal strength,
with roughly equal numbers amassed along the 38th parallel. However, this
data did not account for the superior battle experience of the North
Korean army, especially among the troops who had returned from China.
The fighting began around 3 or 4 AM on June 25 at the western end of
the parallel. Initial intelligence reports were indeterminate as to who
started the fighting, but by 5:30 AM the formidable 6th Division of the
(North) Korean People's Army (KPA) had joined the fighting in the west. At
roughly the same time, KPA forces in the center of the peninsula dealt a
heavy blow to the ROK Army (ROKA) south of Ch'orwon. The ROKA fell back
and two KPA divisions and an armored brigade crashed through the 38th
parallel, beginning a daunting march toward Seoul, which lay just 50 km
(30 mi) to the south.
Just 20 km (12 mi) north of Seoul stood the town of Ŭijongbu,
a critical line of defense for the South maintained by an ROKA division.
By the morning of June 26, the division at Ŭijongbu had not
committed its forces to battle, probably because it was waiting to be
reinforced by another division from the interior of South Korea. However,
when the reinforcing division finally arrived on June 26, troops panicked,
mutinied, and fled. The reasons for the mutiny were many, including the
relative lack of ROKA firepower, poor training, and ultimately the
unpopularity of the Rhee government which had nearly been voted out of
office in relatively free elections held a month earlier. The collapse at
Ŭijongbu left a gaping hole in the South Korean defensive line,
and North Korean troops poured through. The ROK government fled Seoul,
which was taken on June 28 by a force of about 37,000 North Korean troops.
VI. U.S. Troops to Korea
The quick and virtually complete collapse of resistance in the South
energized the United States to enter the war in force. Secretary of State
Acheson dominated the decision making and soon committed American air and
ground forces to the fight. Acheson successfully argued that the United
States should increase military aid to the ROK and provide air cover for
the evacuation of Americans from Korea. He also persuaded the president to
place the Seventh Fleet of the U.S. Navy in the Taiwan Strait. This was
needed, he argued, to prevent the Communist Chinese government on the
mainland from invading the island of Taiwan, where the Nationalist Chinese
government had retreated after the mainland fell to the Communists in
1949. The following day Acheson developed the fundamental strategy for
committing American air and naval power to the Korean War, a strategy
approved by Truman that evening but not yet approved by the United
Nations, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Congress.
UN support for the defense of South Korea enabled Truman and Acheson to
gain public support for U.S. intervention. Only two days after the
invasion, on June 27, at the urging of the United States, the UN Security
Council voted to repel the North Korean invasion. The USSR, which could
have vetoed the vote, instead boycotted it. The USSR claimed its boycott
was a response to the UN's refusal to admit Communist China; however,
historians have been unconvinced by this argument. On June 25 Stalin
explicitly told the USSR's UN representative not to return to the Security
Council, but Stalin's reasons for this order are not known. Some
historians speculate that Stalin either wanted to draw U.S. forces into a
war that would drain the country of troops and money, or that he hoped to
reveal the UN as an American tool.
American ground troops were finally committed in the early morning of
June 30, over the reluctance of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (the United
States' top military officers). The Joint Chiefs were concerned about the
limits of American power. In June 1950 the total armed strength of the
U.S. Army was 593,167, with an additional 75,370 Marines. North Korea
alone was capable of mobilizing perhaps 200,000 combat soldiers, in
addition to the immense reserve of China's People's Liberation Army (PLA).
Nonetheless, Truman and others were motivated by the news that the ROKA
had mostly ceased to fight. Truman did not seek a declaration of war from
the U.S. Congress, relying instead on the United Nations' support.
In July, World War II hero General Douglas MacArthur was placed in
command of U.S. troops in Korea. At first MacArthur wanted only a
regimental combat team. Within a week, however, he cabled Washington that
the KPA was "operating under excellent top level guidance and had
demonstrated superior command of strategic and tactical principles."
He consequently asked for a minimum of 30,000 American combat soldiers in
the form of four infantry divisions, three tank battalions, and assorted
artillery.
VII. The Pusan Perimeter
In the summer of l950 the Korean People's Army pushed southward with
dramatic success, inflicting one humiliating defeat after another on the
American forces. An army that had defeated Germany and Japan in World War
II found itself overwhelmed by what many thought was a hastily assembled,
ill-equipped peasant army said to be doing the bidding of a foreign
imperial power. By the end of July 1950, the combined U.S. and ROK forces
numbered 92,000 at the front (47,000 were Americans), compared with 70,000
KPA soldiers at the front. Nonetheless, the KPA advance continued until
the North Korean forces occupied roughly 90 percent of South Korea. Kim Il
Sung later said that his plan had been to win the war in a single month,
and by the end of July he nearly had done so.
In the first week of August the U.S. 1st Marine Brigade arrived and
finally stabilized the U.S. and ROK forces, which by that time guarded
only a small area on the southeasternmost part of the peninsula. The
right-angled front, known as the Pusan Perimeter, stretched 80 km (50 mi)
from P'ohang on Yogil Gulf to Taegu in the interior before bending south
110 km (70 mi) to the coastal Chinju-Masan region. The port city of Pusan
lay behind the front on the peninsula's southeastern tip.
The city of Taegu became a symbol of the American determination to halt
the KPA's advance, and many attacks were repelled there. However, it was
probably due to a tactical error at P'ohang, on the northeastern
perimeter, that the KPA failed to occupy Pusan and unify the peninsula.
The official American historian of the war, Roy Appleman, wrote that the
"major tactical mistake" of the North Koreans was not to press
their advantage on the eastern coastal road between P'ohang and Pusan. The
KPA division near P'ohang was concerned about covering its flanks and so
held its position. Had it instead moved quickly on P'ohang and then
combined with other KPA divisions, Appleman concluded that Pusan in all
likelihood would have fallen. In any event, the perimeter held for most of
August.
At the end of August KPA forces launched their last major offensive at
the perimeter, severely straining the American-Korean lines for the next
two weeks. On August 28 three of the advancing KPA battalions succeeded in
breaching the critical parts of the perimeter. The cities of P'ohang and
Chinju were both lost, with KPA forces advancing along both coasts to
Pusan. Another assault was being launched on the city of Taegu, with
enough success that U.S. commanders evacuated the Eighth Army headquarters
from Taegu to Pusan. Prominent South Koreans began leaving Pusan for the
nearby Tsushima Islands of Japan. Only in mid-September did it become
clear that the U.S. and ROK armies would stop the advance. The decisive
factor was numbers. MacArthur succeeded in committing most of the
battle-ready divisions in the entire American armed forces to the Korean
fighting; by September 8 the 82nd Airborne Division was the only
combat-trained Army unit not in Korea. Although many of these units were
with the pending amphibious operation that would land at Inch'on, near
Seoul, some 83,000 American soldiers and another 57,000 South Korean and
British troops faced the North Koreans at the Pusan front. North Korean
forces at the front, including guerrillas and a sizable number of female
soldiers, numbered 98,000. The Americans had also accumulated five times
as many tanks as the KPA and vastly superior artillery. They also had
complete control of the air, which they had maintained since the early
days of the war. The price for repelling the assault was steep casualties,
totaling 20,000 Americans, with 4,280 dead, by September 15.
VIII. Invasion at Inch'on
In mid-September 1950, MacArthur oversaw an amphibious landing at
Inch'on, a port 35 km (22 mi) west of Seoul. The harbor at Inch'on had
treacherous tides that could easily have grounded a flotilla of ships
landing at the wrong time. Fortunately, Admiral Arthur Dewey Struble, the
Navy's foremost expert on amphibious landings, commanded the flotilla.
Struble had led the World War II landing at Leyte in the Philippines, and
he had directed naval operations off Omaha Beach during the Normandy
invasion in Europe. These World War II experiences served him well at
Inch'on, where he commanded an enormous fleet of 261 ships through the
shifting bays and flats, depositing 80,000 Marines ashore with very few
losses.
Although the Marines landed almost unopposed, they faced a deadly
gauntlet before arriving at Seoul. By the end of September, however, U.S.
forces had fought their way into Seoul and recaptured the capital. For
years, many American historians held that the North Koreans were surprised
by the invasion, but new evidence suggests that this was not the case. The
North Koreans simply could not resist the assault and so began what North
Korean historians have called euphemistically "the great strategic
retreat," removing their troops from the South to guard their
northern homeland.
Shortly after the Inch'on landing, U.S. forces retrieved a document
that contained Kim Il Sung's thoughts on the fighting in the South.
"The original plan was to end the war in a month," he wrote, but
"we could not stamp out four American divisions." Instead of
following orders to march promptly southward, the North Korean units that
had captured Seoul dallied, thereby giving "a breathing spell"
to the Americans. Kim wrote that from the beginning the North's
"primary enemy was the American soldiers," but he acknowledged
that "we were taken by surprise when United Nations troops and the
American Air Force and Navy moved in." This suggests that Kim
anticipated the involvement of American ground forces, but not in such
size, and not with air and naval units. Perhaps the North Koreans believed
that Soviet air and naval power would either deter or confront their
American counterparts. Or perhaps they simply believed, like the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff, that the vast majority of American battle-ready
infantry would not be transferred from all over the globe to this small
peninsula of seeming marginal importance to U.S. global strategy.
Regardless, by early October 1950 the North had been pushed from South
Korea. The war for control of the South left 111,000 South Koreans killed,
106,000 wounded, and 57,000 missing; 314,000 homes had been destroyed,
244,000 damaged. American casualties totaled 6,954 dead, 13,659 wounded,
and 3,877 missing in action. North Korean casualty figures are not known.
IX. The March North and
China's Entry
The U.S.-led forces might have reestablished the 38th parallel as the
border between North and South Korea, ended the war, and declared that the
Truman Doctrine's policy of containing Communism had been achieved.
Instead, MacArthur sent troops across the parallel into North Korea in
early October. Historians later faulted MacArthur for taking this action
without Truman's approval, but evidence has since shown that Truman
approved the march north at the end of August, even before the landing at
Inch'on. As the summer progressed, nearly all of Truman's senior advisers
decided the chance had come not only to contain Communism but to roll it
back. Thus, National Security Council document 81 authorized MacArthur to
"roll back" the North Korean regime if there were no Soviet or
Chinese threats to intervene. The document also instructed MacArthur to
use only Korean troops near the Chinese border so as not to further
antagonize China.
In September and October 1950 U.S. intelligence agencies generally
concluded that China would not enter the war. On September 20 the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) noted that there was a slight possibility that
Chinese "volunteers" might enter the fighting, and a month later
it noted "a number of reports" that units from Manchuria (along
the Chinese border with Korea) might be sent to North Korea. Nonetheless,
the CIA decided that "the odds are that Communist China, like the
USSR, will not openly intervene in North Korea." MacArthur swept
confidently onward. By October 19 UN troops had captured the North Korean
capital, P'yongyang, lying 150 km (90 mi) northwest of the 38th parallel.
Three days earlier, Chinese troops had crossed their border at the Yalu
River into North Korea. They dealt heavy losses to ROK troops and bloodied
U.S. forces as well, then abruptly ceased offensives for three weeks. This
incursion by China did not stop the American march to the Yalu. General
Walter Bedell Smith, director of the CIA, wrote on November 1 that the
Chinese "probably genuinely fear an invasion of Manchuria." He
also predicted the Chinese would try to establish a buffer zone along the
border for security "regardless of the increased risk of general
war." However, the CIA still found insufficient evidence throughout
November that China would mount a major offensive.
North Korean and Chinese documents released or declassified in the
1980s and 1990s tell a different story. China did not enter the war purely
to protect its border. Rather, Mao decided early in the war that should
the North Koreans falter, China had an obligation to help them because
many North Koreans had sacrificed their lives alongside Chinese in the
Chinese revolution that overthrew the imperial government in 1911 to 1912,
in resistance to Japan's decades of occupation, and in the Chinese civil
war of 1946 to 1949. On August 4, 1950, Mao told the Chinese Politburo
(the highest decision-making body of the Chinese Communist Party) that he
intended to send troops to Korea "in the name of a volunteer
army" should the Americans reverse the tide of battle. The day after
UN troops crossed the 38th parallel, Mao informed Stalin of his decision
to invade. In other words, it was not the approach of American troops on
the Chinese border that prompted China's attack; it was the American
strategy to roll back North Korean Communism.
The North Koreans and Chinese apparently waited to attack UN forces
until they were well inside North Korea in order to stretch the UN supply
lines and gain time for a dramatic reversal on the battlefield. On
November 24 MacArthur launched a general offensive all along the northern
front, which was nearing the Yalu. He described it as a "massive
compression and envelopment," a pincer movement to trap the remaining
KPA forces that were backed into the mountainous northern part of the
peninsula. The offensive rolled forward for three days against little or
no resistance, with ROK units succeeding in entering the important city of
Ch'ongjin on the upper east coast, 70 km (45 mi) short of China. Lost amid
the victory were reports from U.S. reconnaissance pilots that long columns
of enemy troops were "swarming all over the countryside."
X. China Takes North Korea
Chinese and North Korean troops began strong counterattacks on November
27, 1950, dealing devastating blows to U.S. and ROK troops. The U.S. 1st
Marine Division was pinned down at the Changjin Reservoir, the ROK II
Corps collapsed, and within two days a general withdrawal ensued. By
December 6, Communist forces occupied P'yongyang, and the next day the
front was only 32 km (20 mi) above the 38th parallel. A little more than
two weeks after the Sino-Korean offensive began, North Korea was cleared
of enemy troops. Chinese troops in North Korea numbered approximately
200,000. On New Year's Eve Chinese and North Korean troops launched
another major offensive, once again capturing Seoul. Secretary of State
Acheson later called this the worst American defeat since the Battle of
Bull Run during the American Civil War (1861-1865).
Under the field command of U.S. Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway, UN
troops finally stiffened their defenses south of Seoul in early 1951.
Bloody weeks of fighting ensued as UN troops fought northward to the Han
River, opposite the capital. Several more weeks passed before Seoul
changed hands again, and in early April, Ridgway's forces again crossed
the 38th parallel. By then fighting had stabilized more or less along what
later became the Korean demilitarized zone, with UN forces in occupation
north of the parallel on the eastern side, and Sino-North Korean forces
occupying swatches of land south of the parallel on the western side.
XI. The Atomic
Threat and the Removal of MacArthur
As early as November 30, 1950, Truman said the United States might use
any weapon in its arsenal to hold back the Chinese, an oblique reference
to the atomic bomb. This threat apparently deeply worried Stalin.
According to a high official who served at the time in the KGB (the Soviet
intelligence agency), Stalin feared that global war would result from the
American defeat in northern Korea and favored letting the United States
occupy all of Korea. "So what?" Stalin is reported to have said.
"Let the United States of America be our neighbors in the Far East.
... We are not ready to fight." China, however, held a different
view, apparently willing to fight at least to the middle of the Korea
Peninsula, though not further if the consequence might be a third world
war.
The U.S. government seriously considered using nuclear weapons in Korea
in early 1951. The immediate threat was the USSR's deployment of 13 air
divisions to East Asia, including 200 bombers that could strike not just
Korea but also American bases in Japan; and China's deployment of massive
new forces near the Korean border. On March 10, 1951, MacArthur asked
Truman for a "D-Day atomic capability"—the ability to launch a
massive nuclear assault. Truman complied, ordering the Air Force to
refurbish the atomic bomb loading pits at Okinawa, Japan, which were used
during World War II. Atomic bombs were then carried to Okinawa unassembled
and put together at the base, lacking only the essential nuclear cores.
On April 5, the Joint Chiefs of Staff ordered immediate atomic
retaliation against Soviet and Chinese bases in Manchuria if large numbers
of new troops entered the war. Also on April 5, Gordon Dean, chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), arranged for the transfer of nine
nuclear capsules held by the AEC in the United States to the Air Force
bomb group that would carry the weapons. Truman approved the transfer as
well as orders outlining their use the next day.
The president also used this extraordinary crisis to get the Joint
Chiefs of Staff to approve MacArthur's removal. For some time, MacArthur
had chafed against restrictions placed on him by Truman. MacArthur sought
to expand the war to mainland China and ignored Truman's orders to use
only Korean troops near the Chinese border. On April 11, 1951, Truman
asked for MacArthur's resignation. Most observers assumed Truman wanted a
more subordinate commander. Although this observation was partly true,
U.S. government documents later made clear that Truman wanted a reliable
commander in the field should Washington decide to use nuclear weapons.
Truman, in short, was not sure he could trust MacArthur to use nuclear
weapons as ordered.
XII. Stalemate
By early summer 1951 the war had settled into the pattern it would
follow for the next two years: bloody fighting along the 38th parallel,
most of it in trench warfare reminiscent of World War I (1914-1918), and
tortuous peace negotiations. During this time the UN forces engaged mainly
in a series of probing actions known as the active defense. Periods of
heavy fighting continued, however, both on the ground and in the air.
Although the Communists could not sustain another major offensive, their
well-entrenched forces made even the UN's active defense strategy very
costly. Some of the most desperate battles took place on the hills called
Old Baldy, Capital, Pork Chop, T-Bone, and Heartbreak Ridge. On June 23,
1951, the USSR's representative to the UN, Adam Malik, proposed that the
warring parties begin discussions for a cease-fire. Truman agreed, and the
ancient Korean capital of Kaesong, located just south of the 38th
parallel, was chosen as a meeting place. Truce talks began on July 10, led
initially by U.S. Vice Admiral C. Turner Joy for the UN side, and
Lieutenant-General Nam Il of North Korea. The talks dragged on
interminably, with several suspensions and a removal of the truce site to
the village of P'anmunjom, just southeast of Kaesong.
There were months of haggling over how to properly and fairly mark each
side's military lines, but the main issue that prolonged the negotiations
was the disposition of the many prisoners of war (POWs) on both sides. The
North Koreans had maltreated many American and allied POWs, harshly
depriving them and subjecting many to political thought reform that was
decried as "brainwashing" in the United States. In the South's
POW camps, a virtual war ensued over repatriation. About one-third of
North Korean POWs and a much larger percentage of Chinese POWs did not
want to return to Communist control, prompting struggles among
pro-Communists and anti-Communists. Meanwhile South Korea refused to sign
any armistice that would keep Korea divided, and the South's Syngman Rhee
sought to hinder the talks by abruptly releasing thousands of North Korean
POWs who did not want to return home. The United States decided Rhee could
not be trusted and developed plans to remove him in a coup d'état. The
coup was never carried out.
The POW issue was finally settled on June 8, 1953. The Communists
agreed to the placement of POWs who refused repatriation under the control
of a neutral commission of nations for three months; at the end of this
period those who still refused repatriation would be set free. Two final
and costly Communist offensives in June and July 1953 sought to gain more
ground but failed, and the U.S. Air Force for the first time destroyed
huge irrigation dams that had provided water for 75 percent of the North's
food production. Although not widely reported, hundreds of square miles of
farmland were inundated.
On July 27, 1953, the UN, North Korea, and China signed an armistice
agreement—South Korea refused to sign—and the fighting ended. The
armistice called for a buffer zone 4 km (2.5 mi) wide across the middle of
Korea, from which troops and weapons were supposed to be withdrawn. This
"demilitarized zone" was in fact heavily fortified; as of the
late 1990s, more than 1 million soldiers confronted each other along the
zone. With no peace treaty signed, the two Koreas remained technically
still at war; only the armistice agreement and demilitarized zone kept a
tenuous peace.
XIII. Aftermath
The Korean War was one of the most destructive of the 20th century.
Perhaps as many as 4 million Koreans died throughout the peninsula,
two-thirds of them civilians. (This compares, for example, with the 2.3
million Japanese who died in World War II.) China lost up to 1 million
soldiers, and the United States suffered 36,934 dead and 103,284 wounded.
Other UN nations suffered 3322 dead and 11,949 wounded. Economic and
social damage to the Korea Peninsula was incalculable, especially in the
North, where three years of bombing left hardly a modern building
standing.
The war also had lasting consequences beyond Korea. Much of the
materiel used in the war was bought from nearby Japan. This gave the
Japanese economy such a dynamic boost after the ravages of World War II
that some have called the Korean War "Japan's Marshall Plan," a
reference to the U.S. economic aid program that helped rebuild post-war
Europe. The Korean War had similar effects on the American economy, as
defense spending nearly quadrupled in the last six months of 1950. Perhaps
even more so than World War II, the Korean War was responsible for
establishing America's chain of military bases around the world and its
enormous defense and intelligence system at home.
Decades later, Koreans still seek reconciliation and eventual
reunification of their torn nation.
Contributed By: Bruce Cumings, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Norman and Edna
Freehling Professor of History, The University of Chicago. Author of
Korea's Place in the Sun: A Modern History and other books.
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