CMH PUB 21–2: KOREA—1951-1953 (11 Oct 1996)

CMH PUB 21–2: KOREA—1951-1953 (11 Oct 1996)

United States Army. Center of Military History
Korea
1951-1953
120
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140
TATUT
MERCATOR RGIKCT
WASH. DC
Soipon
Guam
KOREA
1951–1953
by
John Miller, jr.
Owen J. Curroll, Major, U.S. Army
and
Margaret E. Tackley
Center of Military History
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 56–60005
Facsimile Reprint, 1989, 1997
CMH PUB 21–2
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, US. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402
FOREWORD
To the 1997 Edition
The fiftieth anniversary of the Korean War gives both the Army and the nation an opportunity to honor those veterans who served in that bitter conflict. This volume, a companion
to a similar work treating the first six months of the war, was prepared shortly after the war
ended. Despite the passage of time, it still provides a valuable summary of more than two
long years of combat through its text, photographs, and maps. Keeping this material in print
for the commemorative period provides a new generation of soldiers with the opportunity to
better understand that struggle and the sacrifices made by so many for a cause that was central to the international security policies of the United States. I am thus pleased to release this
new printing of a classic photographic collection.
Since the source of every photograph is noted at the back of this book, it is the Center of
Military History’s hope that various commands and offices throughout the Army will find
this work useful also as a catalog of available photographs as they develop their own projects
commemorating the anniversary of the war. Finally, I am mindful of the fact that as we honor
those who served in the Korean conflict, we are also recognizing by extension those soldiers
who continue to serve in Korea today, doing their own part in preserving freedom in a significant part of the world.
Washington, D.C. JOHN W. MOUNTCASTLE
11 Oct 1996 Brigadier General, USA
Chief of Military History
Foreword
In Korea the American soldier, with his Korean and United Nations
allies, fought with bravery and skill against his communist foe and met
the test in accordance with the best traditions of the service. His valor
and determination defeated the communist aggression and stabilized the
battle along the present demilitarized zone. The location of this line
largely above the 38th parallel is historic evidence that in Korea
aggression did not pay.
MAXWELL D. TAYLOR
General, United States Army
Chief of Staff
Preface
This volume records briefly, by text and photograph, the Korean
conflict from January 1951 to the cessation of hostilities in July 1953.
Like its predecessor, Korea 1950, it attempts to provide an accurate
outline of events in order to show the U.S. Army veteran of the Korean
conflict how the part he played was related to the larger plans and
operations of th United Nations forces. For this reason Korea 1952–1953
focuses on the o rations of the United States Army but summarizes the
achievements of the sister services and of the other United Nations troops
in order to make clear the contributions of all to the successful resistance
against armed aggression. It does not purport to be a final history. Fuller,
more detailed histories of all phases of the Korean conflict are now being
prepared by this Office. Two of these have already appeared in print:
Captain Russell A. Gugeler’s Combat Actions in Korea and Captain John G.
Westover’s Combat Support in Korea, both published by Combat Forces
Press in Washington, D. C.
The text, which is based upon records and reports of the Far East
Command, the United Nations Command, and the Eighth Army, was
written by Dr. John Miller, jr., and Maj. Owen J. Carroll, using, in part,
drafts prepared by Capt. Robert K. Sawyer and 1st Lt. Walter K.
Lukens, Jr.
The photographic sections of this volume were prepared by Miss
Margaret E. Tackley.
The maps appearing with the text were prepared under the supervision of Mr. Wsevolod Aglaimoff. Those inside the front and back covers
are from Army Map Service.
A. C. SMITH
Major General, U.S. Army
Chief of Military History
Contents
1 JANUARY–21 APRIL 1951
Chapter Page
I. THE ENEMY HIGH TIDE: 1–24 January 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
II. ATTACK AND COUNTERATTACK: 25 January–28 February
1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
III. CROSSING THE 38TH PARALLEL: 1 March–21 April 1951 . . . . . . . . 21
Illustrations
Section

  1. l–24 JANUARY 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
  2. 25 JANUARY–28 FEBRUARY 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
  3. 1 MARCH–21 APRIL 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
    22 APRIL–12 NOVEMBER 1951
    Chapter
    IV. THE ENEMY STRIKES BACK: 22 April–19 May 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
    V. THE UNITED NATIONS RESUME THE ADVANCE: 20 May–
    24 June 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
    VI. LULL AND FLARE-UP: 25 June–12 November 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
    Illustrations
    Section
  4. 22 APRIL–19 MAY 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
  5. 20 MAY–24 JUNE 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
  6. 25 JUNE–12 NOVEMBER 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
    12 NOVEMBER 1951–30 JUNE 1952
    Chapter
    VII. STALEMATE: 12 November 1951–30 June 1952 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
    VIII. SUPPORT AND SERVICE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
    Illustrations
    Section
  7. 12 NOVEMBER 1951–30 JUNE 1952 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
    1 JULY 1952-27 JULY 1953
    Chapter Page
    IX. OUTPOST BATTLES: 1 July-31 December 1952 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269
    X. THE LAST BATTLE: 1 January-27 July 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
    Illustrations
    Section
  8. 1 JULY–31 DECEMBER 1952 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285
  9. 1 JANUARY–27 JULY 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303
    LIST OF PICTORIAL SOURCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
    Maps
    No.
  10. Enemy Offensive, January 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
  11. United Nations Offensive, 25 January–28 February 1951. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
  12. United Nations Offensive, 1 March–21 April 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
  13. Enemy Offensive, 22 April–19 May 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
  14. United Nations Offensive, 20 May–24 June 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
  15. United Nations Front, 25 June–12 November 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
  16. The Last Battle, 1 January–27 July 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276
    1 JANUARY–21 APRIL 1951
    2
    MAP
    1
    3
    CHAPTER I
    The Enemy High Tide
    1–24 January 1951
    As the first day of 1951 dawned in Korea,
    weary soldiers of the United Nations braced
    themselves to withstand the expected onslaught of North Korean and Chinese
    armies. The outlook for the United Nations,
    though not hopeless, was far from promising, for the unpredictable history of the
    fighting in Korea seemed only to be repeating itself. Since the initial North Korean
    invasion across the 38th parallel into the
    Republic of Korea on 25 June 1950, the
    months had been filled with bitter reverses,
    gallant defenses, spectacular advances,
    sudden blows, and more withdrawals for
    the U.N. forces.
    When United States forces were ordered
    to Korea in July 1950, the enemy’s advance
    had forced them to withdraw to a relatively
    small perimeter in the vicinity of Pusan at
    the southeast tip of the Korean peninsula.
    Here, as several of the United Nations other
    than the United States sent in reinforcements, the beleaguered troops made a
    gallant and successful stand throughout the
    latter part of the grim summer of 1950.
    Then, on 15 September, when General of
    the Army Douglas MacArthur’s forces
    made their spectacular amphibious envelopment at Inch’on, on Korea’s west
    coast about halfway between the 37th and
    38th parallels, the tide of war turned
    abruptly in favor of the United Nations.
    The South Korean capital city of Seoul was
    recaptured; the troops broke out of the
    Pusan perimeter. As the North Koreans
    fled northward, the U.N. forces crossed the
    38th parallel in hot pursuit. They scored a
    series of victories until late November 1950,
    when they launched an offensive directed
    toward seizing the line of the Yalu River,
    the boundary between North Korea and
    Manchuria, and ending the conflict.
    But now the tide of war changed once
    again. Some Chinese Communist “volunteer” troops had appeared at the front in
    October, and in late November more
    “volunteer” forces, crossing over from
    Manchuria, struck in strength. They halted
    the U.N. advance, then forced a withdrawal.
    The two principal ground commands in
    Korea, the U.S. Eighth Army and the U.S.
    X Corps, had been physically separated
    from each other when the Chinese struck.
    The Eighth Army was in the western portion of the Korean peninsula, the X Corps
    in the east, with towering mountains between. Both had been operating directly
    under the United Nations Command in
    Tokyo, which was led by General MacArthur, who in turn received orders from
    President Truman and the U.S. Joint Chiefs
    4
    of Staff in Washington acting as executive
    agents for the United Nations Security
    Council.
    December 1950 was a period of withdrawal and reorganization. The Eighth
    Army and attached Republic of Korea
    (ROK) forces withdrew rapidly to the
    south with Chinese forces in pursuit. The
    X Corps, valiantly resisting the enemy in
    the bitter cold of the northeastern mountains, made its way to Hungnam on the
    northeast coast. From there U.N. naval
    forces took it safely off in one of the greatest
    sea evacuations in all history. The corps
    was brought to the vicinity of Pusan for
    reorganization.
    Meanwhile, in mid-December, the U.N.
    commanders selected a defense line for the
    Eighth Army. Lying generally along the
    38th parallel, it started from the flats of the
    Han River delta south of the parallel, ran
    northeastward along the Imjin River, then
    bent eastward through steep mountains to
    the Sea of Japan. By the end of 1950,
    enemy forces estimated at nearly half a
    million men were poised in the snowcovered mountains along the 38th parallel.
    On 30 December, General MacArthur
    warned the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff that
    the Chinese Communist forces could, if they
    desired to make the effort, drive the United
    Nations forces out of Korea. The United
    States Government, though anxious to
    avoid a full-scale war in Korea, was also
    determined to resist the Chinese-North
    Korean aggressors. Therefore, MacArthur
    was ordered to defend his positions, to retire, if forced, through a series of defense
    lines as far as the old 1950 perimeter
    around Pusan, to inflict as much damage
    on the enemy as possible, and to maintain
    his units intact. Though no one wished to
    evacuate Korea, MacArthur was authorized to withdraw his troops to Japan if that
    drastic measure proved necessary to avoid
    severe losses. At this time, his forces for
    Korean operations included the U.S.
    Eighth Army with attached troops from
    nine other United Nations, the Army of
    the Republic of Korea, the Far East Air
    Forces, and the Far East Naval Forces.
    To Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, who
    replaced the late Gen. Walton H. Walker
    as commander of the U.S. Eighth Army on
    26 December, MacArthur passed on the
    orders to defend positions, inflict maximum
    damage on the enemy, and maintain major
    units intact. Within this framework he
    vested Ridgway with complete authority to
    plan and execute operations in Korea and
    ceased the close supervision he had formerly
    exercised over the Eighth Army and the X
    Corps. He assigned the X Corps to the
    Eighth Army so that for the first time since
    the X Corps landed at Inch’on the Eighth
    Army commander controlled all U.N.
    ground troops in Korea. By now fifteen of
    the United Nations-the United States,
    Great Britain, Australia, Canada, New
    Zealand, India, South Africa, France,
    Greece, the Netherlands, the Philippines,
    Thailand, Turkey, Belgium, and Swedenhad troops in Korea.
    Ridgway commanded about 365,000
    men. The largest single contingent was the
    Army of the Republic of Korea, which was
    under his control but not part of the Eighth
    Army. The next largest was the Eighth
    Army, to which certain U.S. Air Force,
    U.S. Marine Corps, and several United
    Nations units, including Koreans, were attached. The U.N. command estimated that
    about 486,000 enemy troops, or twenty-one
    Chinese and twelve North Korean divisions, were committed to the Korean front
    and that reserves totaling over one million
    men were stationed near the Yalu, in Manchuria, or on the way to Manchuria.
    5
    In establishing the defense line along the
    38th parallel in late December, General
    Ridgway concentrated the bulk of his
    Eighth Army forces in the relatively flat
    central and west sectors because it was obvious that the enemy was concentrating
    strong forces above Seoul. Maj. Gen. Frank
    W. Milburn’s I Corps held the left (west)
    sector south of the Imjin River; on the right
    (east) of the I Corps, Maj. Gen. John B.
    Coulter’s IX Corps held the center.1
    Because it was believed that the mountainous
    land in the east could be more easily held
    than the western portion of the peninsula, a
    seventy-mile mountain front was first assigned to the weakened ROK II Corps and
    the newly committed, inexperienced ROK
    III Corps. Shortly afterward these were reinforced by the ROK I Corps with the
    crack ROK Capital Division. The U.S. X
    Corps, under Maj. Gen. Edward M.
    Almond, was reorganizing in the vicinity
    of Pusan. The 1st Marine Division, until
    recently a part of the X Corps, was held in
    army reserve.
    At daybreak on 1 January 195 1, after a
    night of incessant mortar and artillery
    bombardment all along the line, enemy
    soldiers struck southward through minefields and barbed wire in great force. They
    attacked along the entire front but directed
    their major effort against the U.S. I and IX
    Corps in the west and center. Seven
    Chinese Communist armies and two North
    Korean corps penetrated deeply toward
    Seoul and the rail and road center of
    Wonju, in the central sector.’ The only
    units escaping the fury of the attack were
    the U.S. 25th Division and the Turkish
    Brigade on the extreme left and the ROK
    Capital Division on the east coast.
    As the offensive gained momentum General Ridgway reluctantly ordered the U.N.
    forces to pull back to a line which ran along
    the south bank of the frozen Han River to
    Yangp’yong, thence to the Sea of Japan
    through Hong’chon and Chumunjin. This
    line included a crescent-shaped bridgehead
    around Seoul which was intended to delay
    the enemy armies and deny them the Han
    River bridges. Co-ordinating their move
    with the retiring ROK forces in the east, the
    I and IX Corps pulled back to the Seoul
    bridgehead line. The U.S. X Corps (the 2d
    and 7th Infantry Divisions) re-entered the
    fight on 2 January; next day it assumed
    control of three additional ROK divisions
    in a new corps zone on the central front between the U.S. IX and the ROK III Corps.
    U.N. forces now presented a stronger, more
    solid front than they had in the tragic
    month of November 1950 when the Chinese
    had struck the widely separated Eighth
    Army and X Corps.
    With three enemy armies comprising a
    total of nine divisions astride the northern
    approaches to Seoul, and a division from
    each of two adjacent armies in position to
    exploit successes, the South Korean capital
    was imminently threatened. The enemy,
    evidently sure that he would not be seriously opposed, followed up successes much
    faster than before. And though the Eighth
    Army fought hard, it could not check the
    advance.
    In the belief that standing in place would
    invite destruction, General Ridgway decided to withdraw instead of holding his
    present line. Withdrawal offered the chance
    to preserve the U.N. forces and to capitalize
    on the fact that the enemy’s logistical capabilities did not match his tactical abilities. 1
    The I Corps consisted of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division,
    the Republic of Korea (ROK) 1st Infantry Division, the
    Turkish Brigade, the 29th British Infantry Brigade; the
    IX Corps included the U.S. 1st Cavalry and 24th Infantry Divisions, the ROK 6th Infantry Division, the 27th
    British Commonwealth Brigade, and the Greek and Philippine Battalions. 2
    A Chinese army is equivalent in strength to a U.S. corps.
    6
    This weakness had been noted in China
    when the Communists’ attacks against the
    Nationalist forces had invariably slowed
    down, then stalled after the first blow,
    presumably while the attacking units were
    resupplied and reinforced. The Chinese attacks against the American forces in November had followed the same pattern.
    Lacking complete motorized transport, and
    using pack horses, ox carts, and human
    backs to bring up supply, the enemy had
    outrun his supply lines and was forced to
    pause above the 38th parallel before continuing the attack.
    Ridgway’s decision to roll with the punch
    accorded with MacArthur’s orders to maintain his nits intact and to achieve “maximum punishment, maximum delay.” U.N.
    forces would damage the enemy as much as
    possible while withdrawing to carefully selected defensive positions. When the attack
    stalled, the U.N. troops could strike back
    before the enemy’s supplies and reinforcements came up.
    As the enemy intensified his attacks and
    began crossing the ice of the Han River
    both east and west of Seoul, it became clear
    that the capital city bridgehead could not
    be held. Ridgway ordered another withdrawal south to a line in the vicinity of the
    37th parallel. This line ran from P’yongt’aek on the Seoul-Taejon highway east
    through Ansong, northeast to Wonju, thence
    in a curving, irregular fashion to the east
    coast town of Samch’ok. The U.S. I and IX
    Corps were first to occupy intermediate
    positions in front of Suwon, about sixteen
    miles south of Seoul, to cover the removal
    of great stocks of supplies. Movement to the
    new line began on 3 January, with bumperto-bumper columns of vehicles jamming the
    roads.
    With the advancing enemy hard on their
    heels, the U.N. troops had no time to save
    nearly 500,000 gallons of fuel and 23,000
    gallons of napalm at Kimpo Airfield west
    of Seoul. These were burned in a great
    holocaust, as were barracks, hangars, and
    other military installations.
    On 4 January South Korean government
    officials and the U.N. troops pulled out of
    Seoul as the points of enemy columns
    entered it from the north. Incendiaries set
    to work, and office buildings, hotels, and
    shacks burned. Smoke swirled through the
    streets as civilians who had waited until the
    end in the hope that the capital might be
    saved stumbled along in a haze of windwhipped embers. When the civil police left,
    bands of looters ranged the city. All during
    the day columns of U.N. jeeps, trucks, staff
    cars, and soldiers poured south over two
    engineer bridges that spanned the Han.
    Refugees clogged the single footbridge that
    was spared them. That night huge clouds
    of black smoke billowed up into the bleak
    winter sky as Seoul changed hands for the
    third time in a little more than six months.
    Once Seoul was evacuated, its port of
    Inch’on was abandoned. Port troops and
    thousands of civilians were brought safely
    out, their withdrawal covered by carrierbased U.S. Marine aircraft and by gunfire
    from U.S., Canadian, Australian, and
    Dutch warships. Docks, quays, and cranes
    were destroyed, all stores that could not be
    taken were burned, and the last two LST’s
    were floated off the mud flats as Chinese
    troops swarmed into the port area.
    Endless streams of refugees from Seoul
    and North Korea flooded the roads and
    railways leading south. Some of the refugees
    carried only small bundles, others dragged
    rude carts loaded with household possessions, and still others had only the clothes
    on their backs. Many died of exposure and
    starvation. Families became separated, as
    children wandered and their frantic par-
    7
    ents sought them among the milling
    throngs. Crying babies were taken from the
    backs of their dead mothers. Many old
    people gave up hope and squatted beside
    the roads waiting for death. Civil assistance authorities did their best to help, and
    provided food, clothing, and shelter of a
    sort for a large number, but there were too
    many to care for them all and great numbers of innocent victims perished.
    The shifting masses endangered military
    operations. Refugees had always presented
    a problem, but now the homeless wanderers
    trying to reach Pusan, which was already
    jammed, clogged vital highways and railroads. Finally control points were established at key road and rail junctions to
    channel the people into the southwest
    provinces.
    At the front the U.S. I and IX Corps fell
    back to their intermediate positions on the
    P’yongt’aek-Samch’ok line after the supplies at Suwon had been removed and the
    airfield installations were burned. Osan,
    where the U.S. 24th Division had begun its
    heroic delaying action almost six months
    before, was abandoned. But now the
    Chinese attacks in the west tapered off, the
    enemy pushed light forces south of Seoul
    but did not follow up in force. As the U.N.
    units withdrew farther south, contact with
    the enemy diminished sharply. Consequently, on 7 January, even before the I
    and IX Corps had occupied their new positions, the U.S. 27th Infantry (the “Wolfhound” regiment) of the 25th Division, reinforced with field artillery, tanks, engineers, and two air force liaison parties,
    pushed north from P’yongt’aek toward
    Osan without finding an enemy soldier. A
    IX Corps patrol went as far as Ich’on, east
    of Suwon, and met only scattered enemy
    detachments. Local patrols along the western front made no contact.
    But the central and eastern fronts saw
    heavy fighting. The North Korean II corps,
    in late December, had driven through the
    eastern mountains to place large numbers
    of enemy soldiers behind U.N. lines, and as
    the January offensive continued enemy
    guerrilla activities in these sectors increased.
    Obviously, these were carefully timed to
    coincide with the attacks from the north.
    Elusive enemy groups disrupted communications and raided military installations.
    During the first days of January the situation in the U.S. X Corps area in the center
    was obscure. Contact had been lost with the
    ROK 5th and 8th Divisions to the X Corps’
    right; the ROK 9th Division was badly disorganized, and the ROK 2d Division had
    virtually disintegrated. Thus there were
    only isolated pockets of South Korean
    troops between the X Corps and the ROK
    III Corps, and an estimated 18,000 enemy
    soldiers poured into the gap. To counter this
    threat General Ridgway formed a defensive
    line facing east and northeast on the X
    Corps’ right flank, and another to block the
    enemy’s movement to the south. But the
    enemy had already penetrated so deeply
    and in such force that it looked as if U.N.
    forces would be forced to withdraw still
    farther south.
    Now that Seoul had fallen, many enemy
    units shifted eastward to concentrate on
    driving through the rough, mountainous
    land along the Hongch’on–HoengsongWonju axis. Success in this area would place
    the enemy in position to attack southwestward behind the U.S. I and IX Corps.
    Further, this attack threatened the railroad and highway between Hongch’on and
    Pusan, the main U.N. north-south supply
    route. The capture of Wonju, moreover,
    would seriously limit U.N. movement in
    central Korea. Thus when Hongch’on and
    Hoengsong were abandoned and the U.S.
    8
    X Corps retired in co-ordination with the
    withdrawals of the I and IX Corps to the
    P’yongt’aek–Samch’ok line, the enemy
    quickly followed up with strong attacks
    against Wonju.
    Wonju was defended by elements of the
    U.S. 2d Division. This unit had suffered
    severe losses when it screened the Eighth
    Army withdrawal in North Korea in late
  17. Now reconstituted and strengthened
    by the French and Dutch Battalions, the
    “Indianheads” showed their mettle by
    making a stand on high ground immediately south of Wonju and holding in the
    face of repeated assaults by at least two divisions. January produced some of the worst
    weather of the winter, and air support was
    seriously limited. On 10 January, for example, the Far East Air Force could fly no
    close-support sorties. On other days during
    this period F-80 and F-84 jets skimmed the
    tops of hills through snow flurries and
    clouds to give what support they could.
    Thus lacking complete air support, and
    fighting in temperatures as low as 25 degrees below zero, the men of the 2d Division
    hurled back all the enemy’s assaults and
    counterattacked time and again through
    knee-deep snow. But this defense was not
    enough. The almost total disintegration of
    the line to the 2d Division’s right forced
    abandonment of Wonju. During this action
    the division was commanded by Maj. Gen.
    Robert B. McClure to 13 January, thereafter by Maj. Gen. Clark L. Ruffner.
    By 10 January large numbers of the
    enemy had flooded through the gap to the
    2d Division’s right and infiltrated the ROK
    III Corps, while enemy guerrillas harried
    the supply lines. To meet this threat
    Ridgway ordered Maj. Gen. Oliver P.
    Smith to move his 1st Marine Division from
    the vicinity of Masan on the south coast
    northward to prevent enemy penetration
    from north of the Andong–Yongdok road
    on the east and to protect the supply routes
    to the ROK units.
    With the central and eastern sectors seriously threatened, the west was now comparatively quiet. Patrols of the U.S. I and
    IX Corps ranged north in attempts to make
    contact with the enemy. Air reconnaissance
    in front of the I Corps revealed a build-up
    of enemy troops and supplies between
    Suwon and Osan, astride the main highway
    from Seoul to Taejon and Taegu. This,
    coupled with police reports of large groups
    of guerrillas between Taejon and Yongdong,
    indicated that the enemy might soon renew
    his attack along this main route to southeast
    Korea. But ground sightings and contacts
    in the I Corps sector were so few that it
    seemed the enemy was moving at night and
    avoiding roads, or that the bulk of his forces
    was moving eastward.
    Clearly, General Ridgway needed more
    exact information about the enemy. To attempt to re-establish contact in the west,
    and to force the diversion of some forces
    from the X Corps sector, he planned Operation WOLFHOUND, a reconnaissance in
    force in the I Corps sector. Accordingly, the
    27th Infantry was again reinforced with
    field artillery, tanks, and engineers and
    ordered north.
    The task force struck out northward in
    the early morning hours of 15 January. A
    battalion from the U.S. 3d Infantry Division covered its right flank, while other
    units to the west delivered local covering attacks. Blown bridges and other obstacles
    that the withdrawing U.N. troops had set
    up were the chief impediments to the advance. As the task force moved north along
    the Seoul highway toward Osan, it passed
    over bare, frozen hills and through deserted
    villages where an occasional solitary civilian might be seen dimly beside his ruined
    9
    home. Thin wisps of smoke showed the
    presence of other human beings in this
    barren land, but investigating patrols found
    only more wretched South Koreans huddling around small fires. Not a single
    enemy soldier was encountered until the
    task force reached a point just south of
    Osan, where it met and exchanged shots
    with a small enemy detachment, which
    then fled.
    Advancing in two columns, the task force
    converged on Suwon the next day, 16
    January, and met machine gun fire about
    800 yards south of the ancient city. But by
    now the high command was satisfied, and
    ordered the task force to withdraw about
    twelve miles southward.
    The Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army,
    General J. Lawton Collins, arrived in
    Korea in mid-January to assay the fighting
    qualities of the U.N. forces and promptly
    settled the question of evacuation. “As of
    now,” he announced to news correspondents, “we are going to stay and fight.” General Ridgway expressed his confidence in
    his troops, avowing that the Eighth Army
    could readily take care of itself in its present
    situation. The Eighth Army, Collins informed Washington on 17 January, was in
    good shape and constantly improving under
    Ridgway’s leadership.
    This optimism was confirmed by events
    to the east of the I and IX Corps. On 15
    January, when the WOLFHOUND force
    moved north, U.N. troops south of Wonju
    had begun further withdrawals to a shorter
    defense line which ran roughly between
    Wonch’on and Yongwol. The situation in
    the central and eastern sectors, though still
    serious, had improved by the third week of
    the new year, and enemy pressure was
    gradually decreasing. Guerrillas still harassed the rear areas, but the threat was
    abating as U.N. troops contained and
    hunted down enemy irregulars. The enemy
    armies had suffered heavily in their efforts
    to drive down the center of the peninsula.
    In one action, for example, the North
    Korean 2d, 9th, and 31st Divisions, while trying to encircle the U.S. 2d Division, were
    estimated to have lost one thousand men
    per day to U.N. infantry, armor, artillery,
    and aircraft. Eighth Army headquarters
    later estimated that the hostile armies had
    lost 38,000 men during the first twenty-six
    days in January.
    Broad expanses of the Eighth Army front
    had now become quiet, but quietness did
    not necessarily indicate that the enemy had
    given up his attempts to drive to Pusan. Air
    reconnaissance revealed that he was building up reserves or supplies and bringing up
    thousands of replacements to his depleted
    units. It became apparent that, as the U.N.
    troops developed their positions along the
    P’yongt’aek–Samch’ok line, the enemy
    thinned his forward elements, establishing
    screening forces to maintain light contact,
    and concentrated the bulk of his troops
    farther north.
    General Ridgway, on 20 January, issued
    orders designed to exploit this situation. He
    directed his subordinate commanders to
    create opportunities for brief but violent
    counteraction with armor, artillery, infantry, and air power with the intention of
    disrupting enemy preparations for a new
    offensive. He found the moment promising.
    “Never have members of a military command,” he told his troops, “had a greater
    challenge than we, or a finer opportunity
    to show ourselves and our people at their
    best—and thus be an honor to the profession of arms, and a credit to those who
    bred us.”
    As local patrols were still making very
    little contact, the U.S. IX Corps planned a
    reconnaissance in force on its front. For this
    10
    mission a task force was organized out of
    elements of the 1st Cavalry Division, a
    Regular division which fought as infantry in
    World War II and in Korea. The force included the 3d Battalion, 8th Cavalry, the
    70th Tank Battalion, a battery of field
    artillery, and a platoon of engineers. With
    the mission of conducting aggressive operations in a triangular area bounded by the
    towns of Kumnyangjang-ni, Ich’on, and
    Kyongan-ni, the force struck out at 0530,
    22 January, and advanced northward to a
    point on the Ich’on–Kumnyangjang-ni
    road about five miles east of the latter town.
    There it split into two groups. One turned
    to the east and traveled as far as Och’on-ni
    without encountering any opposition. The
    other went west for nearly a mile, came
    under fire from a small enemy group which
    dispersed under an air strike, and then
    moved north for several thousand yards.
    This element encountered no more resistance until en route back to the U.N. lines,
    when it met and scattered another small
    hostile band.
    This reconnaissance, and Operation
    WOLFHOUND, further demonstrated that the
    enemy did not occupy any positions close to
    the front lines of the U.S. I and IX Corps in
    strength. Therefore Ridgway scheduled a
    still larger operation, THUNDERBOLT, for 25
    January. THUNDERBOLT was to be another
    reconnaissance in force, with each U.S.
    corps authorized to use one U.S. division
    and one ROK regiment. Since the terrain
    in the coastal sector was flatter and the road
    network denser, the I Corps planned to use
    five columns of infantry and armor, while
    the IX Corps employed but two. The
    operation was to be a methodical, coordinated advance designed to push through
    the area south of the Han River and seek
    out the enemy.
    The two-day period preceding Operation THUNDERBOLT was unusually quiet,
    even in the zones of the U.S. X and ROK
    III Corps. The 1st Marine Division had the
    only contact with strong enemy forces—
    guerrillas to the south. Heavy snow impeded movement along the east coast, but
    active patrolling by ROK elements failed
    to locate any large enemy concentrations
    within fifteen miles of the front. In this setting, combat reconnaissance units of the I
    and IX Corps went forward on the night of
    24 January to the line of departure for
    Operation THUNDERBOLT. The pendulum
    was swinging north again.
    12
    MAP 2
    CHAPTER II
    On the first day of THUNDERBOLT (25
    January) six of the seven participating
    columns proceeded against scattered resistance. Only the Turkish Brigade east of
    Osan encountered stiff opposition. By nightfall elements of the U.S. 35th Infantry,
    25th Division, were on the south edge of
    Suwon, and in the U.S. IX Corps zone a
    column reached Ich’on and took up positions north and east of the town. U.N. air
    units meanwhile co-ordinated their close
    support missions, armed reconnaissance,
    and interdictory attacks with the fire and
    movement of the advancing ground elements. General Ridgway requested U.N.
    naval forces to intensify their offshore patrolling along the west coast in order to prevent any amphibious infiltration of the
    army’s left flank.
    The support furnished by the air forces
    was most effective during this period. When
    Eighth Army foot elements flushed elusive
    enemy soldiers into the open, U.N. aircraft
    closed in to destroy them. Air strikes softened up points of resistance almost as fast
    as they developed. Most important was the
    damage being inflicted upon Communist
    supply lines by air power, which, according
    to air intelligence estimates, kept as much
    as 80 percent of the enemy’s supplies from
    reaching his front lines. The enemy now
    had to move not only ammunition but food
    down from the north, for local rice stockpiles had been removed or destroyed by
    withdrawing U.N. forces or burned during
    the fighting, and he could no longer live off
    the countryside.
    During the rest of the month the U.S. I
    and IX Corps advanced slowly as all units
    proceeded cautiously and methodically,
    ridge by ridge, phase line by phase line, to
    clear out every enemy soldier. U.N. task
    forces advanced a limited distance each
    day. The tanks, “quad .50’s” (multiple
    antiaircraft machine guns mounted on halftracks), and field artillery would cover a
    certain number of hills with fire; and the infantry, under this cover, would sweep the
    same ground clean. Each pocket of resistance was wiped out before the next coordinated advance was made. The Eighth
    Army commander insisted that U.N. forces
    maintain a solid front, for an attempt to advance only in roadbound columns would
    surely invite the enemy to drive down the
    ridgelines between roads to U.N. rear areas.
    During the first days of THUNDERBOLT
    the enemy launched a few small night
    counterattacks, but in general fought only
    outpost actions. Prisoners of war reported
    that only two divisions of the Chinese Communist 50th Army occupied a front of nearly
    Attack and Counterattack
    25 January–28 February 1951
    14
    thirty miles, a strong indication that it had
    a screening mission.
    But by 30 January resistance had stiffened, and the enemy began launching
    counterattacks in battalion strength. Hostile machine gun, mortar, and artillery fire
    north and northwest of Suwon increased,
    and in some sectors Chinese, armed only
    with grenades and sticks of dynamite, attacked. But the enemy still fought a delaying action. The U.S. 3d Division had joined
    the battle on 27 January, and as the operation continued it developed from a reconnaissance in force to a full-scale attack.
    Eighth Army troops were not only finding
    and destroying the enemy but were taking
    ground and holding it.
    Then came indications that the extended
    frontage of the Chinese Communist 50th
    Army was being greatly reduced. Identified
    from west to east across both corps’ zones
    were the 148th, 149th, and 150th Divisions of
    the Chinese Communist 50th Army, the
    North Korean 8th Division and the 112th,
    113th, and 114th Divisions of the Chinese
    Communist 38th Army. U.N. air observers
    warned of numerous freshly dug enemy
    foxholes along the Inch’on–Yongdungp’o
    highway, and on the last day of January the
    U.S. I Corps advanced less than one mile,
    with some units engaging in hand-to-hand
    fighting. Nevertheless, U.N. armored spearheads probed aggressively toward Seoul,
    their way paved by massed Eighth Army
    artillery, bombing and napalm attacks, and
    naval gunfire that included the 16-inch
    rifles of the U.S. battleship Missouri. During
    Operation THUNDERBOLT, the Eighth Army
    was for the first time able to bring the full
    weight of two major weapons—armor and
    artillery—to bear on the Chinese enemy. In
    return, the enemy increased the size and
    strength of his counterattacks. Columns of
    U.N. tanks and other vehicles found roads
    heavily mined, and defensive mortar and
    artillery fire dropped into U.N. lines with
    mounting intensity.
    The enemy resisted vigorously until 9
    February, then abruptly gave way. Patrols
    that penetrated to a point three miles east
    of Inch’on reported no enemy activity.
    Other patrols raced north through a heavy
    snow storm, past abandoned foxholes and
    frozen rice paddies, to the Han River without contact. Task forces from the U.S. 25th
    Division made an 11,000-yard advance the
    following day to secure Inch’on and Kimpo
    Airfield without firing a shot. By nightfall
    on 10 February, the U.S. I Corps closed up
    to the south bank of the Han River and
    U.N. troops looked across at the capital
    city.
    Although no massive amphibious invasion had been necessary to recapture
    Inch’on, the U.N. demolitions during the
    January evacuation were so complete that
    the port looked as if it had suffered another such destructive operation. The city
    was three-quarters destroyed. Piers were
    smashed and battered; barbed wire entanglements and twisted metal blocked the
    streets; buildings were blackened and deserted. At Kimpo hundreds of charred 55-
    gallon gasoline drums, which withdrawing
    U.N. troops had set afire, still littered the
    bomb-pocked runways, and the hangars
    were now but gaunt skeletons.
    On the central front, meanwhile, U.N.
    armored patrols reached Wonju, now deserted except for a few civilians. Since there
    was little activity in the center and east at
    the end of January, Ridgway ordered the
    U.S. X Corps to create diversionary efforts
    to the north. Elements of the corps. accordingly pushed toward Hoengsong along the
    Wonju–Hoengsong road, and captured the
    town on 2 February against light resistance.
    But presence of the North Korean II and V
    Corps in the vicinity foreshadowed stiffer
    15
    opposition to a farther advance northward.
    The time now seemed ripe for more ambitious efforts. Ridgway instructed the X
    Corps and the ROK III Corps to initiate an
    attack similar to that being so successfully
    carried out in the zones of the U.S. I and IX
    Corps. The plan called for the ROK 5th
    and 8th Divisions of the X Corps to spearhead enveloping attacks on Hongch’on in
    order to disrupt the regrouping of North
    Korean forces south of the town. At the
    same time ROK III Corps units would advance in the central-east zone to protect the
    X Corps’ right flank.
    This attack, called Operation ROUNDUP,
    began on 5 February, and all units moved
    forward without opposition on the first day.
    By nightfall on the sixth, however, the
    ROK 5th and 8th Divisions were both
    meeting resistance. The former, on the
    right, found the going particularly difficult
    northeast of Hoengsong. Moreover, ROK
    III Corps units to the east could not keep
    pace with the advances in the central zone,
    and by 8 February strong North Korean
    forces were hitting the right flank of the
    U.S. X Corps. The ROK 5th Division
    therefore took up blocking positions along
    the exposed flank, and the ROK 3d Division was given the mission of continuing the
    envelopment of Hongch’on from the east.
    For several days pressure on the U.S. X
    Corps increased steadily and signs pointed
    to a large enemy build-up on its front. U.N.
    troops encountered mine fields and boobytrapped foxholes. Although the enemy was
    definitely on the defensive he began launching stronger counterattacks all along the
    line. In some cases the enemy seemed to be
    trying to entice U.N. troops into attacking.
    Air observers reported the presence of large
    enemy groups north of the boundary between IX and X Corps and of other groups
    moving south and east above Hoengsong.
    In addition, U.N. intelligence thought
    it probable that the enemy had shifted the
    bulk of his forces in the west to the westcentral zone, and the threat of a counteroffensive there became more likely as U.S.
    I and IX Corps closed up to the Han River.
    This threat materialized on the night of
    11–12 February, when elements of the
    Chinese Communist 40th and 66th Armies
    and the North Korean V Corps struck violently in subzero weather against the ROK
    3d, 5th, and 8th Divisions, north of Hoengsong. Signaling his attack with bugle calls,
    whistles, and the beating of drums, the
    enemy made immediate penetrations and
    forced the ROK divisions to withdraw
    rapidly. Large enemy groups moved southeast through the snow-clogged, ice-glazed
    mountains in the battle zone, and air
    observers reported numerous enemy road
    blocks behind U.N. lines. The three ROK
    divisions attempted to build a defensive line
    just north of Hoengsong, but the situation
    had already deteriorated to a point where
    an organized defense was impossible. Only
    remnants of the ROK 5th and 8th Divisions
    remained. One regiment of the ROK 3d
    Division north of Hoengsong was surrounded, U. N. units became disorganized
    and individuals streamed southward, fighting desperately to break through the road
    blocks. Hoengsong was abandoned on 13
    February, as Eighth Army troops battled
    their way south toward Wonju.
    At nightfall on the 13th, the enemy attacked in strength at Chip’yong-ni, on the
    left hinge of the U.S. X Corps zone northwest of Wonju. This tiny village, no more
    than a few thatch-roofed huts clustered in a
    valley surrounded by snow-covered rocky
    peaks, happened to be the junction of several roads, and as such was a keystone of
    the central zone. If it fell the entire Eighth
    Army front might be endangered. The 23d
    Infantry of the U.S. 2d Division and the
    French Battalion formed a defensive perimeter on a ring of low hills immediately
    around the town, and by mid-morning of
    16
    the 14th they were surrounded by a force
    later estimated to have comprised three
    Chinese Communist divisions. For three
    days the stalwart U.N. troops fiercely defended the Chip’yong-ni road junction
    against repeated assaults as enemy fire
    poured in on them from the surrounding
    mountains.
    U.N. air forces dropped food and ammunition to the beleaguered men and destroyed hundreds of enemy troops with
    strafing and napalm attacks. Even at night,
    aircraft were able to give a measure of support by using magnesium flares to illuminate the battlefield. American and French
    ground troops were fighting gallantly when
    an armored task force from U.S. 5th Cavalry Regiment ran the gantlet of enemy fire
    to join them. The following day when
    weary American and French soldiers
    climbed out of their foxholes they found
    that enemy pressure had melted away.
    For its extreme bravery in this action the
    French Battalion, commanded by Lt. Col.
    Ralph Monclar, a Foreign Legion veteran
    who had given up his four-star rank of
    Général de Corps d’Armée to take a battalion to
    Korea, was awarded the American Distinguished Unit Citation as were also the U.S.
    23d Infantry and attached troops. The defense of Chip’yong-ni proved to be the turning point in the enemy advance.
    During the action at Chip’yong-ni, some
    twelve miles of front had lain totally undefended between Chip’yong-ni and a
    point southwest of Wonju. Two units of the
    U.S. IX Corps, the ROK 6th Division and
    the 27th Commonwealth Brigade, hurriedly
    moved to fill the gap. Although the time lag
    in getting them to their assigned sectors
    could have been exploited by the enemy, he
    apparently was more intent on driving on
    the road junctions at Chip’yong-ni and
    Wonju, and the IX Corps filled the hole
    before he could act.
    While U.N. soldiers were thus bitterly
    defending in the central and central-west
    sectors, strong North Korean forces had attacked northeast of Wonju in an attempt
    presumably to recapture P’yongch’ang.
    This attempt was believed to be an effort
    secondary to the major thrust in the U.S. X
    Corps zone, but the North Koreans soon
    made a deep penetration east of Wonju and
    drove to within ten kilometers of Chech’on
    to expose the right flank of the X Corps
    once more. General Ridgway had to muster
    all his resources to contain the enemy
    salient. Elements of the U.S. 7th Division
    and remnants of the recently disorganized
    ROK 3d and 5th Divisions hastily formed a
    defensive line north of Chech’on. The situation was unstable for several days, but the
    enemy’s southward surge near Chech’on
    was at least temporarily arrested.
    At the same time the U.S. I and IX
    Corps were gradually taking all the ground
    up to the Han River in their zones to the
    west. Some I Corps units were in position
    along the south bank west of Seoul. Here
    the action was confined largely to patrolling
    and duels between U.N. tanks and enemy
    self-propelled guns located across the river.
    Several ROK patrols attempted to slip over
    to the north bank, but were driven back by
    artillery and mortar fire. The South Korean
    capital was reported to be bristling with
    enemy troops, and it was estimated that the
    Chinese Communist 50th Army, numbering
    approximately 18,000 men, was in the city
    itself, while the North Korean 8th and 47th
    Infantry and 17th Mechanized Divisions, totaling about 19,800 men, were in the vicinity.
    The enemy still retained a sizable foothold south of the Han, generally between
    Seoul and Yangp’yong. Although he defended it resolutely, troops of both U.S.
    corps were steadily narrowing it down. On
    the night of 13–14 February, a powerful
    enemy counterattack from the bridgehead
    17
    pushed between two U.N. units and
    plunged into I Corps near areas toward
    Suwon. This counterattack, probably intended to divert attention from the enemy’s
    main effort in the central regions, was
    quickly contained. During the next day,
    U.S. troops searched out the hostile force
    and, by actual count, killed 1,152 and took
    353 prisoners. The remaining enemy troops
    fled to the north.
    Meanwhile, far to the south, guerrillas
    and remnants of the North Korean II Corps
    continued operations in the rear area. Although these forces were scattered throughout the entire southern Korean peninsula,
    large concentrations between Andong and
    Uisong posed a constant threat to the U.N.
    supply routes. No truck convoy was safe
    from the marauders. All attempts to destroy
    the guerrilla groups by attacks from a single
    direction had failed. The enemy simply fell
    back and disappeared. The U.S. 1st Marine
    Division, which fought them until the middle of February, soon learned the most
    effective technique: first, surround the hostile bands to prevent their escape; then, attack with the support of mortars and
    artillery.
    Gradually the guerrillas became less
    active, less eager to fight, and prone to disperse after short skirmishes. It was estimated
    that U.N. counteractions had reduced the
    strength of these forces to about 18,000 by
    the end of February, a decline of approximately 15 percent during the first two
    months of 1951.
    The last two weeks of February, however,
    saw the enemy strengthen his forces considerably on the fluid central front. Elements
    of nine Chinese divisions had been identified in the enemy offensive in the central
    zones, as well as elements of the North
    Korean II and V Corps, with the North
    Korean III Corps attached. In addition, one
    more Chinese Communist army was known
    to be immediately available.
    The enemy attack at Chip’yong-ni had
    followed the expected pattern. Within a
    week after the initial blow the offensive had
    slowed down, and the enemy thinned his
    lines in the west-central area and around
    Wonju. The penetration by North Korean
    troops in the east-central zone had continued to move toward Chech’on, but the
    momentum of the thrust abated and it degenerated into infiltration. Two factors had
    apparently forced the enemy to suspend his
    offensive: tremendous casualties and the
    need to pause for resupply and reorganization.
    When the Chinese Communists attacked
    in November, they had been fresh, confident, and unhurt. By the time their midFebruary attack died down, they had been
    weakened by U.N. air and ground action,
    and had suffered cold, hunger, and disease.
    The cold, in particular, had affected the
    Chinese much more than the U.N. forces
    for most of them were inadequately clothed.
    Moreover, they did not have, by Western
    standards, proper medical facilities. As few
    towns were left standing, they could not
    find buildings to protect them from the
    freezing weather. When they did, U.N. aircraft wiped out the buildings along with the
    enemy soldiers. Frostbite and trench foot
    were taking their toll within enemy ranks
    and, if prisoners of war were to be believed,
    they were plagued by typhus, that age-old
    scourge of armies. Fighting 260 miles south
    of the Manchurian border, the Chinese
    found the situation quite different from that
    in November when they had had their
    bases to their immediate rear.
    At 0745 on 18 February, Maj. Gen.
    Bryant E. Moore, who had assumed command of the U.S. IX Corps on 31 January,
    reported to Ridgway that one of the regiments in the sector of the U.S. 24th Division
    had found no opposition before it. The enemy’s foxholes were empty, and abandoned
    18
    weapons and cooking equipment lay strewn
    about. Eighth Army headquarters passed
    this information to the U.S. I and X Corps
    with the request that combat patrols be sent
    out to gain contact. The army commander
    warned that any withdrawal by the enemy
    might be a ruse, but findings of the patrols
    confirmed the fact that enemy forces along
    the entire Eighth Army central front were
    beginning a general retreat. General Ridgway immediately ordered U.S. X Corps to
    attack eastward to destroy the North
    Koreans on its eastern flank, near Chech’on.
    At the same time, he directed the IX Corps
    to seize positions running from Hajin to
    Yangp’yong, and thence northwest to the
    intersection of the U.S. IX Corps boundary
    with the Han River. These moves met very
    light, scattered resistance and disclosed evidence of hasty retreat. By 19 February the
    initiative all along the front had passed
    from the enemy into U.N. hands.
    General Ridgway was determined to give
    the North Koreans and Chinese neither rest
    nor opportunity to reorganize. On 21 February, he inaugurated a general advance
    (Operation KILLER) by both the U.S. IX
    and X Corps to deny important positions to
    the enemy and to destroy as many hostile
    troops as could be found. The objective was
    a line which ran generally eastward from
    Yangp’yong on the Han River east of Seoul
    to points north of Chip’yong-ni and Hwangsong-ni, and thence eastward so as to secure
    the east-west portion of the Wonju–Kangnung road between Wonju and Pangnimni. In order to include the U.S. 1st Marine
    Division in KILLER, the boundary between
    the two corps was shifted eastward so that
    Wonju and Hoengsong fell within the IX
    Corps zone. The Marine division was relieved of its antiguerrilla mission and committed near Wonju as part of the IX Corps.
    During the first week of Operation
    KILLER the U.N. troops advanced up to ten
    miles in the Chip’yong-ni area, and by 24
    February the 1st Marine Division had
    seized the high ground overlooking Hoengsong. That same day General Moore, the
    U.S. IX Corps commander, died of a heart
    attack following a helicopter accident in
    which he and his pilot crashed into the Han
    River. General Smith, commander of the
    U.S. 1st Marine Division, assumed temporary command of the corps pending the arrival of Maj. Gen. William M. Hoge who
    took command on 5 March.
    Advances in both corps zones were slow
    and unspectacular, for South Korea was
    just beginning to thaw. Swollen streams and
    mud greatly hampered military operations.
    In the X Corps zone thaws coupled with
    extremely mountainous terrain made each
    day’s advance a test of endurance for both
    men and equipment. Heavy rains turned
    frozen rice paddies into treacherous brown
    slime, and men stumbled and slithered in
    deep mud. At night, U.N. troops scraped
    through sodden sand and muck to hack out
    foxholes in the frozen ground beneath.
    Though opposition in front of the U.S. IX
    Corps was heavy, enemy tactics along the
    entire central and central-east fronts were
    much like those encountered by Operation
    THUNDERBOLT a month before. Enemy
    groups contested U.N. advances, but their
    mission was plainly one of delay.
    As U.N. troops began moving back into
    the areas lately occupied by the enemy,
    they found evidence of the effectiveness of
    their attacks. The hills around Wonju and
    Chech’on were littered with enemy dead.
    Many more had been buried in shallow
    graves on the bleak mountain sides. Apparently the Chinese and North Korean invaders had been even more severely mauled
    than had been imagined. The Eighth Army
    Psychological Warfare Branch went into
    action, and shortly thereafter the Fifth Air
    Force began dropping leaflets to the retreat-
    19
    ing enemy with the terse invitation: “Count
    your men!”
    In the I Corps zone the Han River became a formidable obstacle shortly after the
    beginning of the thaws. Behind this obstacle
    the Communist defense of Seoul and other
    areas on the north bank was apparently
    being conducted with a reduced number of
    troops. The port of Inch’on was again in
    limited use, but many weeks would pass before piers, cranes, tidal gates, and other port
    installations could be fully restored. Kimpo
    Airfield would not again be operational
    until May.
    In eight days U.N. forces had advanced
    to their assigned objectives in the central
    and central-east zones. Operation KILLER
    was nearly completed. Its success had been
    due in large measure not only to continuous
    pressure against an enemy who appeared
    unable to launch a major counterattack
    unless granted time to organize, but also to
    the strict observance of the basic tactical
    doctrine of co-ordinated movement.
    On 28 February, after weeks of ceaseless
    hammering by U.N. forces, the Communist
    foothold south of the Han River collapsed.
    By 1 March the entire Eighth Army front
    was relatively stable. For the first time, the
    U.N. line had no gaping holes, no soft spots,
    and no enemy salients threatening to tear it
    in two.
    20
    MAP 3
    21
    CHAPTER III
    Operation KILLER—the advance by the
    IX and X Corps—had not fulfilled all of
    General Ridgway’s hopes for it, for the enemy had managed to withdraw while
    wretched weather was disrupting Allied
    road and rail movement. But in large part
    the recent losses had been recouped and the
    geographical objectives were attained by
    1 March. The U.N. line, situated about
    halfway between the 37th and 38th parallels, swung in a concave arc from south of
    the Han River in the west through
    Yangp’yong and Hoengsong, then curved
    gently northeast to Kangnung.
    With MacArthur’s approval, Ridgway
    determined to continue the offensive with a
    new attack, Operation RIPPER. He planned
    to attack northward in the central and
    eastern zones to capture Hongch’on and
    Ch’unch’on and seize a line, designated
    IDAHO, just south of the 38th parallel.
    RIPPER’S purpose was, again, to destroy
    enemy soldiers and equipment, to keep up
    pressure that would prevent the mounting
    of a counteroffensive, and to split the Chinese from the North Korean forces, most of
    which were posted on the eastern front. The
    U.S. IX and X Corps were to advance in
    the center through successive phase lines to
    IDAHO while the ROK units in the east
    covered the right flank with local attacks
    and the I Corps in the west maintained its
    positions south and east of Seoul. The drive
    by the IX and X Corps would create a
    bulge east of the capital city from which
    U.N. forces could envelop it.
    Operation RIPPER began on 7 March
    when, after one of the most tremendous artillery preparations of the war, the U.S.
    25th Division crossed the Han River near
    its confluence with the Pukhan and established a bridgehead on the north bank.
    Simultaneously, the ROK 1st Division delivered a diversionary thrust northwest of
    Kimpo Airfield, and the U.S. 3d Division
    demonstrated along the Han River south of
    Seoul in an attempt to draw attention from
    the 25th Division. At first the enemy vigorously contested the bridgehead, but after
    three days of heavy fighting retired in disorder. In the central and eastern zones,
    U.N. forces made substantial gains on the
    first day, and thereafter moved steadily forward. Opposition to the drive took the form
    of a series of small unit delaying actions, a
    tactic well adapted to the rugged terrain.
    Wherever the land was least favorable to
    attacks, wherever roads were lacking, slopes
    precipitous, and natural approaches few,
    there the enemy held most stubbornly. For
    the next six weeks a grinding type of warfare prevailed. Nevertheless, by 11 March
    Crossing the 38th Parallel
    1 March–21 April 1951
    22
    elements of the U.S. IX Corps had reached
    the first phase line. Other units reached it
    in the next two days, and the attack to the
    second phase line began on the 14th.
    As intended by General Ridgway, the
    advance in the central and eastern zones
    had threatened the enemy’s control of the
    capital. To search out the positions that still
    barred the way, a patrol from the ROK I
    Division crossed the Han River west of
    Seoul and proceeded northward for several
    miles before running into enemy fire. Another patrol probed the outer defenses of
    the city, found them almost deserted on the
    night of 14–15 March, and U.N. troops
    moved in. Thus Seoul changed hands for
    the fourth time. Within a matter of hours
    the Republic of Korea flag was raised over
    the National Assembly Building.
    Heavily blasted by U.N. and enemy
    bombardment, some of its principal buildings the scenes of previous fighting, Seoul
    showed both new and old scars. The Bun
    Chon shopping district, untouched when
    U.N. troops had withdrawn in January,
    had been flattened. United States Ambassador John J. Muccio’s official residence
    had taken two more direct hits. The great
    brass-studded red gates of the embassy
    compound were leveled and buried in
    rubble. No utilities were in operation.
    Streetcar and light wires dangled from
    poles. Of the city’s original population of
    1,500,000 only some 200,000 ragged civilians remained. By the end of March, however, a city government was once more
    functioning in Seoul.
    During the next week the enemy fought
    only delaying actions. In the X Corps zone,
    some of the worst terrain yet encountered
    proved to be more of an obstacle than the
    enemy. The mountainous country consisted
    of high peaks and narrow valleys, and U.N.
    troops were constantly either descending
    sharp slopes or climbing steep heights to attack enemy positions that were sometimes
    above the clouds. Each enemy position was,
    in effect, a strong point which had to be approached, enveloped, and carried by assault. The early spring’s rising temperatures
    were turning battlefields into quagmires.
    All supplies had to be hand-carried, and
    usually only the barest essentials reached
    the front lines. Prompt action by air rescue
    and evacuation units saved many wounded
    who otherwise would have died, for it sometimes took two days to carry the wounded
    out to litter jeeps. Far East Air Forces cargo
    aircraft contributed by dropping food and
    ammunition, and thus gave the ground
    forces greater flexibility. Despite the enemy
    and natural obstacles, Operation RIPPER
    ground slowly forward.
    About this time Ridgway ordered the
    ROK I Corps in the east to complete the
    destruction of remnants of the North Korean 10th Division in the Chungbong Mountains southwest of the coastal town of
    Parhan-ni. This enemy division, currently
    harassing the South Korean forces engaged
    in Operation RIPPER, had infiltrated southward in January through the mountains
    from the 38th parallel to within twenty
    miles of Taegu. Relying on the countryside
    for food and clothing and on captured materiel for ammunition, it had been able to
    make itself the full-time concern of at least
    one U.N. division plus ROK security forces.
    It had suffered constant attack and heavy
    losses. Because it had no medical facilities,
    only the fittest survived. Yet the North Korean 10th Division managed to maintain the
    form of a military organization.
    As early as 13 March, what was left of
    the division had made its way as far north
    as the Chungbong Mountains, where the
    surviving elements continued their operations. During the next few days, four ROK
    23
    regiments harried the North Koreans in an
    effort to wipe them out. Though the 10th
    Division casualties were high, many must
    have survived to escape: the major activity
    in the sectors of the ROK 3d and 9th Divisions, on 17 and 18 March, consisted of
    fighting enemy groups that entered U.N.
    areas from the rear, fought their way
    through, and disappeared to the north.
    With this threat eliminated, other ROK
    forces in the east were able to move to Line
    IDAHO by 17 March. The U.S. IX and X
    Corps neared their third phase line in the
    central zone and, Hongch’on having been
    secured, U.S. marines advanced toward
    Ch’unch’on. The enemy in this sector
    fought vigorously from bunkers which were
    little affected by aircraft and artillery attack. In many instances enemy soldiers had
    to be dislodged by the bayonet. Since
    Ch’unch’on was an enemy supply and communications center, and it seemed probable
    that the city could be taken only after a
    hard fight, the 187th Airborne Regimental
    Combat Team (RCT) was alerted to make
    a drop there on 22 March. By the 19th,
    when U.N. armored patrols entered the
    Ch’unch’on basin, it became apparent that
    the progress of Operation RIPPER and the
    withdrawal of the enemy had been so rapid
    that an airdrop would not be profitable.
    The project was canceled.
    Once Seoul had fallen I Corps troops
    took up positions on a line from Yongdungp’o through the capital’s northern
    suburbs, thence northeast. Ridgway then
    enlarged RIPPER to include a move by the I
    Corps westward to the Imjin River, and the
    corps began its attack on 22 March.
    Next day the 187th Airborne RCT and
    two Ranger companies parachuted from
    more than 100 twin-tailed “Flying Boxcars”
    onto drop zones at Munsan-ni about 20
    miles northwest of Seoul. An armored task
    force from the I Corps then rolled forward
    through mine fields and quickly made contact with the paratroopers. But the jump,
    which had been designed to block enemy
    movement along the Seoul–Kaesong axis
    and trap large numbers of enemy troops,
    failed to achieve these results. The enemy,
    here and elsewhere during Operation
    RIPPER, had elected to withdraw, rolling
    with the punch and trading space for time.
    His prompt withdrawal made the advance
    to the Imjin River rapid and very nearly
    bloodless.
    This advance placed Eighth Army troops
    on the west flank of the enemy. The U.S. I
    Corps commander quickly ordered the
    187th RCT to attack due east to capture
    the commanding ground behind the enemy
    troops facing the U.S. 3d Division. This
    move would allow the latter to attack and
    hammer the enemy against the anvil
    formed by the airborne regiment. But foul
    weather and all but impassable roads—
    supporting armored elements were forced
    to return to Seoul—slowed the eastward
    movement of the 187th RCT. By the time
    the objective was reached the enemy had
    withdrawn.
    By the last days of March, as RIPPER
    came to a close, Ridgway’s forces had
    fought their way through rain and mud
    generally to the 38th parallel. In the east
    the ROK III and I Corps had pushed
    patrols more than twelve miles north of the
    parallel, and by 31 March South Korean
    troops were in control of the roads leading
    west and south from Yangyang on the east
    coast. In the west, an American armored
    column probed over the line north of
    Uijongbu above Seoul. The enemy had
    pulled back and broken contact in many
    areas across the front. All U.N. forces were
    in position on Line IDAHO, and all geographical objectives had been taken. But
    24
    the main body of the enemy had slipped
    away and escaped destruction. RIPPER was
    thus a qualified success.
    Throughout February and March, U.N.
    naval forces played an important role in
    the Korean conflict. Ships from the navies
    of the United States, Australia, Canada,
    Great Britain, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea, and Thailand
    constantly harassed the enemy. A blockading force had initiated a continuous bombardment of Wonsan and Songjin that was
    to surpass the Civil War record established
    when Federal ships shelled Vicksburg for
    forty-two consecutive days. Both Wonsan
    and Songjin were communications centers
    for the road and rail networks along the
    east coast, and the blockade and bombardment were designed to keep the supply
    arteries severed. By the end of March the
    siege was in its forty-third day.
    In addition, South Korean units raided
    Wolsa Peninsula, about forty-five miles
    southwest of P’yongyang, killed and
    wounded a number of the garrison, and
    withdrew with a bag of prisoners. Similar
    raids were delivered at Inch’on, and ROK
    marines hit far up the east coast in the
    vicinity of Wonsan. The U.N. commanders
    launched these operations for several purposes: to inflict physical damage on the enemy; to net prisoners who could furnish
    valuable information; and to force the enemy to keep garrisons in areas where such
    raids might be expected.
    When the main enemy forces had pulled
    back before RIPPER, it was to a line north of
    the 38th parallel which had apparently
    been built before the North Korean onslaught of June 1950. This line was probably the strongest position in enemy territory. The most stalwart portion of this line
    lay in the center, where a series of fortifications, built in solid rock and reinforced by
    logs and concrete, protected the road network and supply and assembly areas in the
    popularly termed “Iron Triangle” bounded
    by Ch’orwon, Kumhwa, and P’yonggang.
    Sending U.N. troops in force across the
    38th parallel was not an undertaking to be
    entered into lightly. A northward advance
    would lengthen their communication lines
    while correspondingly shortening the enemy’s, and eventually a point would be
    reached where U.N. air superiority would
    be nullified. General MacArthur had reported that his forces could successfully
    proceed for one hundred miles over the
    parallel before they reached this point, but
    in the United States and among the other
    participating United Nations, it was all too
    easy to remember the debacle of late 1950
    after the first U.N. crossing of the parallel.
    On the other hand, the enemy armies could
    not be allowed to regroup and reorganize
    unmolested for a counterattack which intelligence sources considered inevitable.
    To complicate matters, the forthcoming
    March–July rainy season would limit the
    mobility of armored and mechanized forces.
    The decision whether to cross the parallel
    or stand pat was a vital one. President
    Truman considered it a tactical decision
    which should be made by the responsible
    commander. The choice was made by
    Ridgway. With MacArthur’s approval,
    he elected to continue the advance with
    the hope of achieving maximum destruction.
    In making their plans, U.N. commanders were sure that the enemy was engaged
    in a full-scale buildup of troops and matériel not far to the north. While U.N. tactical
    advances were taking place, they gave careful consideration to the expected Chinese
    Communist spring offensive. That it would
    come was a foregone conclusion, and the
    only elements that remained in doubt were
    25
    the time and the place of the attack. The
    enemy was still generally on the defensive,
    but there were definite offensive overtones
    in his actions. He was building no new positions farther to the rear. The Chinese were
    believed to have moved their XIX Army
    Group (consisting of the 63d, 64th, and 65th
    Armies) close to the Eighth Army’s western
    front. If so, they could be expected to attack
    in the west and west-central zones over
    open, comparatively flat land, the only territory along the existing line where armor
    could be used advantageously. That armor
    would be used seemed certain, for air observers had reported the presence of the
    equivalent of one armored division and possibly two armored regiments in enemy rear
    areas. And on the central and central-east
    fronts, additional Chinese and North Korean troops had moved to within striking.
    distance of the line.
    By the end of the first week in April,
    U.N. intelligence officers reported that nine
    Chinese Communist armies had been positively identified, and ten more tentatively
    identified, together with eighteen North
    Korean divisions and six brigades. The
    combat efficiency of three of the armies had
    doubtless been reduced by the recent offensives, but the other armies were a formidable force.
    The possibility that the enemy, might use
    his increasing air strength—now believed
    to be a minimum of 750 aircraft of all
    types—was a cause for concern. Numerous
    reports and air photographs left little doubt
    that the North Koreans were making airfields ready for immediate use. In some instances runways were being lengthened to
    accommodate jets or bombers. In P’yongyang the enemy was readying a street to
    serve as a runway by demolishing adjacent
    houses. It was reasonable to assume that all
    this was intended to permit use of air power
    in conjunction with a ground offensive.
    In the face of these potential threats, it
    was better for the U.N. forces to move forward than to stand still. Thus on 5 April
    Ridgway followed RIPPER with Operation
    RUGGED, a general advance toward a new
    objective line called KANSAS. Running
    along commanding ground north of the
    38th parallel, KANSAS was approximately
    115 miles in length, including fourteen
    miles of tidal water on the left flank and, in
    the center, the ten-mile water barrier of the
    Hwach’on Reservoir, which was Seoul’s
    source of water and electric power. The terrain on the right flank of this line was
    rough, nearly devoid of roads and therefore
    difficult for both U.N. and enemy units.
    But by shortening and strengthening their
    line, the U.N. commanders could use the
    water and terrain barriers to establish a
    stronger defense in depth. They could also
    make KANSAS the base for later operations
    designed to seize the Iron Triangle.
    By 9 April, all units in the U.S. I and IX
    Corps and the ROK I Corps on the east
    coast had battled their way against fluctuating enemy resistance to positions on Line
    KANSAS. Although the U.S. X and ROK
    III Corps, in the central and central-east
    sectors, had been delayed by rugged, terrain
    and hampered by the lack of adequate supply routes, they were steadily drawing up.
    On the same day, 9 April, the enemy
    opened several sluice gates of the dam that
    controlled the water passing from the
    Hwach’on Reservoir into the lower Pukhan River. The Pukhan, originating in the
    mountainous country to the north, flowed
    south to the reservoir and thence southwest
    to its confluence with the Han River east of
    Seoul. Within an hour the water level had
    risen several feet; one engineer bridge was
    broken, and IX Corps Engineers were
    forced to swing a second one back to the
    26
    banks. To prevent the enemy from opening
    all eighteen sluice gates and flooding the
    Pukhan, a task force from the 7th Cavalry
    and the 4th Ranger Company was hastily
    organized and sent to seize the dam, close
    the gates, and immobilize the gate-opening
    machinery.
    This raid failed for a variety of reasons:
    lack of enough landing craft, poor visibility,
    difficulty of movement over the almost
    trackless terrain, and stubborn enemy resistance. But the enemy’s opening of the
    Hwach’on gates, while dramatic, had less
    effect on U.N. operations than originally
    feared and the task force was recalled after
    two days.
    While the U.S. X and the ROK III
    Corps drew up to the KANSAS line, the U.S.
    I Corps and left-flank units of the IX Corps
    continued the advance by attacking toward
    Ch’orwon, the southwest corner of the Iron
    Triangle, with the intention of seizing a line
    designated UTAH which was in effect an
    outward bulge of KANSAS. As UTAH’S
    northernmost point lay just south of Ch’orwon, this move would place the U.N. forces
    in position to strike at the Triangle. The
    main body of the IX Corps remained in
    position and patrolled, and on the east coast
    the ROK I Corps advanced by column of
    divisions.
    Meanwhile U.N. forces continued to
    edge forward, although the enemy burned
    off large areas of his front to create dense
    smoke screens that reduced the effectiveness
    of close air support. The Hwach’on Dam
    fell on 16 April, and on the east coast South
    Korean forces took Taep’o-ri. Other ROK
    troops north of Seoul sent patrols across the
    Imjin River and far to the northwest. By 17
    April the Eighth Army’s front-line units
    could not make contact with the enemy and
    U.S. IX Corps units not already moving
    joined in the advance north from Line
    KANSAS. Thereafter the general progress
    toward Line UTAH was virtually unopposed. Even as the advance continued,
    however, evidences of enemy preparation
    for counterattack continued to be reported
    to Van Fleet.
    The enemy had long boasted in his press
    and radio releases that his offensive would
    be designed to force a military decision by
    either driving the U.N. forces from Korea
    or destroying them in the field. Van Fleet
    foresaw different results. His army had improved during the winter campaign. U.S.
    soldiers had become highly skilled in the
    months since they had entered the war as
    green occupation troops. Van Fleet decided
    to meet the expected attack by continuing
    the doctrines developed by his predecessor—those of “maximum punishment,
    maximum delay . . . .” The U.N. forces
    would, if compelled, buy time with space,
    and conduct a co-ordinated withdrawal to
    defensive positions well south of the 38th
    parallel, maintain contact with the enemy
    at all times, and inflict maximum losses on
    him by utilizing superior U.N. fire power
    from the ground and the air. When the
    offensive had run its course the Eighth
    Army would counterattack, cut the enemy’s
    supply lines, and endeavor to destroy all
    hostile troops in the forward areas.
    During this period came a dramatic
    change in command. On 11 April, after a
    series of public utterances revealed sharp
    differences over national policy and military strategy, President Truman relieved
    General MacArthur of all his commands
    and replaced him with General Ridgway.
    Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet was dispatched
    posthaste from Washington to take command of the Eighth Army and attached
    forces. He arrived and assumed command
    on 14 April.
    27
    The U.N. campaign in Korea bore a
    striking resemblance to the Duke of Wellington’s campaigns against Napoleon’s
    armies in Spain and Portugal. Wellington,
    like U.N. commanders, was pitted against
    enemy forces that were capable of receiving
    steady overland reinforcements, while his
    troops, like those of the Eighth Army, were
    supplied chief ly by superior sea power.
    Wrote the Duke, describing his war of
    maneuver: “If they advance against me I
    shall retire before them, accepting battle if
    they give me a favorable opportunity, for
    the . . . action of my lines is superior to
    the shock action of their columns . . . .”
    To anticipate an enemy offensive did not
    mean to sit and wait for it. By 19 April, all
    U.S. I and IX Corps units were in position
    along Line UTAH and preparing to continue
    the advance to Line WYOMING, an eastward
    extension of the UTAH bulge. After consolidating their gains for two days these
    corps started northward again. If this attack proved to be successful, U.N. forces
    would be on the high ground overlooking
    Ch’orwon at the base of the Iron Triangle.
    But during the daylight hours of 22 April
    enemy activity across the whole front
    sharply increased, and the U.N. offensive
    halted abruptly. Their lines alive with
    movement, the Chinese and North Koreans
    abandoned cover and concealment and
    moved boldly into the open. The expected
    enemy spring offensive was at hand.
    SECTION 1
    l–24 January 1951
    31
    32
    33
    CONGESTION ON THE HONGCH’ON–WONJU ROAD, central sector, 3 January 1951
    34
    35
    BUILDINGS BURNING IN SEOUL as South Korean government officials and U.N. troops leave the city
    for the second time, 3 January.
    AMMUNITION DUMP ON FIRE AT KIMPO AIRFIELD
    36
    TROOP-LOADED TANKS MOVING
    BABY-SAN WAITING FOR PARENTS to arrange passage out of Inch’on.
    37
    SOUTH after crossing the Han River.
    LAST TROOPS TO LEAVE INCH’ON HARBOR boarding
    an LST, 4 January.
    38
    RAIL BRIDGE ACROSS THE HAN RIVER is demolished by engineer troops. Both photographs were
    taken on 4 January.
    39
    PONTON BRIDGE SPANNING THE ICY HAN is blown up after last of the U.N. forces evacuate Seoul,
    4 January.
    40
    HORDES OF REFUGEES FLEEING FROM SEOUL clogging a dike across rice paddies, 5 January.
    A SEEMINGLY ENDLESS COLUMN OF SOUTH KOREANS plodding
    41
    through the heavy snow south of Kangnung near the east coast.
    TWO KOREAN MOTHERS pushing a cartload of their younger children.
    42
    2D DIVISION VEHICLES IN MOUNTAIN PASS south of Wonju, 10 January. In this sector enemy troops
    flooded through the gap to the right of 2d Division positions and ROK III Corps lines.
    43
    SUPPLY CONVOY HELD UP by accident on icy highway. Temperatures reached 25 degrees below
    zero during the fighting for Wonju, attacked by Communist forces 7 January.
    44
    A 25-pounder Field Gun-howitzer. Artillerymen of the 29th British Brigade prepare to support
    the Turkish Brigade fighting in the west sector, 19
    January. Both brigades were attached to the 25th
    Division.
    ROK 3d DIVISION TROOPS ADVANCING to the mountains southeast of Yongwol on the central
    front, 20 January.
    45
    Moving Out over the frozen ground, X Corps
    area. Note rocket launcher in foreground.
    25TH DIVISION TROOPS MOVING UP TO OSAN, 23 January. Operation THUNDERBOLT, a reconnaissance-in-force designed to seek out the enemy, was scheduled to start on 25 January.
    46
    GEN. J. LAWTON COLLINS, CHIEF OF STAFF,
    U.S. ARMY, stopping for a conference in
    Japan before going to Korea, is greeted by
    General of the Army Douglas MacArthur.
    GEN. HOYT S. VANDENBERG, CHIEF OF STAFF,
    U.S. AIR FORCE (left), confers with Lt. Gen.
    George E. Stratemeyer, Commanding General, Far East Air Forces.
    ARRIVING IN JAPAN afater turning over their commands, Maj. Gen. David G. Barr (left) commanded the 7th Division and Maj. Gen. John H. Church the 24th Division.
    47
    GENERAL MACARTHUR VISITING NEAR THE FRONT LINES, north of Suwon, 28 January, He is
    accompanied by his military secretary, Maj. Gen. Courtney Whitney, 2d from left, and Lt. Gen.
    Matthew B. Ridgway, Commanding General, U.S. Eighth Army, wearing his characteristic
    grenade. Maj. Gen. William B. Kean, Commanding General, 25th Division, is behind General
    MacArthur.
    48
    49
    “WESTERN JAMBOREE,” Special Services road show
    playing in the 25th Division area.
    SECTION 2
    25 January–28 February 1951
    53
    54
    U.N. AIRCRAFT GIVING CLOSE SUPPORT to the 1st Cavalry Division near Ich’on, 26 January.
    96TH FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION WINDING ITS WAY THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS to the 1st
    Cavalry Division area, 26 January.
    55
    FOUR CHINESE CAPTURED BY ROK 1ST DIVISION north of Ansong.
    ADVANCING WEST OF SUWON on 27 January, U.N. troops pass a small village recently vacated by
    the Communist forces.
    56
    PREPARING B OXES O F C RATIONS T O BE
    AIRDROPPED
    LAST-MINUTE INSPECTION OF CARGO BEFORE
    TAKING OFF
    C-119 FLYING BOXCAR LOADED WITH CARGO flying
    57
    RECOVERING A N AIRDROPPED 55-GALLON
    DRUM OF GASOLINE
    over jagged mountains to a drop zone, January 1951. KOREAN LABORERS ASSEMBLING AIRDROPPED
    C RATIONS
    58
    59
    LINEMAN REPAIRING TELEPHONE LINES between Tanyang and Chech’on. Railroad is part of
    South Korea’s main rail system from Pusan to Seoul.
    60
    MEMBERS OF THE 187TH AIRBORNE REGIMENTAL
    COMBAT TEAM firing the 75-mm. recoilless rifle,
    5 February.
    25TH DIVISION MEN OBSERVING WHITE PHOSPHORUS falling on enemy positions near the small
    village of Ansan.
    61
    ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE ARMY EARL D. JOHNSON (center) with General Kean (left) and
    General Ridgway watching the 25th Division advance.
    5TH INFANTRYMEN PATROLLING IN RUGGED TERRAIN near the Han River, 5 February.
    62
    63
    BACK FROM CAPTIVITY. Two American and four
    Australian soldiers in the 24th Division Medical
    Clearing Station after reaching U.S. lines.
    64
    65
    15TH INFANTRYMEN fighting their way to the Han
    River, 13 Febr uar y.
    66
    67
    CROSSROAD AT CHIP’YONG-NI, central Korean front.
    On 13 February the 23d Regimental Combat
    Team, 2d Division, and attached French Battalion
    were surrounded by three Chinese Communist
    divisions. For three days this U.N. force defended
    the road junction against assaults by the enemy
    entrenched in the surrounding mountains.
    68
    SUPPLIES COMING IN at the X Corps command post airstrip, Wonju, 12 February.
    GREEK SOLDIERS SHARING THEIR WARMTH with an adopted Korean orphan.
    69
    AT CHIP’YONG-NI, 23 February. From left: General Ridgway; Maj. Gen. Charles D. Palmer,
    Commanding General, 1st Cavalry Division; Col. William A. Harris, Commanding Officer, 7th
    Cavalry Regiment; and Col. John Daskalopoules, Commanding Officer of Greek Battalion
    attached to the 7th Cavalry Regiment.
    70
    WALKING WOUNDED HEADING FOR AID STATIONS. Canadian infantryman is helped along by a fellow countryman, left; a 2d Division casualty is supported by an Australian soldier, right.
    71
    ARMY NURSE OFF DUTY
    72
    INFANTRYMEN OF THE 27TH REGIMENT CAUTIOUSLY MOVING UP A MOUNTAIN near Kyongan-ni,
    southeast of Seoul in the west sector, 17 Febr uar y.
    73
    MEN OF THE 17TH INFANTRY TAKING COVER BEHIND A STONE WALL, 20 February. On 18 February the 17th Regimental Combat Team, 7th Division, attacked northwest from Chech’on in the
    central sector.
    7TH DIVISION TROOPS TRUDGING UP HILL 675 after crossing the snow-covered valley (background). On 20 February Chuch’on-ni was secured.
    74
    All Hands Join in To Fight a Raging Fire, 2d
    Logistical Command, Pusan, 19 February.
    75
    76
    77
    CATCHING UP ON NEWS FROM HOME, 23 February. Men are from the Belgium–Luxembourg Battalion, which arrived in Korea on
    31 January.
    BRINGING IN ENEMY PRISONERS, 1st Cavalry Division area, 27 February. On 21 February Operation
    Killer was launched along sixty miles of central
    Korean front to annihilate enemy forces and reestablish U.N. line east of Wonju.
    SECTION 3
    1 March-21 April 1951
    80
    WHITE PHOSPHORUS SHELLS FALLING ON ENEMY
    POSITIONS north of the Han. The 3d Division attempted to divert enemy attention from the 25th
    Division south of Seoul. Operation Ripper was
    launched on 7 March to take Ch’unch’on, an
    enemy supply and communications center, and
    outflank Seoul.
    81
    M4 TANKS OF THE 89TH TANK BATTALION, 25th
    Division, crossing the Han River near its confluence with the Pukhan River, 7 March.
    82
    COMPANY K, 32D REGIMENTAL COMBAT TEAM, NEARING THE TOP OF ANOTHER HILL. Smoke is
    from white phosphorus shells.
    83
    7TH DIVISION TROOPS moving north (above) rest their weary feet during a break along the roadside (below) near P’yongch’ang, east central sector.
    84
    85
    REMAINS OF A HANGAR AND MAINTENANCE
    SHOP
    SEOUL TWO DAYS AFTER IT WA S RETAKEN BY
    U.N. FORCES, 17 March.
    86
    AFTER CROSSING THE HONGCH’ON RIVER, men of the 5th Infantry tackle another enemy-held hill,
    central sector, 19 March.
    87
    CROSSING AN ENEMY-MADE FOOTBRIDGE. The 24th Division advanced to positions northwest of
    Ch’ongp’yong-ni by 23 March.
    ENEMY SOLDIERS BAGGED BY THE 5TH INFANTRY are escorted south, 24 March.
    88
    187TH AIRBORNE REGIMENTAL COMBAT TEAM PRACTICE-JUMPING FROM C- 119’s, the twin-tailed
    “Flying Boxcars.”
    PREPARING T O L OAD FOR THE AIRDROP A T
    MUNSAN-NI, designed to block enemy movement
    along the Seoul-Kaesong axis and trap large numbers of enemy troops, 23 March.
    89
    LOADED “FLYING BOXCARS” heading for the drop zone.
    90
    187TH IN POSITION EAST OF MUNSAN-NI. After
    parachuting in, the troops were ordered to
    capture the commanding heights behind the
    enemy troops facing the 3d Division.
    3D DIVISION INFANTRYMEN CLIMBING UP THE TRAIL
    to their objective near Uijongbu, 23 March. By the
    end of the month the enemy had pulled back to a
    line north of the 38th parallel.
    91
    92
    TANK-INFANTRY RECONNAISSANCE PATROL moving through a war-torn street in Hongch’on.
    93
    A BATTALION STAFF OF THE 1ST MARINE DIVISION observing artillery fire, central front, 17 March.
    94
    MEDIUM TANK M26 GRINDING ALONG A NARROW MOUNTAIN ROAD, central sector. On 23 March
    the 1st Marine Division advanced to positions north and east of Ch’unch’on.
    95
    CONVOY CROSSING THE SOYANG RIVER. By 8 April the 7th Division put two battalions across the
    Soyang River, and by 19 Apr il U.N. forces were in position along Line UTAH.
    96
    MARSHALING YARD O N THE MAIN RAIL LINE leading south from Wonsan undergoing a fiery
    napalm bomb attack by B-26’s of the 452d Light Bomb Wing, Fifth Air Force. Both Wonsan and
    Songjin were enemy communications centers for road and rail networks along the east coast of
    North Korea.
    97
    FIVE KNOCKED-OUT ENEMY BRIDGES over the Ch’ongch’on River near Sinanju.
    98
    99
    ROLLING OUT THE RED CARPET AT OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, for the first marines rotated home.
    22 APRIL–12 NOVEMBER 1951
    102
    Map 4
    CHAPTER IV
    By the light of a full moon in the early
    evening hours of 22 April, three Chinese
    Communist armies attacked the U.N.
    forces following four hours of artillery bombardment. The initial attack, a secondary
    one, was delivered through the Kwandok
    Mountains in the Yonch’on–Hwach’on
    area of central Korea. By daybreak the
    enemy was in motion across the whole
    peninsula.
    Delivering his main effort against the
    U.S. I and IX Corps, the enemy attempted
    a double envelopment against the west
    sector to isolate Seoul, coupled with the
    secondary thrust in the Yonch’on–Hwach’on
    area and a push against the eastern part of
    the line near Inje. Radio P’yongyang announced that the ultimate objective—destruction of the U.N. command—would be
    readily accomplished. Of an estimated total
    of 700,000 available troops in Korea, the
    enemy commanders employed about half
    in the offensive, but they used little artillery,
    few tanks (contrary to U.N. expectations),
    and no close air support. Their tactics—assaults by a “human sea” of massed infantry—were the same as before, and again
    bugle calls and flares co-ordinated night
    attacks in which small units infiltrated the
    U.N. lines. When dawn came the enemy
    broke contact and, using camouflage and
    natural and man-made features, sought
    cover and concealment against artillery fire.
    The U.N. lines held firm against the first
    assaults everywhere except in the central
    sector held by the IX Corps, where the
    ROK 6th Division was defending the center
    with the U.S. 24th Division on the left and
    the 1st Marine Division on the right. Here
    the enemy struck the ROK division in the
    Namdae River valley south of Kumhwa
    and drove it back. As the division withdrew in confusion south of the UTAH line,
    the enemy attempted to exploit his advantage by moving into the gap between
    the 24th Division and 1st Marine Division,
    which refused their exposed flanks and held
    on.
    With his line cracked, General Van Fleet
    ordered the I and IX Corps to retire step by
    step to KANSAS while the infantry, supported by artillery and aircraft, slowed the
    enemy. Thus was lost the ground gained in
    the recent U.N. offensives. Task forces built
    around the U.S. 5th Cavalry and the 27th
    Commonwealth Brigade darted into the gap
    left by the ROK 6th Division, struck the advancing Chinese south of the 38th parallel,
    and stopped the exploitation. On the right
    the 1st Marine Division retired southward
    The Enemy Strikes Back
    22 April–19 May 1951
    104
    from the Hwach’on area to take up new
    positions before Ch’unch’on. When an
    enemy thrust cut the Seoul–Ch’unch’onKansong highway near Kap’yong on 26
    April, Van Fleet pulled the IX Corps back
    to the Hongch’on River.
    Meanwhile, although the enemy did not
    throw his full weight against Seoul until
    after the Seoul–Kansong road was cut, the
    I Corps was heavily engaged in the west.
    Fording the waist-deep Imjin River about
    midnight of 22 April, Chinese infantrymen
    established shallow bridgeheads on the
    south bank between Korangp’o-ri and Majon-ni. Other enemy troops cut south along
    the Ch’orwon–Seoul highway, but the I
    Corps slowed the attacking Chinese as it retired to the KANSAS line until the morning
    of 23 April, when the enemy drove the
    ROK 1st Division south of the KANSAS line.
    This setback exposed the left flank of the 1st
    Battalion, The Gloucestershire Regiment,
    of the British 29th Brigade. During the next
    few days this unit gallantly held its position
    even after it was isolated and virtually overrun. Only a handful of soldiers from the
    Gloucestershire battalion were able to
    make their way back to the main U.N.
    line.
    Once the enemy had cut the Seoul–Kansong highway on 26 April, he put his weight
    into a strong attack against Seoul. Next day
    he outflanked Uijongbu and the U.S. 3d
    Division pulled back to positions four miles
    from the outskirts of Seoul while the ROK
    troops withdrew down the road from Munsan-ni. Van Fleet directed the establishment of a new transpeninsular line to halt
    the enemy in front of Seoul and north of the
    Han.
    On 29 April U.N. pilots strafed an estimated 6,000 enemy soldiers when they tried
    to ferry the Han and attack down the
    Kimpo Peninsula to outflank Seoul from
    the west. The survivors were never able to
    offer a serious threat to the peninsula’s defenders, the ROK 5th Marine Battalion.
    The enemy also attempted to outflank
    Seoul to the east in the V-shaped area between the Han and the Pukhan Rivers, but
    the 24th and 25th Divisions checked this
    maneuver and held the enemy on the north
    bank of the Han in the vicinity of Kumgong’ni and Punwon-ni. On the east-central
    front North Koreans attacked the ROK
    units in the Yanggu–Inje area, made several
    gains, and captured Inje, but by 29 April
    their drive had been halted.
    On this day General Van Fleet established a new line, not named and therefore
    termed NO-NAME-LINE which extended
    from north of Seoul to Sabangu, thence
    northeast across the 38th parallel to Taepori on the east coast. Because the major
    weight of the enemy’s attack had struck in
    the west, Van Fleet reshuffled his units to
    put more American divisions there. Assigned to the I Corps, on the left, were the
    ROK 1st Division, and the U.S. 1st Cavalry
    and 25th Infantry Divisions, with the U.S.
    3d Division in reserve. Holding the Kimpo
    Peninsula was the British 29th Brigade.
    The IX Corps, on the I Corps’ right, had
    the 28th Commonwealth Brigade (this
    was the redesignated 27th Commonwealth
    Brigade), the U.S. 24th Division, the
    ROK 6th and 2d Divisions, and the U.S.
    7th Division in line, with the U.S. 187th
    Airborne RCT in reserve. In the center the
    X Corps, consisting of the U.S. 1st Marine and 2d Infantry Divisions and the
    ROK 5th and 7th Divisions, held the line,
    and the ROK III and I Corps defended the
    eastern sector.
    Thus by the end of April the U.N. infantrymen, strongly supported by artillery and
    air (U.N. airmen flew 7,420 sorties during
    the last eight days of the attack), had halted
    105
    the enemy short of Seoul and the Han, and
    held a strong, continuous defense line. The
    enemy had fallen far short of his announced
    intention of destroying the U.N. forces.
    U.N. intelligence officers, reasoning on the
    basis of information gained by air reconnaissance, concluded that he would start
    another offensive soon.
    While the Chinese and North Koreans
    regrouped and brought supplies forward,
    General Van Fleet decided to capitalize on
    the lull and take the initiative. During the
    first week of May regimental patrol bases
    were established almost eight miles in front
    of NO-NAME-LINE, and armored patrols
    ranged ten to twelve miles into enemy territory to harass the enemy troops that were
    withdrawing from NO-NAME-LINE. U.N.
    forces cleared the Kimpo Peninsula. The
    ROK 1st Division fought its way up the
    Munsan-ni road. Uijongbu fell to the 1st
    Cavalry Division on 6 May, and a 25th
    Division task force drove northeastward up
    the Seoul–Sinp’al-li highway. In the westcentral sector an armored patrol regained
    control of the Seoul–Kap’yong road for the
    United Nations, and on 7 May U.S. marines dug North Koreans out of camouflaged bunkers on the Wonju road and captured Ch’unch’on. A task force consisting
    of the French Infantry Battalion, the U.S.
    1st Ranger Company, one company of the
    U.S. 9th Infantry, and the U.S. 72d Tank
    Battalion probed northeast of Chaun-ni.
    On the extreme right the ROK III and I
    Corps also advanced northward. General
    Van Fleet then planned a general offensive
    based on NO-NAME-LINE designed to carry
    through to KANSAS, but increasing evidence
    that the enemy was preparing to resume the
    offensive forced the Eighth Army commander to postpone his plan.
    The signs were unmistakable. After 10
    May enemy resistance to local attacks stiffened. Airbase construction was still increasing. U.N. intelligence placed enemy air
    strength at 1,000 planes, with fifty new airbases being pushed to completion. Supply
    columns moving southward were reported
    daily, and air patrols noted heavy troop
    movements north of the IX Corps.
    To cripple enemy air strength before the
    new offensive, the Fifth Air Force and the
    1st Marine Aircraft Wing stepped up their
    attacks. A good example of their efforts
    came on 9 May when a total of 312
    planes—F-80 Shooting Stars, F-84 Thunderjets, F-86 Sabres, F9F Panthers, F4U
    Corsairs, and F-51 Mustangs—struck at
    Sinuiju airbase on the south bank of the
    Yalu and reported demolishing fifteen enemy jets and over 100 buildings.
    During the first ten days of May, when it
    looked as if the enemy would concentrate
    his attack west of the Pukhan River against
    Seoul, General Van Fleet had strengthened
    the western portion of his line. But between
    10 and 15 May, according to intelligence
    reports, the Chinese had moved five armies
    eastward and deployed them in front of the
    Ch’unch’on–Inje area held by the U.S. X
    Corps and the ROK III Corps. Because
    time was short, Van Fleet decided not to
    shift his forces from the west, but he alerted
    the U.S. 3d Division, in I Corps reserve, to
    move out on his order. The rough and
    mountainous Ch’unch’on–Inje area generally favored the defender, but it would provide the attacker with some security from
    air and armor.
    The daylight hours of 15 May saw all the
    usual signs of impending enemy attack, including an increased number of enemy
    agents trying to slip through the lines. Air
    patrols reported more bridge construction,
    and enemy probing attacks grew more
    numerous. Van Fleet’s command made
    ready to stand firm.
    106
    By 14 May NO-NAME-LINE had been
    considerably strengthened. The U.N. forces
    had laid mines, registered artillery, established bands of interlocking machine gun
    fire, and strung over 500 miles of barbed
    wire. Interspersed among the mine fields
    and barbed-wire networks were 55-gallon
    drums of gasoline and napalm, ready to be
    detonated electrically. General Van Fleet
    resolved not to yield ground, but to hold his
    line with all the weapons and power at his
    disposal. As he phrased it, “We must expend steel and fire, not men. . . . I want
    so many artillery holes that a man can step
    from one to the other.”
    After darkness fell on the night of 15–16
    May, an estimated twenty-one Chinese divisions, flanked by three North Korean divisions in the west and six in the east, struck
    down the center of the peninsula against
    the U.S. X Corps and the ROK III Corps
    in the Naep’yong-ni-No-dong area. The X
    Corps held a thirty-seven-mile sector of
    NO-NAME-LINE from the high ground west
    of Hongch’on northeastward to Inje. The
    U.S. 1st Marine Division held the left part
    of the corps line on the jagged terrain overlooking Ch’unch’on plain. To the right was
    the U.S. 2d Division, with the ROK 5th
    and 7th Divisions on its right, and the ROK
    III Corps to their right. Chinese units
    crossed the Pukhan River west of Ch’unch’-
    on, and on 16 May other units struck hard
    against the ROK 5th and 7th Divisions.
    The patrol base regiments fell back to NONAME-LINE, and by 1930 hours of 16 May
    the two ROK divisions were heavily engaged along a twenty-mile front in the
    vicinity of Han’gye-ri, a village ten miles
    northeast of Inje. The two divisions held
    their ground for a time, then fell back, disorganized and broken.
    On the left (west) shoulder of the enemy
    salient, the U.S. 2d Division, including the
    French and Dutch Battalions, withstood
    resolute enemy attacks until 18 May, and
    then, together with the 1st Marine Division,
    moved right to fill the gap left by the two
    ROK divisions. The IX Corps extended its
    front to the right to cover the area left by
    the 2d Division and the marines. Van Fleet
    raced the 15th RCT of the U.S. 3d Division
    from Seoul to bolster the west face of the
    salient, and sent the 7th and 65th Infantry
    Regiments to blocking positions at the
    southernmost part of the penetration. The
    swarming columns of Chinese and North
    Koreans soon almost surrounded the 2d Division, pushing against its front, right, and
    rear. The Chinese even blocked the 2d’s
    main supply route, but a co-ordinated attack by the U.S. 9th Infantry driving
    northward, and the U.S. 23d and 38th Infantry Regiments attacking southward
    along with their French and Dutch contingents, regained control of the route. The 2d
    Division stood fast and punished the enemy
    heavily. The 38th Field Artillery Battalion,
    firing in support, threw 12,000 105-mm.
    rounds in twenty-four hours.
    It was this kind of monumental artillery
    support which helped to create the so-called
    ammunition shortage that later was the
    subject of public debate and a Congressional investigation in the United States.
    All U.N. artillery units were firing the “Van
    Fleet load,” which was five times larger
    than the ammunition allowance previously
    in use. The Van Fleet load, together with a
    shortage of motor transport and the difficulties of supply inherent in mountain warfare, was largely responsible for the muchpublicized shortage.
    Lt. Gen. Edward M. Almond, commanding the X Corps, ordered the 2d Division back to a new line south of Han’gye-ri
    on 18 May. The division, commanded by
    Maj. Gen. Clark L. Ruffner, successfully
    107
    withdrew. During its defense it lost 900
    men—killed, wounded, and missing—and
    estimated enemy casualties at 35,000. During this period, while the Seoul sector was
    relatively quiet, the divisions of the ROK
    III Corps, on the X Corps right, were heavily engaged, broke, and pulled back to the
    P’yongch’ang–Kangnung road. The ROK
    I Corps, on the coast, withdrew from
    Taep’o-ri to Kangnung.
    While the battle raged on the central and
    eastern fronts, the enemy struck in the western sector held by Lt. Gen. Frank W. Milburn’s I Corps and the IX Corps. On the
    night of 17 May, an enemy force estimated
    at 25,000 men struck down the Pukhan
    River toward the Han, but the U.S. 25th
    Division and the ROK 6th Division
    stopped this drive just south of Masogu-ri in
    three days of violent action. A weak attack
    directed against Seoul by some four North
    Korean battalions was quickly halted.
    By 20 May the U.N. troops had brought
    the enemy’s offensive to a standstill. The X
    Corps stabilized its front. The U.S. 1st Marine Division still held its portion of NONAME-LINE, and the U.S. 2d Division, with
    the 15th Infantry attached, prepared to
    wrest the initiative from the Chinese and
    retake its positions on NO-NAME-LINE.
    Having thus stopped two major enemy offensives in as many months, and with two
    more U.N. battalions about to join the
    Eighth Army, General Van Fleet decided
    to take the offensive again.
    108
    MAP 5
    CHAPTER V
    General Van Fleet opened his new offensive with a series of local attacks designed to
    relieve enemy pressure on the U.S. X
    Corps. On 18 May he ordered the U.S. I
    and IX Corps, and the U.S. 1st Marine Division, the left flank element of the X Corps,
    to send out strong patrols and prepare to
    attack a phase line (TOPEKA) about halfway
    between NO-NAME-LINE and KANSAS. The
    next day, after bolstering the U.S. 3d Division by attaching to it the newly arrived
    Canadian 25th Brigade, he enlarged the
    goals of his offensive by directing the I, IX,
    and X Corps to advance to enemy supply
    and communications areas near Mansedari,
    Hwach’on, and Inje. The ROK I Corps, on
    the east, was to advance and conform to the
    movements of the X Corps’ right flank. The
    ROK III Corps, which had recently broken
    under enemy attack, was deactivated. Together with part of the old ROK III Corps
    front, the ROK 9th Division was given to
    the X Corps, and the ROK 3d Division
    and its front were given to the ROK I
    Corps.
    The new offensive, Van Fleet hoped,
    would deny the enemy any chance to gather
    himself for another counterstroke, threaten
    the enemy supply route in the Hwach’on
    Reservoir area, and eventually result in the
    capture of the Iron Triangle. He shifted
    boundaries to place the western third of the
    Hwach’on Reservoir in the IX Corps zone,
    leaving the remaining two thirds the responsibility of the X Corps. Once the X
    Corps had taken its objectives, he hoped to
    send it in an enveloping move northeastward to the coast to block the enemy while
    the ROK I Corps attacked northwestward.
    As he put it, “The 38th Parallel has no significance in the present tactical situation.
    . . . The Eighth Army will go wherever
    the situation dictates in hot pursuit of the
    enemy.”
    Once more, as the enemy pulled back,
    the United Nations forces rolled forward
    against generally light resistance. On 19
    May units of the ROK 1st Division reconnoitered the Seoul highway toward Munsan-ni. Within the next few days I Corps
    troops reached the Imjin River north of
    Munsan-ni and entered Uijongbu and
    Sinp’al-li. Elements of the IX Corps pushed
    toward Kap’yong, drove the enemy across
    the Hongch’on River, and moved toward
    the Hwach’on Reservoir.
    In the X Corps zone, while aircraft
    executed a continuous series of close supThe United Nations Resume
    the Advance
    20 May–24 June 1951
    110
    port missions, the American divisions made
    ready to trap or destroy the enemy soldiers
    that had burst through the lines in the offensive just halted. Using tank-infantry task
    forces as well as regular formations, General Almond planned to employ the U.S.
    1st Marine Division, on the left, in the
    Yanggu area to push the enemy back
    against the Hwach’on Reservoir while to
    the southeast the U.S. 3d Division struck at
    the farthest point of enemy penetration. At
    the same time, the 187th Airborne RCT
    was to drive northeast along the Hongch’-
    on–Kansong highway to cut the enemy
    supply route at Inje, east of Yanggu, while
    a task force composed of American and Korean infantrymen covered the right flank.
    The ROK 8th and 9th Divisions were in reserve; the ROK 5th and 7th Divisions were
    reorganizing.
    The 1st Marine Division attacked toward
    Yanggu at 0800 on 24 May, while the 187th
    RCT started out for Inje. One battalion of
    the airborne regiment broke loose and
    crossed the Soyang River the next day to
    hold a bridgehead pending the arrival of
    the 23d Infantry of the U.S. 2d Division
    two days later, when the 7th Marines also
    reached the Soyang. Almond formed a task
    force of the 187th, the U.S. 72d Tank Battalion, and other elements to drive to the
    coastal town of Kansong in accordance
    with Van Fleet’s orders.
    Although rain, mud, and enemy resistance slowed the offensive on 27 and 28
    May, and in many instances permitted the
    enemy to withdraw with his supplies, the
    187th had taken Inje by the 27th) the marines were making a final push toward the
    Hwach’on Reservoir and Yanggu, and the
    17th Infantry of the 7th Division, in the IX
    Corps, had taken Hwach’on. At the end of
    the month the X Corps was deployed along
    the Soyang River. Its f lanking drive to
    Kansong proved unnecessary, for that town
    fell to the ROK Capital Division of the
    ROK I Corps.
    The Eighth Army had scored a significant advance which had brought it just
    about back to the Kansas line. The front
    now ran from Munsan-ni through Yongp’yong, Hwach’on, and Yanggu, dipped
    southward sharply, and then swung north
    and east to Kansong. Except in the west
    where it slanted southward to take tactical
    advantage of the Imjin River, the line lay
    north of the 38th parallel. South Korea was
    virtually cleared of the enemy.
    Enemy casualties for the last half of May,
    Eighth Army headquarters reported, included 17,000 counted dead and 17,000
    prisoners of war. Its own casualties for the
    entire month numbered 33,770. The South
    Koreans had lost the most; American losses
    totaled 745 dead, 4,218 wounded, 572 missing, and 6,758 nonbattle casualties, most of
    which were caused by disease.
    What should be done next? General Van
    Fleet’s statement about the hot pursuit of
    the enemy did not mean that he intended
    another advance to the Yalu, for the Joint
    Chiefs of Staff had prescribed that the
    Eighth Army was not to go beyond the general vicinity of Line KANSAS. General Ridgway, however, had authorized local advances to gain better ground. In any event,
    it was clear that the U.N. forces were not
    numerous enough to encircle and destroy
    the enemy in large-scale maneuvers, but
    would have to stabilize along a strong defensive line. In addition to KANSAS, there
    were other transpeninsular lines—the
    Yesong River–Wonsan line, and the
    Sukch’on–Wonsan line north of the 39th
    parallel—that were relatively short; but
    they possessed less defensible terrain than
    KANSAS, their road systems were poorer,
    and to seize them would lengthen the U.N.
    111
    communications lines while shortening the
    enemy’s Clearly, then, the best policy appeared to be to defend KANSAS, meanwhile
    taking advantage of Ridgway’s authorization to conduct local advances to more
    favorable ground.
    On 1 June, therefore, Van Fleet directed
    reserve elements of his forces to clear out
    all civilians and to strengthen KANSAS by
    stringing barbed wire, clearing fields of fire,
    laying mines, constructing shelters with
    overhead cover, establishing trail and road
    blocks, and plotting artillery concentrations.
    He hoped thus to make the line virtually
    impregnable. Meanwhile the I and IX
    Corps were to continue their advance
    toward Line WYOMING, the bulge north of
    KANSAS that ran from the Imjin River to
    just south of Ch’orwon and Kumhwa,
    thence southeast. With this order Van Fleet
    lowered his sights slightly, for his earlier
    plans had aimed at capturing the Iron
    Triangle rather than stopping short on
    WYOMING.
    This advance, dubbed Operation PILEDRIVER, was carried out with comparative
    ease except along the approaches to the
    Iron Triangle where the enemy resisted
    stoutly. Except for a range of hills, the Triangle was a low-lying area surrounded by
    saw-toothed mountains. It was the terminus
    of a main highway from Manchuria and
    was interlaced with dirt roads and two
    single-track railroads. It served the enemy
    as a supply and communications area. Elements of both the I and IX Corps fought
    their way toward the WYOMING line near
    the Ch’orwon–Kumhwa base of the Triangle, and the enemy fought back hard
    from defenses arranged in depth. As happened so often, heavy rains in the first few
    days of June limited direct air support and
    turned the roads into veritable quagmires.
    But the Eighth Army edged forward. The
    1st Cavalry Division pushed from Uijongbu
    toward Ch’orwon against hard-fighting
    Chinese, as sweat-soaked engineer parties
    moved ahead of creeping tanks to probe for
    wooden box-mines. Infantrymen of the
    U.S. 3d and 25th Divisions used flame
    throwers against mud and log bunkers. By
    10 June, aided by drier weather that made
    possible round-the-clock air support, the 3d
    Division, with the ROK 9th Division and
    the 10th Philippine Battalion, attacked and
    gained the high ground south of Ch’orwon,
    while the 25th Division and the Turkish
    Brigade fought their way to within three
    miles of Kumhwa. Next day at 1330
    Ch’orwon fell, abandoned by the enemy;
    two hours later the Turkish Brigade entered
    Kumhwa, from which the enemy had also
    departed.
    Now firmly in control of its portion of
    Line WYOMING, the I Corps sent out task
    forces to pursue the enemy. On 13 June two
    tank-infantry task forces, from Ch’orwon
    and Kumhwa, reached P’yonggang, which
    they found deserted. When they discovered
    that the enemy held the dominating ground
    north of the city, however, the two task
    forces quickly returned. Units of the IX
    Corps pushed northeast toward Kumsong
    and found the enemy present in strength
    and obviously establishing a defensive line.
    As the Triangle was dominated by the surrounding heights, neither side attempted to
    hold it in strength thereafter, although
    Chinese troops struck back at the I and IX
    Corps and reoccupied P’yonggang on 17
    June.
    On the east-central front, meanwhile, the
    X Corps had pushed through mountains
    toward its sector of the KANSAS line, which
    extended over a series of ridges from the
    Hwach’on Reservoir northeastward to the
    lower lip of the “Punchbowl,” an aptly
    named circular depression north of Inje.
    112
    Using three divisions, the ROK 7th, the
    U.S. 1st Marine, and the ROK 5th (which
    had relieved the U.S. 2d Division), the X
    Corps ground forward against the North
    Korean II and V Corps. The enemy, well
    dug in on the ridge tops and amply supplied with machine guns, mortars, and
    artillery, fought back hard. Marines and
    South Koreans assaulted successive bunkerstudded ridges to push the enemy out, and
    on 16 June elements of the 1st Marine Division reached KANSAS, while on the right of
    the X Corps the ROK I Corps advanced
    from Kansong toward Kosong.
    Thus by mid-June the Eighth Army had
    largely attained the principal terrain objectives of PILEDRIVER, although the enemy
    had again managed to get away. Action for
    the rest of the month, except in the Punchbowl area where the 1st Marine Division
    fought a violent battle, was confined to developing the KANSAS and WYOMING lines,
    and to patrolling and local fights which,
    although fierce and bloody, did not materially affect the dispositions of either side.
    As the first year of the Korean conflict
    came to an end, the United Nations could
    look back on their accomplishments with
    considerable satisfaction. South Korea had
    been cleared of the invading enemy, and
    the U.N. forces, after receiving and delivering severe batterings, had pushed north of
    the 38th parallel and successfully executed
    the missions that were within their power to
    accomplish. Thus, when on Sunday evening, 23 June, in New York City, Jacob
    Malik, Deputy Foreign Commissar of the
    Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and his
    country’s delegate to the United Nations,
    proposed cease-fire discussions between the
    participants in the Korean conflict, his proposal, while it may have been made for the
    convenience of the Chinese, came at a
    fortunate time for the Eighth Army.
    114
    MAP 6
    CHAPTER VI
    After Mr. Malik made his proposal, the
    Peiping radio followed his lead and indicated that the rulers of Communist China
    favored a truce. President Truman then
    authorized General Ridgway to conduct
    negotiations with the enemy generals. The
    U.N. commander at once sent radio messages to his opposite numbers in the enemy
    camp, and after some argument both sides
    agreed to meet in Kaesong, a town near
    Korea’s west coast about three miles south
    of the 38th parallel and between the opposing armies’ front lines. After liaison officers
    had made preliminary arrangements, the
    negotiations opened on 10 July with Vice
    Adm. C. Turner Joy, the Far East naval
    commander, acting as chief delegate for the
    United Nations. Lt. Gen. Nam Il led the
    enemy delegation.
    Both sides agreed that hostilities would
    continue until a truce was signed, but
    neither side was willing to start any largescale offensives while the peace talks were
    in progress. All along the front—which now
    extended from the Imjin River to Ch’orwon, paralleled the base of the Iron Triangle, swung southeast to the lower edge of
    the Punchbowl, and then ran north and
    east to the Sea of Japan above Kansong—
    the fighting died down. U.N. troops busied
    themselves improving their positions and
    consolidating the ground they had just won.
    Action was characterized by artillery fire
    and air strikes, plus a continuing bombardment of Wonsan. Combat patrols went out
    regularly; enemy attacks were repulsed.
    Offensive action consisted chiefly of limited
    regimental or battalion attacks designed to
    seize more favorable terrain, capture prisoners, and keep the enemy from nosing too
    close to the U.N. lines. With the exception
    of the flare-up in the fall of 1951 that followed the breaking-off of the truce negotiations in August, this general pattern was
    to prevail until just before the signing of the
    truce in 1953.
    Enemy policy appeared to follow the
    same lines as that of the United Nations,
    whose intelligence officers concluded that
    the Chinese forces were being strengthened.
    New Chinese units were identified northeast of the Iron Triangle, in front of the IX
    Corps below Kumsong, and in the vicinity
    of the Punchbowl. The enemy, like the
    U.N. forces, appeared to be holding a main
    line of resistance with screening units in
    front rather than relying on defense by
    maneuver.
    Throughout the summer months there
    was continuous, though local, fighting for
    limited objectives, and no day passed without casualties. In general the front lines remained stable except in the Iron Triangle
    and the Punchbowl. The Triangle action
    Lull and Flare-up
    25 June-12 November 1951
    116
    focused on the low Sobang Hills which the
    Chinese had reoccupied after being driven
    out during Van Fleet’s June offensive. On
    1 July tank-infantry task forces from the
    Corps tried to eject the Chinese but failed.
    Repeating the attacks through Independence Day, tanks and infantry finally pushed
    the enemy entirely from the area between
    the Triangle’s base and P’yonggang, then
    withdrew to the main U.N. line. At the
    same time I Corps patrols crossed the Imjin
    to harry the enemy, and the X Corps
    bombed and shelled positions in the Punchbowl where North Koreans appeared to be
    concentrating artillery and mortars.
    Later in July Van Fleet ordered a northward advance in the X Corps zone to
    shorten the line, prevent the enemy from
    freely observing the KANSAS line, and force
    the enemy to pull back his mortars and artillery. The specific objective was a 3,890-
    foot-high mountain, designated Hill 1179
    or Taeu-san, at the southwest edge of the
    Punchbowl which ROK marines had unsuccessfully attacked. It was defended by
    what was estimated to be a regiment (1,700
    men) of North Koreans. Elements of the 2d
    Division, strongly supported by aircraft and
    artillery, took over and after a four-day assault secured the crest of Taeu-san.
    In August the strength of all forces under
    Van Fleet’s command numbered 586,769 at
    their peak. This figure included, in addition
    to 229,339 in the Eighth Army proper,
    357,430 from the Republic of Korea, the
    U.S. Marines, the Fifth Air Force, and the
    seventeen other U.N. contingents. By now
    the Colombian Battalion had reached Korea to join in alongside the men from the
    United States, the Republic of Korea, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Ethiopia, France,
    Great Britain, Greece, India, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, and the
    Union of South Africa.
    Action was focused again in the zone of
    the X Corps and the ROK I Corps to the
    east. Both corps, the latter supported by
    gunfire from warships lying offshore, advanced their fronts to gain more favorable
    terrain to the northeast and west of the
    Punchbowl, and the U.N. units on the
    western portion of the line sent out raiding
    parties and combat patrols to divert the enemy reserves. The X Corps and ROK I
    Corps offensives were carried out almost exclusively by South Koreans under American command and supported by American
    units. But on the night of 27–28 August,
    when a unit of the ROK 5th Division
    crumpled under an enemy counterattack
    delivered against a newly captured hill
    mass (“Bloody Ridge”) west of the Punchbowl, the U.S. 9th Infantry Regiment of the
    2d Division was committed. It was unable
    to retake the lost ground.
    Late in August, after the truce negotiations had been suspended, Van Fleet determined to resume the offensive in order to
    drive the enemy farther back from the
    Hwach’on Reservoir (Seoul’s source of
    water and electric power) and away from
    the Ch’orwon–Seoul railroad. Success in
    each of these enterprises would also
    straighten and shorten the U.N. front, give
    greater security to the KANSAS line, and inf lict damage on the enemy. Therefore,
    when the 9th Infantry’s attack failed, the
    U.N. commanders determined to put forth
    a major effort in the X Corps zone, using
    all five divisions in that corps to continue
    the ridge-top and mountain actions in the
    Punchbowl area.
    The U.S. 1st Marine Division, with
    ROK marine units attached, opened a
    drive against the northern portion of the
    Punchbowl on 31 August. Two days later
    the 2d Division attacked northward against
    Bloody and Heartbreak Ridges in the vicinity of the Punchbowl’s western edge and
    117
    Taeu-san. Both assaults, delivered uphill by
    burdened, straining infantrymen, met with
    initial success. By 3 September, the two divisions had reached their first objectives.
    Van Fleet ordered them to continue the advance as far north as the northwesterly leg
    of the Soyang River above the Punchbowl.
    On 11 September the 1st Marine Division attacked again. After seven days of
    heavy fighting, with the enemy resolutely
    defending each ridge top from mutually
    supporting positions and yielding only after
    repeated counterattacks and seesaw struggles, the marines secured their objective on
    18 September.1
    Meanwhile the 2d Division, on Bloody
    and Heartbreak Ridges west of the Punchbowl, was engaged in the fiercest action
    since spring. Like the marines, the 2d Division infantrymen, often carrying 60-mm.
    mortar or 75-mm. recoilless rifle rounds as
    well as their own ammunition and equipment, crawled hand over hand up towering, knife-crested ridges to assault the hardfighting enemy who would yield a ridge
    only in desperation, then strike back in vigorous counterattack. The same crest often
    changed hands several times each day.
    By 19 September the X Corps front was
    stabilized except in the 2d Division’s zone.
    Supplied by airdrop and by sturdy Korean
    carriers with A-frames strapped to their
    backs, and heavily supported by aircraft
    and artillery, the 2d Division fought on bitterly. In one instance it delivered, within
    the space of twenty-four hours, no less than
    eleven separate assaults, all unsuccessful,
    against one ridge. The battle raged into
    October. Finally, on the 14th, after the enemy seemed to be willing to reopen the
    truce talks, the last ridge was secured and
    the 2d Division consolidated its hard-won
    gains.
    Along the western portion of the front,
    action in September was characterized by
    local attacks, counterattacks, and combat
    patrols which culminated, in the eastern
    portion of the Triangle, in a series of successful raids by tank-infantry task forces from
    the IX Corps. Once these were accomplished, the five divisions-the ROK lst,
    the 1st British Commonwealth, the U.S. 1st
    Cavalry, 3d, and 25th Divisions—struck
    north across a forty-mile front from the
    Kaesong area to Ch’orwon to advance the
    front three or four miles, establish a new
    line, JAMESTOWN, and thus protect the
    Ch’orwon-Seoul railroad. By 12 October
    JAMESTOWN was secured. The IX Corps, to
    the right, followed with aggressive patrolling toward Kumsong. By 21 October the
    24th Division had seized the commanding
    heights just south of Kumsong. The successful advances of August, September, and
    October gave the U.N. forces possession of
    commanding ground along their entire
    front, and may have influenced the enemy
    leaders to decide to sit down at the peace
    table once again.
    General Ridgway had attempted to persuade the enemy to resume negotiating on
    4 October, while the 2d Division was fighting hard west of the Punchbowl. Six days
    later liaison officers met again, this time at
    Panmunjom, a tiny village on the Seoul
    highway north of the Imjin River. Their
    deliberations were interrupted by a misdirected U.N. air attack near Panmunjom
    that brought from the enemy a violent protest. It was 22 October before the liaison
    officers met again, and three days later the
    plenipotentiaries once more resumed the
    negotiations that were to continue for many
    weary months. Meanwhile, for the soldier
    at the front, the war went on.
    1
    Several days later the marines tried the first troop lift by
    helicopter in a combat zone. During September they moved
    company-sized units, and in October managed to move a
    whole battalion.
    SECTION 4
    22 April–19 May 1951
    121
    122
    U.N. FORCES WITHDRAWING UNDER THE WEIGHT
    OF THE ENEMY OFFENSIVE. Top, Belgian Battalion
    heading south; middle, British 29th Brigade resting along the roadside; bottom, 24th Infantry
    Division moving to new defensive positions.
    123
    Top, 65th Infantry, 3d Division, moving down a
    valley road; middle, M46 Patton tank towing a
    crippled mate through Uijongbu; bottom, battalion commander calling in the position of his men
    near Uijongbu.
    124
    F-80 SHOOTING STAR BOMBING ENEMY POSITIONS south of Ch’orwon.
    “LONG TOMS” OF THE 204TH FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION firing north of Seoul.
    25TH DIVISION MEN IN THE HILLS south of Ch’orwon expecting an enemy attack, 23 April.
    125
    INFANTRYMAN OF 24TH REGIMENT SQUEEZING ONE OFF, west central sector.
    CLEANING OUT ENEMY EMPLACEMENTS. Note
    Hant’an River in background.
    ESCORTING A WOUNDED 25TH DIVISION INFANTRYMAN down the hill to an aid station, 22 April.
    126
    F-9F PANTHERJETS RETURNING TO THE CARRIER USS PRINCETON (left center) after a bombing
    mission. USS Philippine Sea is in the right background.
    127
    AD SKYRAIDER on the deck of the USS Princeton lowering its wings as it swings into take-off
    position.
    T H E HWACH ’ O N DA M UNDER ATTACK by Navy AD Skyraiders using aerial torpedoes.
    128
    RAILROAD BRIDGE ACROSS THE TAEDONG RIVER, south of Tokch’on, is blown up by Superforts of
    the Far East Air Forces, May 1951.
    129
    MARSHALING YARD NEAR YANGYANG on east coast undergoing a bombing attack by B-26 light
    bombers of the Fifth Air Force.
    SECTION 5
    20 May–24 June 1951
    132
    133
    MARINE PATROL CLOSING IN ON A KOREAN HUT. Note feet of enemy casualty in the doorway. U.N.
    offensive, opened on 18 May, was slowed by heavy rains, mud, and stiff enemy resistance.
    17TH INFANTRY, 7TH DIVISION, TAKING TIME OUT
    along a road near Chungbangdae-ni, south of the
    Hongch’on River, 22 May.
    134
    HIGH-LEVEL CONFERENCE. From left, Maj. Gen. William M. Hoge, Commanding General, IX
    Corps; Maj. Gen. Blackshear M. Bryan, Commanding General, 24th Division; Lt. Gen. James
    A. Van Fleet, Commanding General, U.S. Eighth Army; and General Ridgway.
    135
    31ST INFANTRY REGIMENT, 7TH DIVISION, on a hill near Ch’unch’on, 24 May. Note 57-mm. recoilless rifles in photograph above. A casualty (opposite page, bottom) receives emergency first
    aid. On the 25th, elements of the 7th Division moved north of Ch’unch’on.
    136
    SUPPLIES FOR THE 187TH REGIMENTAL COMBAT TEAM dropping near Umyang-ni, south of Inje.
    AIRDROPPED SUPPLIES NEAR THE MAIN SUPPLY ROUTE south of Inje. On 27 May, the 187th drove
    into Inje.
    137
    MOVING OUT UNDER ENEMY FIRE, 26 May.
    ROK 8TH DIVISION MEN ON THEIR WAY FORWARD passing combat-worn troops resting on their
    way to the rear.
    138
    ROK 16TH REGIMENT ADVANCING to positions held by 7th Infantry.
    EVACUATING 2D DIVISION CASUALTIES across the Soyang River.
    139
    M4 TANKS OF 1ST CAVALRY DIVISION fording the Imjin River,
    ENEMY-MADE FOOTBRIDGE used by 7th Infantry, 3d Division, in withdrawing from the front lines.
    140
    CHINESE PRISONERS captured north of the Imjin River by 1st Cavalry Division.
    PUERTO RICAN INFANTRYMEN, 65th Infantry, 3d Division, in an enemy-made trench, 1 June.
    141
    COMPANY I, 5TH CAVALRY REGIMENT, moving across rice fields before starting the climb up Hill
    513, north of Tokchong, 1 June.
    142
    F-80 SHOOTING STAR on a strafing mission north of Inje, 1 June.
    OBSERVATION P LANE S EARCHING THE R UGGED
    PEAKS for information on enemy positions to relay
    to ground troops.
    143
    ENGINEERS PROBING FOR ENEMY MINES ahead of a creeping tank south of Ch’orwon, 10 June.
    MEDIUM TANK M4A3 FIRING at enemy positions in
    the hills north of Inje, 4 June.
    144
    MINE EXPLOSION CASUALTY AWAITING EVACUATION BY HELICOPTER. Above, medical corpsmen
    administer plasma to one of five marines wounded in the explosion. Right page: top, a Sikorsky
    helicopter approaches a marker placed as a landing guide; bottom, marines hold down the
    helicopter after it lands on the windy slope.
    145
    146
    HAULING IN A “PIG” aboard the mine sweeper USS Mocking Bird. This device, properly termed a
    paravane, is used in minesweeping operations.
    147
    U.S. NAVY HOSPITAL SHIP Haven docked at Pusan. Denmark, India, Italy, Norway, and Sweden
    also furnished special medical elements for the U.N. effort in Korea.
    148
    USS NEW JERSEY FIRING OFF THE EAST COAST
    OF KOREA. Below is a close-up of the 16-inch guns
    aboard the ship. Enemy-held east coast is barely
    visible in background.
    149
    “MEN FROM MARS” FIRING ROCKETS AT ENEMY-HELD WONSAN. The men are wearing one-piece
    suits, with hood and gloves, made of plastic-coated glass fabric designed to give head-to-toe protection against back blasts of fuming acids.
    150
    MARINES PUSHING FORWARD. By 9 June the 1st Marine Division had advanced north of Yanggu,
    east central front.
    RECOILLESS RIFLE CREW, 7th Cavalry Regiment, firing near Ch’orwon.
    151
    TRYING TO WARD OFF THE DEAFENING BLAST OF a 75-mm. Recoilless Rifle.
    152
    DIRECT HIT ON AN ENEMY WAREHOUSE IN WONSAN
    153
    B-26 INVADER OVER A TARGET IN NORTH KOREA
    NAPALM BOMB ATTACK ON AN ENEMY INDUSTRIAL CENTER
    SECTION 6
    25 June–12 November 1951
    157
    158
    RIFLEMEN OF THE 7TH INFANTRY, 3D DIVISION,
    MOVING OU T T O ATTACK HILL 17, south of
    P’yonggang in the Iron Triangle, 3 July.
    159
    160
    UNITED NATIONS DELEGATION AT KAESONG. From left: Maj. Gen. Laurence C. Craigie, USAF;
    Maj. Gen. Paik Sun Yup, Commanding General, ROK I Corps; Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, Far
    East Naval Commander (acting as chief delegate for the U.N.); Maj. Gen. Henry I. Hodes,
    Deputy Chief of Staff, U.S. Eighth Army; and Rear Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, U.S.N.
    161
    CONFERENCE SITE IN KAESONG. Photograph was taken 10 July 1951, the day negotiations opened.
    ENEMY DELEGATION AT CONFERENCE SITE. From left: Maj. Gen. Hsieh Fang and Lt. Gen. Teng
    Hua, Chinese Army; Lt. Gen. Nam Il, chief delegate for the Communists; Maj. Gen. Lee Sang
    Cho and Maj. Gen. Chang Pyong San, North Korean Army.
    162
    SIGNAL CORPS MEN REPAIRING COMMUNICATIONS LINES in a mountain pass south of Hwach’on.
    163
    F-86 SABREJETS READY TO TAKE OFF FOR “MIG ALLEY,” an area in North Korea where Russianbuilt MIG-15 jets were frequently encountered.
    ARRIVING AT X CORPS HEADQUARTERS FOR A LIAISON VISIT, July 1951. Lt. Gen. Harold R. Bull
    (left), Commandant of the National War College, and Maj. Gen. Orlando Ward (center), Chief
    of Military History, talk with Maj. Gen. Clovis E. Byers, Commanding General, U.S. X Corps.
    164
    GENERAL BYERS VISITING A COMMAND POST in the 2d Division area.
    ENGINEERS REPAIRING ROAD DAMAGE caused by heavy rain near Inje, 21 July.
    165
    TRUCKS HEADING FOR INJE along newly repaired road, 1 August.
    166
    STRETCHER-BEARERS ACCOMPANYING TROOPS UP HILL 1179, southwest edge of the Punchbowl.
    167
    WALKING WOUNDED FROM 38TH INFANTRY going
    down Hill 1179 to an aid station. On 30 July elements of the 2d Division seized Taeu-san (Hill
    1179).
    ENEMY SOLDIERS CAPTURED IN THE PUNCHBOWL
    AREA are searched at command post of the 2d Battalion, 16th Infantry, ROK 8th Division.
    168
    169
    ORPHANED KOREAN CHILDREN received money, clothing, food, and toys contributed by thousands
    of Americans.
    170
    LST LOADED WITH BOXCARS moving into Pusan harbor, August 1951.
    KOREAN LABORER CARRYING EMPTY SHELL CONTAINERS on an A-frame. Because of poor roads and
    hilly terrain, the A-frame, an ancient native
    wooden pack carrier, became indispensable for
    supplying many forward units.
    171
    CRANE UNLOADING A BOXCAR AT PUSAN
    172
    F-84 THUNDERJETS, securely anchored aboard a carrier, en route to Japan for action over Korea.
    173
    GIANT CRANE loading a mobile crane onto a barge for shipment to Korea.
    174
    PONTON BRIDGE IN 3D DIVISION SECTOR washed several hundred yards downstream by flash
    floods. During August heavy torrential rains bogged down lines of communication to the front.
    MEN OF THE 23D INFANTRY trying to save equipment in the swollen Soyang River.
    175
    AID STATION housed in bunkers along the side of a mountain.
    OBSERVATION POST, 36TH REGIMENT, ROK 10TH DIVISION, 20 August. One week later the 36th
    Regiment abandoned its positions, returning to Worun-ni, south of Hill 1179.
    176
    KOREAN LABORERS helping to carry 75-mm. recoilless rifles up to 2d Division troops.
    WEARY SOLDIERS OF THE 9TH INFANTRY REGIMENT
    moving to new positions near Yanggu. In late
    August the 9th Infantry fought at Bloody Ridge,
    west of the Punchbowl.
    177
    GUN CREW OF BATTERY C, 204TH FIELD ARTILLERY BATTALION, firing a 155-mm. self-propelled
    gun at enemy positions north of Yonch’on.
    178
    CLOUDS OF SMOKE FROM PRECISION BOMBING of enemy marshaling yards after a surprise attack
    by thirty-five B-29 Superforts, 25 August. The yards are at Rashin, seventeen miles south of the
    USSR boundary on the northeast coast of Korea.
    179
    HELICOPTER LANDING ON FLIGHT DECK of the USS Boxer after an air-sea rescue mission.
    REFUELING IN SEA OF JAPAN. A Navy tanker (center) is servicing a destroyer (left) and a cruiser
    (right).
    180
    UP THE STEEP SLOPE OF HILL 940 trudges Company F, 9th Infantry.
    181
    182
    NEAR THE CREST OF BLOODY RIDGE. This position changed hands several times during September.
    RIFLE TEAM FIRING AT AN ENEMY POSITION
    with a 57-mm. recoilless rif le.
    QUAD .50’s giving support to the 9th Infantry
    fighting for Bloody Ridge.
    183
    HILL 983, crest of Bloody Ridge.
    184
    FIRING AN 81-MM. MORTAR at enemy positions on Hill 931, 13 September.
    185
    FRENCH TROOPS USING PACK ANIMALS to carry supplies.
    186
    FIRE DIRECTION AND CONTROL TEAM of the 23d Infantry within view of Hill 931, crest of Heartbreak Ridge in background.
    187
    COMPANY E, 23D INFANTRY, ON ITS WAY TO HILL
    931 to relieve Company C, which had been fighting on the ridge for nine days. One of the men rests
    near an enemy casualty, below.
    188
    FRENCH BATTALION TROOPS ATTACHED TO 2D DIVISION occupying Hill 931, 23 September.
    189
    CASUALTIES OF FIGHT FOR HILL 931 receiving medical attention at an aid station in 2d Division area.
    190
    M4 TANKS firing in support of the 2d Division, north of Pia-ri near Hill 1179, 18 September.
    105-MM. HOWITZER MOUNTED ON GUN MOTOR CARRIAGE M7 firing in support of the 1st Marine
    Division, 22 September.
    191
    PLOWING THROUGH MUD NEAR KUMSONG, 21 September. Leading vehicle is a multiple-gun
    motor carriage M16, better known as Quad .50’s.
    192
    ENEMY CASUALTY NEAR BUNKER overrun by 7th Marine Regiment. Note trees sheared off by
    artillery fire.
    GU N CREW L OADING A CAMOUFLAGED 105M M.
    HOWITZER used in support of the 7th Marine
    Regiment.
    193
    SIKORSKY HELICOPTER HOVERING OVER HILL 884 with supplies, 20 September. During September the marines moved company-sized units by helicopter; in October they moved units the size
    of a battalion.
    194
    POSITIONS ON THE MAIN LINE OF RESISTANCE occupied by the Colombian Battalion, attached to
    the 24th Division, near Chup’a-ri overlooking the Kumsong Valley.
    195
    SUPPLIES AND REINFORCEMENTS FOR THE ROK 21ST REGIMENT in a cove near the Hwach’on
    Reservoir.
    BRIDGE OVER UNDERCUT ON ROAD BETWEEN INJE AND YANGGU, Engineers removed bridge after
    filling the undercut area to road level.
    196
    GENERAL OF THE ARMY OMAR N. BRADLEY, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at 7th Division
    headquarters area. From the left: Lt. Gen. William M. Hoge, Commanding General, IX Corps;
    General Bradley; Maj. Gen. Ira P. Swift, Commanding General, 25th Infantry Division; Maj.
    Gen. Frank F. Everest, Commanding General, 5th Air Force (shaking hands with General
    Bradley).
    197
    GENERAL RIDGWAY, Commander in Chief,
    United Nations Command (left), with Maj.
    Gen. Claude B. Ferenbaugh, Commanding
    General, 7th Infantry Division, 2 October
    1951.
    MA J. GE N . CLOVIS E. BYERS (left, foreground), Commanding General, U.S. X
    Corps, with Brig. Gen. Min Ki Sik, Commanding General, ROK 5th Division, on the
    way to a training demonstration.
    198
    LOADING A DUKW FROM A VICTORY SHIP, Inch’on harbor, 3 November. The DUKW will transfer its cargo directly to railroad cars.
    199
    CARGO NET FILLED WITH TURKEYS for Thanksgiving Day dinner.
    KOREAN WORKERS LOADING GONDOLAS with artillery ammunition for the front.
    200
    USS NEW JERSEY along the North Korean coast
    firing all nine of her 16-inch guns, November 1951.
    201
    12 NOVEMBER 1951–30 JUNE 1952
    CHAPTER VII
    As the year 1951 drew to a close the
    character of the conflict returned to that of
    July and early August. Fighting tapered off
    into a monotonous routine of patrol clashes,
    raids, and bitter small-unit struggles for key
    outpost positions. By the end of the year a
    lull had settled over the battlefield with the
    opposing sides deployed along defense lines
    that spanned the breadth of the peninsula.
    Not until the early summer of 1953 was the
    fighting resumed on a larger scale, and then
    only briefly.
    The lull resulted from General Ridgway’s decision to halt offensive ground operations in Korea. Two factors influenced
    his decision: the cost of further major assaults on the enemy’s defenses would be
    more than the results would justify; and the
    possibility that peace might come out of the
    recently reopened armistice talks ruled out
    the mounting of any costly large-scale offensive by either side. His orders to Van
    Fleet, therefore, issued on 12 November
    1951, were to cease offensive operations and
    begin an active defense of the Eighth
    Army’s front. Attacks were to be limited to
    those necessary for strengthening the main
    line of resistance and for establishing an
    outpost line 3,000-5,000 yards forward of
    the main positions.
    The line to be defended was manned by
    three American and one South Korean
    corps and extended from the Yellow Sea in
    a great arc eastward for 155 miles to the
    shores of the Sea of Japan. Defending the
    army’s left wing, the U.S. I Corps, now
    commanded by Lt. Gen. John W. O’Daniel,
    occupied the sector originating at the confluence of the Imjin and Han Rivers and
    extending northeast to a point midway between Ch’orwon and Kumhwa. On the
    U.S. I Corps right flank the defenses of
    Maj. Gen. Willard G. Wyman’s U.S. IX
    Corps began, bulging northward toward
    Kumsong and east to the Pukhan River,
    which formed the corps’ right boundary.
    East of the Pukhan the U.S. X Corps,
    under Maj. Gen. Clovis E. Byers from 15
    July to 5 December and thereafter under
    Maj. Gen. Williston B. Palmer, extended
    its lines eastward over the mountainous
    spine of the peninsula to the Nam River,
    to meet the left boundary of the ROK I
    Corps. This latter corps, commanded by
    the ROK Army’s Maj. Gen. Paik Sun Yup,
    defended the Eighth Army’s right wing; its
    zone extended due north along the Korean
    east coast from the Nam River to Kosong.
    Action on the Eighth Army front during
    the last two months of the year was limited
    mostly to patrol clashes and repelling light
    enemy attacks. Blanketed by U.N. harassStalemate
    12 November 1951–30 June 1952
    206
    ing artillery fire, the enemy moved only at
    night, and his own artillery was restricted
    by the liberal use of U.N. counterbattery
    fire. In the U.S. I Corps sector the ROK 1st
    Division mounted a series of tank-infantry
    raids against enemy positions in the area
    south of Panmunjom, but after 16 December these small-scale actions gave way once
    more to patrolling.
    The third week of December saw a series
    of changes on both sides. The U.S. 45th Division, the first National Guard division to
    fight in Korea, arrived from Japan and replaced the 1st Cavalry Division north of
    Seoul in the I Corps sector. The 1st Cavalry Division returned to Japan for a wellearned rest. Following up this change the
    U.S. 2d Division, which had been in IX
    Corps reserve, relieved the U.S. 25th Division on the line.
    On the enemy side, Eighth Army intelligence reported, the North Korean I Corps
    had moved from its positions on the western
    sector of the enemy battle front to reserve
    positions in the eastern sector. As a result
    the Chinese now defended the entire western and central parts of the enemy line.
    This concentration of the North Korean
    forces in the rugged eastern sector, where
    there was little likelihood of a major U.N.
    thrust, indicated that the North Korean
    Army might be suffering from a manpower
    shortage.
    The air conflict over Korea continued at
    a slower pace as snow, fog, and heavy cloud
    cover reduced visibility, but sorties averaged
    700 daily. Enemy pilots seemed reluctant
    to close with American Sabres. Either their
    losses had begun to tell, or a new group was
    being pushed through a jet training cycle
    and the enemy flyers were not ready to do
    battle with the Sabres. U.N. bombers and
    fighter-bombers continued their interdiction campaign, Operation STRANGLE,
    against railroad tracks, bridges, and highway traffic.
    At sea, naval units of nine nations tightened their blockade around the coast line of
    North Korea. Naval planes from the fast
    U.S. carriers Antietam and Valley Forge
    bombed the rail systems around Yonghung,
    blasted bridges, and blew up boxcars. A
    landing ship, equipped with 5-inch rockets,
    joined in the bombardment of the northeast
    port city of Songjin. Two thousand rockets
    fell on the harbor area to destroy a large
    supply point, shunting yards, and bridges
    while coastal roadways were raked with
    shell fragments. United States destroyers
    continued to bombard Wonsan while the
    cruiser Saint Paul, supporting the ROK I
    Corps at the eastern extremity of the front,
    fired on targets of opportunity. Off the west
    coast, south and west of Chinnamp’o, the
    British light cruiser Belfast, the U.S. destroyer Eversole, and the British frigates
    Mounts Bay and White Sand Bay scored direct
    hits on three enemy gun emplacements and
    blew up a small arms supply depot.
    On the ground, patrols from both sides
    were out in force. As expected, the enemy
    jumped off in a series of small-scale attacks
    during Christmas week. The initial thrust,
    delivered by about a battalion, came in the
    X Corps sector deep in the eastern mountains. Covered by 82-mm. mortar and artillery fire, the enemy captured an outpost of
    the ROK 3d Division. Two counterattacks
    failed, but on 28 December a battalion of
    the ROK 3d restored the outpost position
    and enemy attacks stopped. That afternoon
    action. erupted on the far left flank of the
    otherwise quiet front. A Chinese battalion,
    its members wearing white parkas in the
    snow-covered terrain, lashed out at a company-held outpost of the ROK 1st Division
    that served as a patrol base for the division.
    A forty-minute pitched battle ensued in
    207
    bitter, subzero weather before the ROK
    company fell back. Two days later, tanksupported elements of the ROK 1st won
    back 900 yards of the ground the company
    had lost but failed to recapture the outpost
    itself. The high ground was secured by the
    last day of the year in spite of bad weather
    and heavy enemy resistance that cut short
    the attack.
    Although the decision by General Ridgway to discontinue offensive operations
    changed the Eighth Army’s mission to one
    of defense, he had not implied that all
    action should cease. His order did not preclude raids, attritional warfare, or local
    limited offensives under favorable conditions. Therefore in December 1951, Van
    Fleet directed his corps commanders to
    make their attacks against enemy positions
    as costly to the foe as possible. Later, at a
    meeting with the corps commanders, he directed them to begin attacking with artillery and air strikes to impress the Chinese
    and North Koreans with the tremendous
    fire power of the Eighth Army. As the new
    year began, the Eighth Army made ready
    to carry out these instructions.
    The 155-mile front remained generally
    quiet in the opening days of 1952, although
    patrols were regularly dispatched to gain
    prisoners and information. The most significant activity during the first month of the
    year occurred in the western extremity of
    the I Corps line. When light counterblows
    had failed to dislodge the Chinese from a
    ROK 1st Division outpost, the division
    opened a co-ordinated attack on the height
    on 3 January. After a five-day struggle, the
    infantry succeeded in seizing and securing
    the hill and adjacent positions. The Chinese
    lost heavily in this action, suffering an estimated 4,000 casualties and the destruction
    of a considerable amount of precious equipment and supplies.
    In January 1952 the Eighth Army
    opened a month-long artillery-air campaign against enemy positions. The artillery
    units of the four corps fired on remunerative targets, and on alternate days U.N.
    aircraft struck at others with high explosives
    and fire bombs. Thousands of rounds of artillery shells and bombs fell on the targets
    during the month. No doubt this artilleryair attack discouraged enemy offensive
    action, but the strength of the enemy’s positions and his skill in camouflage minimized
    its effect.
    The superiority of U.N. air and artillery
    fire forced the Chinese and North Koreans
    to dig in deeply. Simple emplacements became dirt and log fortifications with overhead cover that varied from four to fifteen
    feet in thickness. It was common practice to
    place primary defense positions on the forward slope of a hill and dig personnel shelters, artillery emplacements, command
    posts, and supply points, all well-camouflaged, on the reverse slope. Tunnels or
    covered trenches connected the fighting
    positions with the shelters. Thus enemy
    troops could move to the shelters when attacked by aircraft or artillery, then return
    to their positions when the fire lifted. All
    positions afforded cover from high-angle
    fire and provided good fields of fire.
    U.N. artillery and the infantry’s recoilless weapons, employing direct fire, neutralized many of the positions on the forward slopes of hills but were less effective
    against enemy fortifications on the reverse
    slopes. Many times the shells would fall into
    the valley below rather than on the target.
    The aerial fire bomb was no more effective.
    Only a direct hit from a 500- or 1,000-
    pound bomb would destroy these emplacements.
    Sporadic, light ground action continued
    to mark the fighting during the remainder
    208
    of January and February of 1952. Patrols
    went out daily to feel out the enemy, capture prisoners, and locate enemy positions.
    The newly arrived 45th Division carried
    out a number of tank-infantry raids near
    the end of January to destroy enemy positions and seize prisoners. Various ruses
    aimed at luring the enemy out of his positions met with little or no success.
    While the spring rains and mists that
    cloaked Korea in March and April limited
    air and ground operations, Van Fleet shifted
    his units along the front to give the South
    Korean Army a greater share of responsibility for defending the battle line and to
    concentrate American fire power in the
    vulnerable western sector.
    By 1 May the 1st Marine Division had
    moved from the Punchbowl area in the
    U.S. X Corps zone to replace the ROK 1st
    Division in General O’Daniel’s I Corps.
    Here the marines’ amphibious training and
    equipment could be utilized to conduct
    small raids across the Imjin River. The
    ROK 1st Division, after nine weeks training, replaced the U.S. 3d Division in the
    corps’ right center sector. General O’Daniel
    now had the 1st Marine Division on the left
    wing, the 1st British Commonwealth and
    the ROK 1st in the center, and the 45th on
    the right.
    General Van Fleet made more extensive
    changes on the central front. He erased the
    U.S. I Corps–U.S. IX Corps boundary and
    redrew it farther west. At the same time he
    also had the right boundary of the latter
    corps moved west. With this shift General
    Wyman’s IX Corps, by 1 May, consisted of
    the ROK 9th Division on the left, the U.S.
    7th Division in the center, and the U.S.
    40th Division on the right. The 40th, the
    second National Guard division to fight in
    Korea, arrived in late January 1952. Assigned to the IX Corps, it relieved the U.S.
    24th Division, which returned to Japan. On
    the IX Corps’ right flank, into the gap
    created by the shift in boundary, Van Fleet
    moved the reactivated ROK II Corps. The
    new corps’ battle front, defended on the left
    by the ROK 6th Division, in the center by
    the ROK Capital, and on the right by the
    ROK 3rd, extended eastward from Kumsong to the X Corps boundary.
    Only two changes occurred on the east
    central and eastern fronts. In General
    Palmer’s X Corps, the ROK 8th replaced
    the 1st Marine Division. General Palmer’s
    sector now had the ROK 7th Division on
    the left wing, the U.S. 25th in the center,
    and the ROK 8th on the right wing. On
    the eastern front, the ROK 11th Division
    moved up from its training area and took
    over defense of the left half of the ROK I
    Corps zone, while the ROK 5th assumed
    responsibility for the right sector on the Sea
    of Japan.
    Ground action had continued to be limited to patrols in March and April, but the
    enemy became bolder in May. He increased
    his probing attacks and patrols, intensified
    his artillery fire, and aggressively intercepted U.N. patrols. The increased enemy
    activity was most pronounced in the U.S. I
    Corps sector, where the Chinese executed
    thirty probing attacks, all unsuccessful, during May against the ROK 1st Division. But
    Chinese thrusts in the 45th Division sector
    overshadowed all other action across the
    entire front. When the Chinese made three
    raids against the 45th, the U.S. division
    countered by sending nine tanks of the
    245th Tank Battalion and a ROK infantry
    unit to raid the town of Agok, eight miles
    west of Ch’orwon, on 25 May. That night
    the Chinese launched an unsuccessful attack against one of the division’s patrol
    bases. Three nights later two Chinese companies intercepted a patrol from the 279th
    209
    Infantry Regiment, on the division’s right.
    Cut off, the patrol engaged the enemy with
    small arms and automatic weapons fire and
    radioed for assistance. Although the
    Chinese fired nearly three hundred mortar
    and artillery rounds on the main line of resistance, a relief platoon started out immediately and reached the besieged patrol
    three hours later. When aircraft illuminated the battle area with flares, the
    enemy’s fire lessened. Finding the patrol
    reinforced and the battlefield light as day,
    the Chinese broke off the engagement and
    withdrew.
    The enemy’s increased aggressiveness
    was greatly aided by his growing strength
    in artillery. In July 1951 the enemy had
    fired an estimated 8,000 artillery and mortar rounds, but in May 1952 an estimated
    total of 102,000 rounds fell on the Eighth
    Army’s positions. Furthermore, the firing
    was more effective. The Chinese and North
    Koreans showed ability to mass eight to ten
    guns on a target, and to place counterbattery fire accurately. They fired widely
    spaced alternating guns and moved their
    artillery pieces frequently. In May the
    Chinese also moved artillery forward to
    within 2,000–6,000 yards of the Eighth
    Army’s defenses.
    As a result of increased Chinese ground
    activity at the hinge of the Eighth Army’s
    line west of Ch’orwon, Maj. Gen. David L.
    Ruffner, the 45th Division commander,
    planned an operation to establish eleven
    patrol bases across his division’s front. If his
    plan succeeded these bases would screen
    the division’s main line of resistance more
    adequately by denying the enemy their use.
    This operation, known as Operation
    COUNTER, began on 6 June when the two
    front-line regiments of the division launched
    a series of attacks to occupy the eleven objectives. By 7 June all but one objective had
    fallen to the assault units of the division.
    The enemy followed up with a series of
    counterblows during the next five days, but
    these were successfully repulsed.
    Seven days later, 13 June, the 45th Division opened Phase II of COUNTER to seize
    the last objective, a hill which the 45th had
    abandoned in March. It lay at the southern
    tip of a T-shaped ridge line eight miles west
    and slightly north of Ch’orwon. The struggle
    for the height began with an air strike and
    a preparatory artillery bombardment. The
    2d Battalion of the 180th Infantry then
    crossed the line of departure and engaged
    the Chinese at close quarters. American infantry repulsed four company-size Chinese
    counterattacks. Next day the regiment’s 3d
    Battalion relieved the 2d and secured the
    objective. U.N. aircraft flew fifty-eight
    close-support missions during the first eighteen hours, and U.N. guns fired 43,600
    rounds during the forty-eight-hour battle.
    At noon on 14 June, Phase II of Plan
    COUNTER ended with the new chain of
    patrol bases one half to two miles in front of
    the main line of resistance secure in the
    division’s hands.
    The Chinese immediately launched
    counterattacks along the entire front of the
    45th Division. They first expended about
    two battalions in futile efforts to retake Hill
  18. Then, on the night of 20–2 1 June, they
    opened a regimental assault, supported by
    5,000 rounds of artillery and mortar fire,
    against Hill 255, southwest of Hill 191.
    When this failed they struck at outpost positions on the western anchor of the division’s
    outpost line, climaxing their efforts on the
    night of 28–29 June with an unsuccessful
    attack that lasted four and a half hours.
    Throughout June the 45th sustained 1,004
    casualties, but the Chinese lost an estimated
    5,000 men, including thirty captured.
    Patrol clashes and light probing attacks
    210
    by the enemy marked the action elsewhere
    on the front during May and June. Strong
    positions and the mountainous terrain acted
    as deterrents to any large-scale action on
    the central and eastern fronts.
    If ground action waned during the first
    half of 1952, so did air action. Enemy jet
    pilots had flown 3,700 sorties in January
    1952 but only 308 in June. Even though the
    Chinese and North Koreans put fewer and
    fewer operational aircraft into the air, they
    continued to expand their air potential.
    U.N. intelligence estimated that they had a
    total of 1,000 planes, including 400 jets, in
    Manchuria and China during May 1951,
    but twelve months later they were reported
    as possessing 1,800 planes, including 1,000
    jets, in the same areas. The enemy also
    tightened his night air defenses. Over a
    dozen of his cannon- and rocket-firing jets
    attacked ten B-29’s on the night of 10–11
    June as the U.N. aircraft were carrying out
    a bombing raid on the Kwaksan railroad
    bridge south of the Yalu River. Assisted by
    radar-controlled searchlights, the jets shot
    down one bomber and caused a second to
    make a forced landing.
    Throughout the first half of 1952, then,
    the U.N. forces waged a war of containment. U.N. infantry units parried enemy
    thrusts and launched attacks of their own,
    while naval units blockaded the coasts of
    North Korea and established an anti-invasion patrol to protect ROK partisans holding offshore islands. Sabrejets successfully
    limited hostile aircraft to the area north of
    the Ch’ongch’on River line, and friendly
    bombers interdicted hostile supply lines.
    The front-line soldier continued to watch
    for enemy assaults while hoping that the
    armistice negotiators would soon reach
    agreement.
    Support and Service
    The prosecution of the war in Korea
    called for a tremendous administrative and
    logistical effort on the part of the Eighth
    Army. Decisions in Washington and Tokyo
    required that the army not only carry on its
    tactical mission but operate the supply lines
    within the peninsula, administer the rear
    areas, give relief to the disrupted civilian
    population, and run the prisoner of war
    camps until August 1952—tasks normally
    carried out by the theater headquarters.1
    In addition, the Eighth Army had to integrate the multinational forces fighting in
    Korea within its command structure. Multitudinous problems arose in carrying out
    these various responsibilities.
    To integrate the ground contingents
    offered by member countries of the United
    Nations most efficiently, the U.N. commander’s plan was to assign them, according to their size, to American units within
    the Eighth Army. Thus the Turkish Brigade
    came under control of an American division. The United Kingdom’s two brigades
    and the one from Canada were placed
    under army control until July 1951, when
    the 1st British Commonwealth Division was
    formed and assumed control of all Commonwealth forces in Korea. This division,
    in turn, came under operational control of
    an American corps. Since all other ground
    combat units were of battalion size, they
    were attached to U.S. infantry regiments.
    A number of problems required immediate solution. Language barriers, different
    standards of training, divergent tactical
    concepts, variations in dietary habits, dissimilar religious and national customs, and
    other discrepancies had to be reconciled.
    Some were resolved with little or no difficulty; others required extensive planning
    for solution.
    The difficulties experienced when the
    first U.N. contingents came to Korea led
    the Eighth Army to organize the United
    Nations Reception Center. The center became responsible for clothing and equipping U.N. forces upon their arrival in Korea and for providing them with familiarization training in American arms and
    equipment. As the newcomers went through
    the reception center, American officers
    could evaluate their proficiency. These
    officers soon learned that some of the units
    were not so well trained as advance reports
    had indicated and that some lacked aggressiveness. As a result, the familiarization
    training programs were expanded.
    Training and other factors influenced the
    assignment and subsequent role of the U.N.
    contingents, although the most desirable
    1
    In August 1952, the Eighth Army was relieved of these
    tasks when the Far East Command organized the Korean
    Communications Zone, under its direct control, for this
    purpose.
    212
    course of action was to employ all U.N.
    units exactly as similar U.S. units were employed. Those units whose training did not
    approximate U.S. standards and who did
    not develop satisfactorily received additional training while on line of communications guard duty before being committed.
    Troops not naturally aggressive and under
    poor leadership were not given an assault
    role in the attack. Those lacking in soldierly
    steadfastness did not receive key defense
    missions. But most U.N. units were considered capable of executing any tactical
    mission appropriate for a similar U.S. unit.
    In assigning the U.N. units and in giving
    them missions U.S. commanders had to
    reckon with divergent staff and tactical
    concepts and techniques. One unit preferred organizing the high ground when on
    the defense, whereas American doctrine
    favored organizing the forward slopes to
    obtain maximum effect with grazing and
    interlocking fire from automatic weapons.
    Another unit considered reconnaissance in
    force and combat patrols wasteful in that
    casualties were suffered without the compensatory gain of a physical objective. Some
    units did not think in terms of massed fire
    power to the degree U.S. forces did. There
    were other minor variations, but generally
    the non-U.S. units endeavored to pattern
    their actions after those of their American
    counterparts. Most of the U.N. officers from
    other countries, particularly staff officers,
    had attended various U.S. service schools.
    They were thus familiar with American
    tactical doctrine, and their military concepts and practices were generally in accord
    with it.
    With so many nationalities operating
    under a unified command in Korea it was
    only natural that language difficulties
    should develop. Although the language
    problem was never completely solved, it
    did not interfere with the army’s tactical
    operations. English was the official language, and all orders, directives, and instructions were issued in that tongue. The
    task of translation fell on the non-U.S. contingents for they had enough men that
    knew English well, whereas the American
    commands to which the contingents were
    attached had too few soldiers that were
    competent in a language other than their
    own. The integrated U.N. units also furnished liaison officers to these same American commands.
    In theory it would have been desirable to
    have each U.N. country furnish the necessary logistical support for the men whom it
    sent into the conflict in Korea. In practice,
    however, it was simpler to have the United
    States furnish the support on a reimbursable basis. Thus the Eighth Army, which
    had the responsibility for supplying all of
    the units integrated into it, could do the job
    via a single line of communications instead
    of many. Nonetheless it encountered a
    number of difficulties.
    National differences in customs and tastes
    led to many complications in supplying
    U.N. forces with rations. Because of Moslem religious restrictions, the Turks could
    not eat pork or pork products. The Hindus
    of the Indian contingent could not eat beef
    because of similar restrictions. The Turks
    wanted strong coffee, spices, and butter instead of margarine. The Hindus had to
    have rice, curry powder, and strong spices.
    Thailanders and Filipinos required rice,
    strong spices, and strong tea and coffee.
    The Dutch missed their milk and cheese,
    and the French their bottle of wine. Nearly
    all of the Europeans wanted a great deal
    more bread than the American ration provided. The Japan Logistical Command
    Quartermaster modified the ration to meet
    these various requirements.
    213
    Types of provisions furnished to particular countries changed from time to time,
    but in May 1952 only three countries—
    Canada, Norway, and Sweden—were accepting the complete American ration with
    nothing taken away or added. British Commonwealth forces, other than the Canadians, received all food supplies except
    perishables from British Commonwealth
    sources. All other units depended fully on
    the United States for their food supplies,
    with the rations modified to suit their tastes
    and customs.
    Items of American clothing generally
    won the favor of the U.N. troops from other
    countries, though many of them were not
    convinced that two layers of light clothing
    were better for winter than a single layer of
    heavy clothing. The major problem was in
    measurements. Western Europeans are of
    about the same size as Americans; so are
    the Greeks and Turks, though their wider
    feet made fitting of shoes difficult. Oriental
    troops such as the Thailanders and Filipinos, on the other hand, are considerably
    smaller and their clothing had to be cut
    down. For them too, fitting of shoes was a
    problem, especially for the Thailanders.
    Supplying the integrated units was part
    of the generally difficult task of the Eighth
    Army in carrying out its overall logistical
    mission. The logistical responsibility held
    by the army involved operating the ports
    and railways, receiving and classifying the
    incoming supplies and equipment, and forwarding them to the battle front. To organize and control this logistical effort, the
    Eighth Army formed the 2d Logistical
    Command. This command also took over
    the job of administering the rear areas.
    Logistical support of an army in the field
    is an arduous task, even under ideal conditions. In South Korea, conditions were far
    from ideal. The country has only one
    port—Pusan—considered adequate to
    handle incoming military supplies. The
    mountainous east coast and the extreme
    tidal range of the west coast prohibit construction of adequate ports. Inch’on, the
    port for Seoul, and several smaller ports on
    the west and south coast were available, but
    deep-draft vessels had to remain offshore
    and have their cargoes lightered in. Hence
    Pusan became the major port for the Eighth
    Army and received nearly all supplies.
    There were disadvantages in using Pusan
    as the chief port. It is located at the extreme
    southeast tip of the peninsula. As the Eighth
    Army moved northward its supply line was
    correspondingly extended. The lack of adequate railroads and highways from Pusan
    to the battle front added to the burden of
    maintaining the supply line. Moreover,
    concentrating the bulk of supplies at one
    port provided an excellent target for enemy
    air attack.
    To move supplies and equipment forward from Pusan to the front the 2d Logistical Command utilized the Korean railroads as the chief means of transportation.
    But the Korean rail system left much to be
    desired. Its 3,500 miles of track are concentrated mostly in the western half of the peninsula, because the mountains prevent construction of lines in eastern Korea. Another
    complication is that the system’s main
    trunk lines, one double track from Pusan to
    Seoul and a single track from Pusan to
    Ch’unch’on, have very few feeder lines. The
    forces in eastern Korea therefore had to
    truck supplies from the main lines over
    great distances.
    The problems of rail support increased as
    the Eighth Army advanced northward and
    track mileage under its control lengthened.
    The rail system had suffered a good deal of
    damage in the fighting, and a shortage of
    214
    rolling stock developed. Air and artillery
    bombardment had destroyed tracks and
    rolling stock, yards and repair shops, railroad bridges and tunnels, and a lack of
    enough skilled workers hindered the restoration of the damaged lines although the
    Eighth Army’s engineers worked constantly
    at the job. The army’s transportation section instituted a system of movements control to help overcome the shortage of rolling
    stock. It insisted that every car be fully
    loaded before shipping and unloaded
    quickly at its destination. The transportation section also obtained some rolling stock
    from Japanese sources and the United
    States, including locomotives. Despite all of
    these measures, a shortage of cars and motive power persisted throughout the course
    of the conflict.
    As for the highway system of Korea, it
    was not built to support modern military
    operations. The roads are narrow, badly
    drained, and poorly surfaced. Snow and ice
    cover them in winter, and spring thaws and
    summer rains make them impassable.
    There were few laterals to connect with the
    main highways, and in many areas roads
    did not even exist or were merely ox-cart
    trails. Because supply agencies had to rely
    heavily on truck transportation, the Eighth
    Army’s engineers spent a great deal of time
    and effort in improving and maintaining
    the existing roads and in constructing new
    roads.
    Yet the tremendous improvements made
    by the engineers in South Korea’s land
    transportation facilities were not enough to
    get the supplies to the combat troops. Trains
    and trucks brought the supplies from the
    ports to forward supply points. But from
    there to many sections of the front, food,
    clothing, ammunition, and other battlefield
    needs had to be hand-carried over the
    rugged terrain, a process that required a
    large number of men. Since combat troops
    could not be spared for such a task, the
    South Korean Government, at the request
    of the Eighth Army, organized the Korean
    Service Corps to carry supplies to the front
    lines. Laborers of this corps, using A-frames,
    daily toiled up the slopes of steep hills carrying needed supplies to the companies and
    platoons. They also assisted the front-line
    troops in building and improving fortifications.
    As its principal means of communication
    in the Korean conflict, the Eighth Army
    used wire and very high frequency radio.
    Because the telephone and telegraph systems of South Korea had been seriously
    damaged by the war and were in a bad
    state of disrepair, the army’s signal section
    built its own wire system extending from
    Pusan all the way to the front. The radio
    network supplemented the wire system to
    insure rapid and constant communication
    between all echelons of command. The ingenuity and hard work that went into the
    construction of the wire and radio networks
    produced in the end what was probably the
    finest communications system that any field
    army ever enjoyed.
    Another problem posed for the Eighth
    Army was maintaining the supply of ammunition. When the conflict began, a great
    amount of ammunition left over from
    World War II was available for the support
    of the army. Transporting this ammunition
    to the front placed an additional burden on
    the inadequate rail and highway system of
    South Korea. As hostilities extended into
    the summer of 1951, ammunition levels in
    the depots began to approach the absolute
    minimum needed to sustain combat operations in Korea. The ammunition affected
    was shells for light and medium artillery
    and for mortars. A rationing program for
    normal combat operations was adopted to
    215
    solve the problem. This program helped to
    relieve the strain on transportation facilities
    and insured that the army’s guns would
    have all the ammunition necessary to stop
    an enemy drive or to support offensive operations.
    Besides giving logistical support to the
    South Korean Army, the Eighth Army
    aided the civil population with relief supplies. From the very beginning of the conflict the Republic of Korea required civil
    assistance for its population. As the fighting
    spread over the whole country, the destruction of homes and fields, economic dislocations, and threats of disease and starvation
    imperiled the new nation. The South
    Korean Government did not have the
    means to cope with the problems of its tens
    of thousands of homeless refugees. Unless
    something was done, civil unrest would
    seriously impair the military effort of the
    U.N. forces in Korea. Thus civil relief became a military problem, at least while the
    fighting continued.
    When the U.S. Army received responsibility for providing civil assistance to the
    Republic of Korea, it moved quickly. The
    Far East Command shipped food, clothing,
    and medicine from its supply depots to care
    for the refugees. Other relief items were
    purchased from Japanese sources. The
    Eighth Army organized the United Nations
    Civil Assistance Command (UNCACK)
    to provide relief. Working with the South
    Korean Government and U.N. representatives, this command supervised the organization of refugee camps, distributed food
    and clothing, and established medical facil;
    ities for the civil population. To prevent the
    spread of communicable diseases, more
    than three fourths of the population received inoculations against smallpox, typhoid, and typhus. Aircraft dusted cities
    with DDT to kill disease-bearing insects
    while teams dusted millions of South
    Koreans.
    Thousands of children who had lost their
    families wandered with the refugees. Orphanages within the country rounded them
    up and cared for them, receiving aid from
    the Civil Assistance Command. In addition,
    thousands of American soldiers voluntarily
    contributed money to support homes for
    them. Many units of the Eighth Army
    “adopted” orphanages, supporting them
    with money, clothing, food, and other
    necessities.
    Another objective of the civil relief mission in Korea was to assist the country in
    rebuilding its economy. The Civil Assistance Command helped to rebuild and expand the agricultural economy by providing technical guidance and material aid. At
    the same time the South Koreans were
    helped and encouraged to build factories
    for the production of war materiel and consumer goods, and the nation’s government
    took steps to reduce inflation. This economic
    program was reinforced by the Eighth
    Army’s employment of thousands of Korean workers and the rebuilding and improvement of the railroads, highways, ports,
    and airfields of the country.
    Another problem bristling with difficulties arose from the large number of enemy
    soldiers held by the Eighth Army. When
    the North Korean forces collapsed near the
    end of 1950, the Eighth Army had well
    over 100,000 prisoners of war on its hands.
    These prisoners were held on the island of
    Koje-do, situated thirty miles southwest of
    Pusan. The camp consisted of four barbed
    wire enclosures each subdivided into eight
    compounds, with each compound capable
    of holding 6,000 prisoners.
    The camp administration carried out the
    principles of the Geneva Convention of
    1949 regarding prisoners of war. Guards re-
    216
    ceived instructions in these principles, and
    representatives of the International Red
    Cross inspected the compounds frequently.
    The captives were permitted to engage in
    athletics, and classes of instruction in a
    great variety of subjects were offered to
    those who wished to attend.
    Camp authorities also instituted a screening program to separate South Korean
    civilians from the real prisoners of war.
    These civilians had been forced to fight or
    to work as laborers in the North Korean
    Army when it overran the Republic of Korea during the first months of the war. As a
    result of the screening program 38,000 captives were reclassified as civilians during
    November and December 1951. Then, in
    January 1952, the camp commander began
    a second screening cycle to correct mistakes
    made in the first one. Communist leaders
    within the compounds resisted this screening because it meant that they would lose
    control over the anticommunist prisoners
    and that the guards could keep a closer
    watch over antagonistic groups.
    During the early months of the camp’s
    operation disorders occurred often, but
    rioting did not break out until late in 1951.
    Evidently a core of tough communists had
    been organized in each compound with the
    objective of seizing control over the anticommunists among the prisoners. Gangs of
    thugs cowed those who would not conform,
    and kangaroo courts sentenced leaders of
    the opposition to death. This attempt to
    seize control of the captives within each
    compound led to factional strife and a
    number of deaths.
    Violent opposition to screening began in
    early 1952, when the inmates of Compound
    62 attacked a battalion of troops from the
    U.S. 27th Infantry Regiment. The battalion had entered the compound to keep
    order while the Republic of Korea screening committee performed its duties. The
    prisoners attacked the Americans with
    rocks, pick handles, homemade knives and
    axes, tent poles, and barbed wire flails. The
    soldiers threw concussion grenades to stop
    the attack, but the mob continued to move
    forward. The American commander ordered his troops to fire, and the prisoners
    were forced back. When the melee ceased,
    200 inmates of the compound were casualties and one American had been killed and
    thirty-eight wounded.
    As a result of the riot the guard strength
    was increased and a new screening and
    segregation program instituted. The new
    program called for separation of those
    prisoners and civilian internees who desired
    repatriation from those who did not and for
    construction of new prisoner of war camps
    on the mainland and the island of Cheju-do.
    As the new screening program began, in
    April 1952, it met with increasing hostility
    from the communist prisoners. Mass meetings, flag raisings, and other acts of defiance
    took place. The climax came in May when
    the prisoners seized the commander of the
    prisoner of war camp. General Van Fleet
    immediately moved reinforcements to the
    island, including flame-throwing tanks.
    Upon release of the camp’s head, Brig.
    Gen. Haydon L. Boatner took over command and proceeded to bring the situation
    under control. General Boatner had all
    civilian residents of the island moved off,
    reorganized the staff, and ordered his
    guards to enter forcibly any compound displaying slogans or flying North Korean
    flags. Engineers began rebuilding the compounds to reduce their capacity to 500 men,
    and the army commander sent the 187th
    Airborne Regiment to reinforce the guard
    strength of the camp.
    The communist leaders prepared to fight
    against any removal of the prisoners. They
    217
    secretly fashioned weapons, filling crude
    grenades with hoarded cooking gasoline.
    The inmates of one compound dug a waistdeep trench before the main gate on the assumption that the guards would enter
    there.
    On 10 June the camp commander proceeded to move the prisoners to the new
    compounds. The leader of Compound 76,
    where the trench had been dug, was ordered to form his men into groups of 150 in
    preparation for the move. He failed to do
    so, and General Boatner ordered the commander of the 187th to move two battalions
    into the compound. The troops did not
    enter by the main gate. Instead engineers
    cut through the barbed wire in rear of the
    compound while tanks patrolled outside of
    the enclosure. Then the troops, wearing gas
    masks, advanced through the cut in the
    wire and threw tear gas grenades into the
    unruly mob. The grenades ignited gasoline
    hidden in the compound, and the inmates
    broke before the American troops. Some
    locked themselves in the barracks of the enclosure while others jumped into the ditch
    near the main gate. The troops began a
    methodical job of cleaning out the barracks
    and ditch, herding the captives toward the
    center of the compound. In one and a half
    hours it was all over. Nearly 6,000 North
    Koreans squatted in the center of the enclosure while the compound’s buildings
    went up in flames. Over 150 inmates were
    killed and injured; the Americans had one
    killed and thirteen wounded. Shortly afterward the prisoners were moved to the new
    compound while their leader was led off to
    solitary confinement.
    With the collapse of the prisoners’ revolt
    in Compound 76, the remainder of the
    screening program was carried out with
    relatively little difficulty. The noncommunist prisoners were separated from the communists, and the latter moved into the 500-
    man compounds. Incidents on the island
    continued, but guards used tear gas to stop
    demonstrations and riots and to maintain
    order and discipline among the unruly
    inmates.
    SECTION 7
    12 November 1951–30 June 1952
    221
    222
    STATION GYPSY, near Hwach’on. Operations van from which programs were broadcast (left) contained two short-wave receivers, two dual-speed turntables, an amplifier for live broadcasts, a
    transmitter, console, microphone, tape recorder, and library of over 35,000 song hits; administrative van is on the right.
    223
    378TH ENGINEER COMBAT BATTALION constructing a treadway bridge across the Pukhan River,
    ROK 6th Division sector of IX Corps area, November 1951.
    224
    PATTON TANK ON THE MAIN SUPPLY ROUTE, 3d
    Division sector, I Corps area, 17 November 1951.
    225
    226
    WINTRY WASHDAY in the 24th Division area, 24 November.
    8-INCH HOWITZER in action, 25th Division area.
    227
    CLEARING SLUSH from a 24th Division landing strip.
    GUARD DUTY. Snow-covered vehicle is a halftrack, Quad .50.
    228
    VICE-PRESIDENT ALBEN W. BARKLEY, right foreground, is welcomed to the 24th Division area by
    the Colombian Battalion Commander; Maj. Gen. Blackshear M. Bryan, Commanding General,
    24th Division, is at right.
    229
    WET AND CHILLED, cavalrymen huddle around a small can of burning gasoline.
    230
    LITTER BEARERS OF THE 7TH DIVISION, moving cautiously over ice and snow, bring in a wounded
    man.
    231
    ENEMY PRISONER, captured by a 7th Division soldier, is on his way south for the winter.
    232
    SELF-PROPELLED 155-MM. GUN lights up the night
    in the 25th Division area, 26 November.
    233
    234
    FLYING BOXCAR C-119 DISGORGING MAIL for APO 24, Ch’unch’on.
    235
    ROLLS OF BARBED WIRE AND MAIL on the way up to Company E, 21st Infantry.
    PATTON TANKS PINCH-HITTING FOR MAIL TRUCKS carry Christmas mail to front-line troops.
    236
    RIDGERUNNER, so called because of its maneuverability on the roadway above running along the
    ridge line. The tank shown above is credited with having destroyed eighteen enemy bunkers in
    one afternoon.
    INSULATED CONTAINERS OF HOT FOOD being carried up to hilltop positions, 24th Division area.
    237
    TANK COMMANDER crouching behind the turret after giving the order to fire.
    ENEMY BUNKER AND CONNECTING TRENCH,
    Hill 770.
    ENEMY KITCHEN on Hill 770 near Kumsong.
    238
    CABLE CAR, built by 3d Engineer Construction
    Battalion. Starting point is at foot of Hill 770, left;
    the car nears the platform at the top of the hill, below. Engine from a discarded 3
    /4-ton truck supplied
    power for the car, which traversed a distance of
    1,530 feet from bottom to top. At several stages of
    its journey the car dangled as much as 200 feet off
    the ground.
    239
    COMPANY E, 21ST INFANTRY, preparing for a long
    winter, near Kumsong. Koreans help with construction of bunker, right. Assistant squad leaders
    attend a class on the use and operation of grenade
    adapters, below.
    240
    Some troops see Santa.
    241
    Some troops do not.
    242
    Now I lay me down to sleep. . . .
    243
    REPLACEMENTS for the 1st Marine Division disembarking from an LST.
    244
    WHITE-CLAD RECONNAISSANCE PATROL from 2d Division moving out, 1 January 1952.
    L-20 PREPARING TO TAKE OFF. Seated in front with the pilot is Maj. Gen. Williston B. Palmer,
    Commanding General, X Corps.
    245
    NEW YEAR’S DAY DINNER on its way up to Company L, 21st Infantry, near Kumsong.
    246
    247
    Celebrating New Year’s Day
    248
    PLOTTING CORRECTIONS ON A MAP in the fire control hut before the next heavy mortar rounds are
    fired, west of Ch’orwon, 4 January
    249
    SERVING A HOT MEAL to the 179th Infantry Regiment, 45th Division, along a mountainside. The
    45th Division arrived in Korea during the third week of December.
    250
    JANUARY 1952. In this month the Eighth Army opened a sustained artillery-air campaign against
    enemy positions.
    251
    DESTROYING AN OLD ENEMY BUNKER WITH TNT,
    NEAR KUMSONG, 11 JANUARY.
    252
    40TH DIVISION INFANTRYMEN preparing to debark at Inch’on harbor, January 1952. The 40th
    Division was assigned to the IX Corps to relieve the 24th Division.
    253
    24TH DIVISION TROOPS aboard the USS George Clymer headed for Japan.
    COFFEE BREAK for 40th Division men on their way to the front lines two days after arriving in
    Korea.
    254
    UNCACK Representative Presenting a Jeep-Type Fire Engine to a Korean public safety
    officer, Taejon, October 1952.
    Partially Contructed Family Housing Units, Taegu, July 1952.
    255
    UNCACK CHIEF NURSE WITH KOREAN WOMEN examining American women’s uniforms donated
    to hospitals, August 1952.
    The United Nations Civil Assistance Command
    (UNCACK), in providing relief for the civil population of South Korea, distributed food and clothing, reconstructed communities, and furnished
    medical facilities.
    CEMENT DONATED BY UNCACK was used to
    make well casings and pipe, July 1952.
    256
    FRENCH BATTALION TROOPS ON MANEUVERS, shown in positions along the electric railroad track
    at Kumgong-ni.
    257
    INSTALLING A FIELD TELEPHONE at the 160th Infantry regimental command post.
    LEAVING WARMING TENTS to carry out a fire mission. The men above are from Battery B, 37th
    Field Artillery Battalion.
    258
    259
    MEDIC TREATING INJURED 2D DIVISION INFANTRYMAN, 14 February 1952,
    while a wounded ROK soldier is helped up the steep bank to await his turn.
    260
    ALL-PRISONER CAST of a play staged for the entertainment of the POW camp, Koje-do, March
    1952.
    U.N. POW CAMP, KOJE-DO. Korean village, foreground, borders the camp.
    261
    SEARCHLIGHT IN POSITION, west of Ch’orwon. This searchlight is mounted on the bed of a converted 21
    /2-ton truck.
    TAKING TIME OUT for coffee and doughnuts, 37th Field Artillery Battalion command post.
    262
    SAVING AN AIRMAN
    FIRING ROCKETS FROM A PT BOAT in a harassing attack against the east coast of North Korea.
    The boat is manned by ROK Navy men.
    263
    LOW-LEVEL AIR ATTACK on enemy supply center at Suan, thirty-five miles southeast of P’yongyang. Note tank of napalm just released from the left wing of the F-80.
    264
    PLATOON LEADER BRIEFING HIS MEN before leaving on a reconnaissance patrol, June 1952.
    265
    CONFERENCE IN THE RAIN, June 1952. General Van Fleet, Eighth Army commander, is on the left;
    next to him is Brig. Gen. Joseph P. Cleland, Commanding General, 40th Division; Maj. Gen.
    Willard G. Wyman, Commanding General, IX Corps, is at right.
    266
    Welcome home.
    1 JULY 1952–28 JULY 1953
    CHAPTER IX
    Deadlock continued as the Korean conflict went into its third year in late June
  19. Since November 1951 the battle front
    had been relative stable, both sides having
    settled down to an active defense of their
    positions. In the following winter and spring
    the fighting dwindled to patrol clashes,
    raids, and small-scale attacks, but the enemy grew more aggressive in May 1952 and
    action along the entire front increased.
    Enemy attempts to seize key outposts and
    terrain guarding the approaches to the
    Eighth Army’s main positions sparked frequent and intense fire fights during the
    summer and fall of 1952. The army successfully defended these positions, breaking up
    the enemy’s attacks and killing thousands
    of Chinese and North Koreans.
    July began with a series of small-scale attacks by both sides. In the Eighth Army’s
    western sector the U.S. I Corps, under its
    new commander, Maj. Gen. Paul W. Kendall, conducted a number of raids on Chinese fortifications opposite the corps’ front.
    On the first day of the month, infantrymen
    from the ROK 1st Division raided enemy
    positions overlooking the Imjin River, In
    the fight that followed the ROK troops
    killed 112 Chinese before returning to the
    division’s lines. Two days later, on 3 July,
    the marines, on the corps’ left wing, struck
    at a Chinese battalion. Supported by mortar and artillery fire, two companies from
    the 7th Marine Regiment swept into the
    enemy positions to inflict 200 casualties on
    the surprised Chinese before retiring. The
    corps handed out more punishment when a
    tank-infantry team from General Ruffner’s
    U.S. 45th Division attacked a hill mass
    northwest of Ch’orwon. The tankers and
    infantrymen returned to their lines after
    killing seventy-nine of the enemy on the
    hill.
    Light action marked the fighting on the
    remainder of the front. In General Wyman’s U.S. IX Corps, troops from Maj.
    Gen. Wayne C. Smith’s U.S. 7th Division
    raided an enemy-held hill ten miles south
    of P’yonggang on 3 July. The raiding infantrymen wiped out the forty-five Chinese defenders and destroyed enemy fortifications
    before returning to their lines. The ROK
    9th Division followed up this raid with two
    of their own against enemy positions, killing
    sixty Chinese and destroying bunkers,
    trenches, and gun emplacements. In the
    ROK II Corps area South Korean infantrymen struck enemy positions northeast of
    Kumhwa to kill sixty-five Chinese. In the
    ROK I Corps sector North Korean troops
    unsuccessfully attacked an observation post
    for naval gunfire on the enemy’s Nam
    River communications line. The enemy lost
    an estimated 600 men in this attempt.
    Outpost Battles
    1 July–31 December 1952
    270
    Torrential rains in the last week of July
    and the first week of August restricted activity along the front, but periods of clear
    weather brought renewed attacks by both
    sides. In the U.S. I Corps zone Maj. Gen.
    James C. Fry, the U.S. 2d Division commander, sent two reinforced companies
    against Hill 266 during the night of 31
    July–1 August. Determined to regain the
    height that had been lost in July, the infantrymen stormed up the slopes and drove the
    Chinese out. Quickly digging in and organizing their position, the 2d Division troops
    awaited the inevitable counterattack. It
    came the following night, but massed division artillery and small arms fire broke up
    the Chinese assault. Enemy attacks later in
    the month met with no success, and the hill
    remained in the hands of the 2d Division.
    Heavy rains again drenched Korea in
    the latter part of August to bring the fighting to a near halt. Then, as September began, the skies cleared and the enemy renewed his assaults on the Eighth Army’s
    outpost positions. These attacks were accompanied by an increasing amount of
    mortar and artillery fire support.
    For quite some time the enemy had
    gradually been increasing the volume of
    mortar and artillery fire used in support of
    his attacks. In September an all-time high
    of 45,000 rounds fell on the army’s front in
    one day. Despite the enormous effort
    exerted by the Fifth Air Force and the
    naval air arm to sever the enemy’s supply
    lines the Chinese and North Koreans kept
    their front-line troops supplied and even
    managed to accumulate a reserve stock of
    ammunition and supplies.
    Various sectors of the Eighth Army’s line
    came under enemy attack in September.
    After unsuccessfully assaulting an outpost
    that the marines had seized and established
    the previous month, the Chinese shifted
    their efforts to the U.S. I Corps’ right wing.
    On the night of 18 September, after their
    artillery had smothered Hill 266 in the U.S.
    2d Division sector with 1,000 shells, an estimated two enemy companies, reinforced
    with tanks, swarmed up the slopes and
    rapidly overran the crest. The Americans
    withdrew 400 yards and established new
    positions, then counterattacked. But the
    heavy and accurate Chinese artillery fire
    prevented the assaulting troops from making any headway. On the evening of 20
    September another American counterattack formed and began to envelop the hill.
    After slow progress through heavy enemy
    fire the attacking companies, reinforced by
    a platoon of tanks, made a co-ordinated
    assault that carried them to the crest. The
    Chinese fell back as the attacking infantrymen swept over the hilltop and secured the
    position.
    In the central sector of the Eighth Army
    line, the enemy struck at two separate
    points in the front of the ROK II Corps’
    Capital Division. On the division’s left flank
    the Chinese overran an outpost position to
    threaten the main line of resistance while
    another outpost on the division’s right fell
    to enemy assaults. Both were soon retaken
    by the South Korean infantrymen.
    In the eastern sector of the front North
    Koreans attacked main line of resistance
    positions on the right wing of the U.S. X
    Corps on the night of 21–22 September.
    While the U.S. 45th Division was in the
    process of relieving the ROK 8th Division,
    elements of two enemy battalions overran
    the western slope and crest of a hill serving
    as part of the ROK division’s main line.
    Driving one company back about 1,000
    yards, the attacking enemy then swung to
    the west to widen the penetration. But the
    defending South Koreans on the left of the
    penetration held firm and halted the North
    271
    Korean attack. The next morning, 22 September, an infantry company from the
    ROK 8th Division, supported by tanks
    from, the 45th Division’s 245th Tank Battalion, managed to regain part of the hill. At
    noon of the same day, after artillery fire
    and air strikes had covered the penetration,
    elements of the ROK 8th’s reserve regiment
    counterattacked and drove the enemy back.
    By nightfall the main line of resistance had
    been restored and all enemy troops driven
    out. During the next two days the North
    Koreans made several weak efforts to penetrate the division’s main line without success. Meanwhile the 45th Division continued its relief of the 8th, completing it on 26
    September.
    While the troops of the Eighth Army defended their outposts and main battle positions against local enemy assaults, the air
    war over Korea intensified during the summer of 1952. Aircraft from the Fifth Air
    Force and the Far East Bomber Command,
    Marine aircraft, and Navy carrier-based
    planes struck at supply centers, troop concentrations, power plants, factories, and
    rail and road networks. In addition to striking deep into enemy territory, air units rendered valuable assistance to front-line
    troops. Enemy bunkers, trenches, gun positions, and communication lines were
    bombed or seared with napalm. On 29
    August the Fifth Air Force carried out the
    largest air raid of the Korean conflict. Hundreds of Air Force, Marine, and Navy
    planes accompanied by aircraft from Australia and the United Kingdom raided
    P’yongyang, the North Korean capital. In
    this massive strike, supply installations, repair shops, troop concentrations, military
    headquarters, and a host of other targets
    were destroyed or badly damaged.
    An increasing number of enemy jet interceptors rose to challenge Fifth Air Force
    Sabrejets during the summer. But the superiority of American pilots was clearly
    demonstrated by the number of enemy aircraft destroyed in aerial combat. During
    the month of September alone, pilots from
    the Fifth Air Force shot down sixty-four
    MIG-15’s at a cost of seven Sabrejets.
    The Navy maintained its blockade of
    both coasts of North Korea. On the east
    coast, warships of the U.S. Seventh Fleet
    continued to bombard the enemy port of
    Wonsan. Ships from the fleet also continued
    to provide gunfire support to friendly forces
    near the east coast of the peninsula. On the
    Korean west coast the U.N. fleet helped
    protect islands off the North Korean coast
    and assisted guerrilla units to recapture an
    island that had been seized by an enemy
    force.
    The rising tide of enemy attacks that began in May culminated in a series of assaults in October that produced some of the
    heaviest fighting in more than a year. Battles raged on many sections of the front as
    Chinese and North Korean units, sometimes employing their familiar human-sea
    tactics, tried to penetrate the Eighth Army’s
    main line of resistance or to seize dominating terrain. The heaviest fighting centered
    around two key heights, Hills 281 and 395,
    northwest of Ch’orwon. Capture of these
    strategic positions, astride the U.S. I CorpsU.S. IX Corps boundary, would give the
    Chinese control of the lateral roads behind
    the corps’ lines and threaten the main supply route to Ch’orwon.
    To herald the opening of their attacks the
    Chinese unleashed the largest volume of
    mortar and artillery fire received by the
    Eighth Army since the fighting began. On
    one day, 7 October, more than 93,000
    rounds fell on U.N. positions along the
    front. The Eighth Army estimated that during these attacks the enemy’s daily expend-
    272
    iture of artillery and mortar ammunition
    doubled to more than 24,000 rounds.
    The Chinese began a co-ordinated attack
    against both hills on the evening of 6 October after a daylong artillery bombardment
    of the objectives. Two enemy companies
    struck Hill 281, the eastern anchor of the I
    Corps line. The U.S. 2d Division’s French
    Battalion, defending the height, repelled
    this assault, but the Chinese added two
    more companies to the attacking force, reformed, and attacked again. The gallant
    French would not yield, and as the battle
    progressed the Chinese continued to build
    up their attacking strength. By dawn, they
    had an entire regiment hammering away
    vainly at the French. Finally, with hundreds of their dead and wounded strewn
    about the besieged position, the Chinese
    broke off the attack and withdrew. They
    kept up pressure against the French-held
    hill for the next few days, but on 12 October
    abandoned further attempts to capture it.
    The main enemy attack in the meantime
    struck Hill 395, guarding the U.S. IX
    Corps left flank. The Chinese hurled an
    estimated two battalions against the height
    in co-ordination with the attack on Hill
  20. Elements of the ROK 9th Division,
    defending the hill, held their positions until
    the following afternoon, 7 October, when
    the enemy threw in additional battalions
    and forced the South Koreans to withdraw.
    A counterattack restored the lost ground,
    but the enemy renewed his assault in regimental strength the next day and again
    forced the ROK troops to withdraw. They
    established a new defense line south of the
    lost positions and then began to counterattack. Assisted by numerous air strikes and
    the massed corps artillery, the South Korean infantrymen managed after two days
    of heavy fighting to fight their way to the
    crest of the hill and drive the Chinese back.
    An enemy battalion then attempted to push
    the infantrymen back, but the defenders,
    backed up by artillery fire, stopped the
    Chinese short of their goal.
    To relieve the pressure against Hill 395 a
    battalion from the ROK 9th Division, supported by a company-sized tank-infantry
    team, seized high ground several hundred
    yards north of the hill. Securing this newly
    won terrain, the battalion continued to advance northward and by 15 October had
    secured two screening positions 1,000 yards
    north of Hill 395. With the South Koreans
    now in firm control of the disputed ground
    the enemy gave up further efforts to penetrate the IX Corps left flank. After the battle was all over, the 9th Division reported
    that the major part of a Chinese reserve
    division from the 38th Chinese Communist
    Army had been destroyed. Over 2,000 Chinese dead were counted on the slopes of
    Hills 281 and 395 in the ten-day battle.
    The Eighth Army countered enemy aggressiveness by making several attacks during the middle of the month. The primary
    aim of these attacks was to strengthen the
    defense of Kumhwa, the right leg of the
    Iron Triangle and the hub of an important
    road net. Two dominating hill masses, Hills
    500 and 598, about four miles north of the
    city were the objectives of the IX Corps’
    U.S. 7th and ROK 2d Divisions. The
    attack began on the morning of 14 October
    when two battalions from the 7th Division’s
    31st Regiment executed a double envelopment of Hill 598 from the south and southeast. Advancing under heavy enemy fire,
    the battalions succeeded in driving the enemy from the hill after six hours of intense
    fighting. The Chinese counterattacked that
    night and forced the Americans off the
    height.
    The next morning, 15 October, the infantrymen of the 31st again attacked. Mov-
    273
    ing silently and swiftly through the morning mists they went up the slopes of Hill
    598 and ejected the enemy from the crest.
    Two smaller heights that lay a short distance from the main objective also fell the
    attacking troops. The Chinese then retaliated by throwing two battalions against
    the hill in an effort to dislodge the Americans. The enemy attack failed. Three days
    later, on 18 October, the American infantrymen advanced another 1,000 yards
    deeper into enemy territory and seized key
    terrain to protect Hill 598 from the north.
    But counterattacking Chinese battalions
    forced the troops of the 31st to pull back the
    main hill mass. Further enemy attempts
    to regain Hill 598 failed until 30 October.
    At that time, three days after the ROK 2d
    Division had taken over the height from the
    U.S. 7th Division, an enemy regiment
    stormed up the slopes and drove out the
    South Korean defenders. Successive counterattacks by the 2d failed to regain the hill.
    While the 7th Division had been fighting
    for Hill 598, a battalion from the ROK 2d
    Division streamed up Hill 500 and seized
    the crest against light enemy opposition.
    The usual enemy counterattack followed,
    and for a week the position changed hands
    repeatedly. Near the end of October the
    ROK troops finally managed to seize and
    hold the height.
    Meanwhile more fighting broke out the
    ROK II Corps’ sector. Two Chinese
    companies attacked hilltop positions near
    the left flank of the ROK Capital Division
    on the night of 6 October. The South Koreans made a determined stand and prevented the enemy from making any penetration of the main battle line. About 500
    yards east of these positions the enemy also
    struck with two companies and seized an
    outpost guarding the division’s center. The
    following morning ROK troops counterattacked and managed to reach positions
    300 yards from the crest. The Chinese prevented any further advance, and as October
    ended the enemy still remained in possession
    of the hilltop.
    Fighting along the remainder of the
    Eighth Army front consisted of patrol
    clashes and light raids by the enemy. Harassing attacks occurred on the U.S. I Corps’
    front against the 1st Marine Division when
    the Chinese attacked several outposts without success.
    With the coming of winter weather in
    November, enemy aggressiveness began to
    decline. Although the Chinese kept pressure on the central front, the severe defeat
    inflicted on them by the IX Corps in October and the adverse weather evidently
    dampened their desire to conduct further
    large-scale attacks against the Eighth
    Army’s battle line. For the remainder of the
    year fighting diminished in intensity as both
    sides prepared to meet the rigors of the
    Korean winter.
    Although most of the front remained relatively quiet, in the U.S. I Corps sector the
    enemy tried to penetrate a part of the 1st
    British Commonwealth Division’s front line
    on 19 November. The British threw back
    the attack after killing over a hundred
    Chinese. Fighting again flared up in the
    corps area when the ROK 1st Division beat
    back Chinese attempts to overrun outposts
    on the Imjin River line in December. The
    enemy then tried to seize key terrain in
    front of the U.S. 2d Division. In a short but
    intense battle the Americans killed 111 of
    the enemy and captured four prisoners.
    The Chinese then withdrew their attacking
    force.
    Enemy attacks on the central front during the last two months of the year resulted
    in several brief but bitter fights. On the IX
    274
    Corps left wing an enemy battalion seized
    an outpost in front of the U.S. 3d Division’s
    lines on 6 November. Shortly after this success the Chinese made an attempt to break
    through the defenses of the U.S. 7th Division’s Ethiopian Battalion. After a brief fire
    fight the enemy withdrew leaving 131 of his
    dead around the Ethiopians’ positions.
    On the eastern front an enemy force
    struck several positions in the U.S. X Corps
    center. The U.S. 40th Division quickly
    broke up these assaults, killing 152 of the
    enemy and capturing seven. Farther east, in
    the ROK I Corps sector, two North Korean
    battalions made a minor penetration of the
    ROK 5th Division’s lines. Counterattacking South Korean infantrymen ejected the
    enemy and restored the positions.
    As ground fighting slowed to a near halt
    during December, General Van Fleet made
    several changes in his battle line. To
    strengthen the Kumhwa–Ch’orwon sector
    of the Iron Triangle, the army commander
    increased the number of front-line divisions
    in the IX Corps. The front of the ROK 9th
    Division, on the corps’ right flank, was
    narrowed and the left boundary of the
    ROK II Corps shifted several miles to the
    east. The ROK Capital Division then filled
    in the resulting gap. One other change occurred in the IX Corps when the ROK 2d
    Division relieved the U.S. 3d Division on
    the corps’ left flank. Lt. Gen. Reuben E.
    Jenkins, who had taken over command of
    the IX Corps from General Wyman in
    August, now had three ROK divisions and
    one U.S. division, the 25th, defending his
    front.
    In the western sector of the army’s battle
    line, the U.S. 7th Division relieved the U.S.
    2d Division on the U.S. I Corps’ right flank.
    On the eastern front a newly created South
    Korean division, the ROK 12th, entered
    combat for the first time, replacing the U.S.
    45th Division on the right flank of the U.S.
    X Corps.
    At the year’s end General Van Fleet had
    sixteen divisions manning the Eighth
    Army’s battle line. Included in this number
    were one U.S. Marine, one British Commonwealth, eleven South Korean, and
    three U.S. Army divisions. Contingents of
    troops from other United Nations countries
    reinforced the American divisions, and a
    Korean Marine regiment became an important adjunct to the 1st Marine Division.
    The army commander also had four divisions available as reserve forces—one South
    Korean and three American.
    By giving the South Koreans responsibility for defending nearly 75 percent of the
    Eighth Army’s front General Van Fleet indicated that he had confidence in the
    ability of the revitalized ROK Army to
    hold its own against large-scale enemy attacks. It was evident that the South Korean
    Army, trained and equipped by the U.S.
    Army, was now a fighting force capable of
    effective defense.
    For over a year now a stalemate had existed in the Korean conflict. Both sides had
    constructed defense lines so powerful that
    their reduction could be accomplished only
    at a prohibitive cost. This had limited the
    Eighth Army’s offensive operations during
    1952 to small-scale attacks to prevent the
    enemy from holding terrain features close
    to the army’s main line of resistance and
    raids to hamper the enemy’s build-up of
    defensive positions.
    During the year the Eighth Army also
    conducted a vigorous defense of its outpost
    positions. These outposts, located on high
    ground to screen the army’s main line of
    resistance, became the objective of frequent
    enemy attack, particularly in the latter half
    of the year. The Eighth Army threw back
    275
    the great majority of these assaults and inflitted thousands of casualties on the enemy.
    Positions that did fall, owing to the weight
    of enemy numbers, were quickly restored by
    counterattacking Eighth Army infantrymen. Occasionally an outpost position had
    to be abandoned when it became clear that
    the enemy intended to seize the position at
    any cost. In this case the outpost lost its usefulness as the price of holding it or retaking
    it outweighed its tactical value in delaying
    enemy attacks on the main line of resistance.
    276
    Map 7
    CHAPTER X
    As the year 1953 began, activity along
    the entire front subsided. Patrolling and
    small-scale harassing attacks characterized
    the fighting during the winter months of the
    new year. Then, as spring began, the enemy
    renewed his assaults upon the Eighth
    Army’s outpost line, attempting to seize
    terrain that overlooked the army’s main
    line of resistance. These attacks increased in
    frequency and intensity until, in July, they
    approached the scale of the enemy’s heavy
    attacks of May 1951.
    During January 1953 General Van Fleet
    continued to make changes in the Eighth
    Army’s line. In the right-wing corps, he replaced the veteran ROK 5th Division with
    the newly activated 15th. In the left-wing
    corps, the U.S. 2d Division relieved the 1st
    British Commonwealth Division, the first
    time the latter unit had been out of combat for nearly eighteen months. In the IX
    Corps, in the Eighth Army’s center, the
    U.S. 3d Division took over the sector held
    by the U.S. 25th Division, while in X Corps
    the U.S. 45th relieved the U.S. 40th Division. After these changes the army commander had twelve South Korean and
    eight U.N. divisions to defend the army
    front. The thousands of service and security
    troops that supported the combat divisions
    brought the army’s total strength to nearly
    768,000 men.
    To oppose the Eighth Army’s twenty divisions the enemy disposed a formidable
    array of strength along his front. Seven
    Chinese armies and two North Korean
    corps, totaling about 270,000 troops,
    manned the enemy defense line. Another
    eleven Chinese armies and North Korean
    corps with an estimated strength of 531,000
    remained in reserve. With service and security forces, the total enemy strength in
    Korea amounted to more than a million
    men.
    The enemy employed his forces along a
    battle line that roughly paralleled that of
    the Eighth Army. The Chinese occupied
    about three fourths of this line; their armies
    extended from the Korean west coast eastward to the Kum River. East of the river
    the North Koreans manned the remainder
    of the line to the Sea of Japan—a sector, incidentally, where there was little likelihood
    of a main U.N. thrust. Although a manpower shortage probably explains this division of responsibility, it is also possible that
    the Chinese questioned the fighting ability
    of their allies.
    Other than a few patrol clashes, little
    fighting occurred during January and February. Only in the sector of the ROK 12th
    Division did the enemy make any serious
    attempts to penetrate the army’s main line
    of resistance, and these failed. Meanwhile,
    The Last Battle
    1 January–27 July 1953
    278
    the Eighth Army carried out a number of
    raids on enemy positions. Supported by air
    strikes and accurate artillery fire, raiding
    parties from all five corps struck hard at
    Chinese and North Korean positions to kill
    or capture enemy soldiers and destroy emplacements and fortifications.
    During February the command of the
    Eighth Army changed hands. General Van
    Fleet, after nearly two years as the Eighth
    Army’s leader, turned over his command to
    Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor and returned
    to the United States for retirement.
    As March began the enemy increased his
    attacks on the army’s outpost line, evidently
    in retaliation for the U.N. raids of January
    and February. The U.S. I Corps bore the
    brunt of these attacks. On the first day of
    March an enemy battalion assaulted main
    line of resistance positions on Hill 355, held
    by elements of the U.S. 2d Division. Although part of the enemy force managed to
    reach the foxholes and trenches of the defenders the attack was beaten off. The
    Chinese hit the hill again on 17 March with
    a battalion. Attacking in two elements from
    the north and northeast, the Chinese
    breached the protective mine fields and
    wire and drove into the trenches on the
    crest. The center of the line gave way, but
    two platoons that had been previously
    placed in blocking positions moved up to
    contain the penetration. Meanwhile, on the
    crest and forward slope of the hill the fighting was heavy. At dawn an infantry company arrived to reinforce the troops on the
    hilltop and the Chinese began withdrawing. As they pulled back, U.N. artillery fire
    hit their routes of withdrawal and inflicted
    further casualties.
    The Chinese again struck at the U.S. I
    Corps during the final week of the month.
    On the evening of 23 March an enemy regiment assaulted Hills 266, 255, and 191,
    outposts of the U.S. 7th Division. Defended
    by the division’s Colombian Battalion, Hill
    266 was the target of the main enemy effort.
    A Chinese battalion supported by artillery
    and mortar fire drove into positions on the
    western slope of the hill at 2100. The
    Colombians on the hill received reinforcements amounting to a company, but this
    was not enough to withstand the enemy assault and the defenders fell back to positions on the southeastern slope of the height.
    The following morning, 24 March, a battalion from the 7th Division counterattacked and managed to gain the crest of the
    hill and engage the Chinese in trenches and
    bunkers. The struggle continued throughout the morning with both sides supported
    by heavy artillery fire. The Chinese stubbornly fought to retain their positions, and
    the Americans broke off their attack, pulling back to the southern slope. Early the
    next day another American counterattack
    failed, and the Chinese still held the crest of
    Hill 266.
    Concurrently with the attack on Hill 266
    two enemy battalions hit Hills 255 and 191.
    The battle on Hill 191 was short. As the
    Chinese companies advanced up the slopes
    the Americans called for and received reinforcements. After a brief fire fight with
    the defenders, the Chinese broke contact
    and withdrew. Over on Hill 255 the Chinese were more successful. Supported by
    tanks and by artillery and mortar fire the
    Chinese forced the defenders to withdraw
    700 yards. Shortly after midnight two companies from the 7th Division counterattacked up Hill 255 and drove the enemy
    off the crest.
    Although the Chinese had gained their
    chief objective, Hill 266, the price was high.
    The 7th Division reported that the battles
    on the three hills cost the enemy 750
    casualties.
    279
    While the battle seesawed about the outposts in the 7th Division sector, the enemy
    prepared for another attack farther to the
    west in the I Corps sector. Early in the evening of 26 March several outposts of the 1st
    Marine Regiment received diversionary attacks by small enemy forces. Then the enemy struck three nearby outposts in regimental strength. Overrunning two of the
    three positions quickly, the Chinese advanced toward the main line of resistance.
    But an American blocking force, placed between the Chinese line of advance and the
    main line of resistance, intercepted the enemy regiment. After a vain, all-night effort
    to get by this obstacle the Chinese withdrew. Later in the morning of 27 March a
    marine battalion counterattacked and recaptured one of the lost outposts. The rest
    of the day and all through the following
    night the marines pressed their attack forward. By morning of the next day, 28
    March, they took the remaining outpost,
    but shortly afterward a Chinese counterthrust drove the Americans back 400 yards.
    In the afternoon the marines again regained
    the outpost. Reinforcing and digging in,
    they awaited the next onslaught. It came
    that night when a Chinese battalion attacked. More marine reinforcements were
    poured in while corps and division artillery
    fire isolated the battlefield and prevented
    the Chinese from increasing the size of their
    attacking force. By the next morning the
    enemy had made no more headway and
    withdrew.
    Friendly and enemy patrols kept busy in
    the I Corps sector. The Chinese, apparently
    sensitive to the activities of the corps’ patrols
    and raiding parties, began to establish ambushes. One patrol of thirty-four men from
    the U.S. 7th Division fell into a trap set by
    the enemy on 9 March. Surrounded by
    some sixty Chinese the whole patrol became casualties: twenty men were killed,
    twelve wounded, and two missing. On another occasion a thirty-four-man patrol
    from the U.S. 2d Division ran head on into
    two Chinese companies. The patrol called
    for and received reinforcements, and the
    resulting engagement lasted until the next
    morning when the enemy broke contact
    and withdrew. The Americans suffered a
    total of sixty-three casualties in this fight,
    twelve of them killed, forty-three wounded,
    and five missing. Two platoons from the
    Colombian Battalion, raiding enemy positions on the morning of 10 March, engaged
    the Chinese in a short but intense fire fight.
    Forced to withdraw under heavy enemy artillery fire, the Colombians lost nineteen
    men killed, forty-four wounded, and eight
    missing.
    After the flare-up of fighting in late
    March, activity along the battle front again
    settled into routine patrolling and smallscale harassing attacks. The calm persisted
    throughout April, interrupted only by
    Eighth Army raids on the enemy’s outpost
    and main line of resistance positions. But as
    April ended, and the armistice negotiations
    at Panmunjom approached a decisive stage,
    there were signs that the enemy intended to
    increase the size and frequency of his attacks. Troop movements indicated that he
    was shifting his forces from the northern
    coastal areas and concentrating them in
    more forward areas. His artillery and armor
    were being positioned in depth and his
    troops realigned on the front and in the
    rear. An increasing number of contacts between Eighth Army and enemy patrols
    showed considerable tightening of the enemy counterreconnaissance screen.
    Then, in the final week of May, the Chinese conducted several attacks against the
    army’s left wing. In the sector held by the
    IX Corps, attacks estimated to be in regi-
    280
    mental strength struck the ROK 9th Division. After intense fighting the South
    Koreans stopped these assaults and forced
    the enemy to withdraw. In the ROK Capital Division sector, two Chinese battalions
    tried to make a penetration. Although supported by large volumes of mortar and artillery fire, the Chinese were unable to drive
    the South Koreans from their positions and
    had to withdraw under punishing corps
    and division artillery fire.
    The enemy’s heaviest blow struck the
    U.S. I Corps. On the evening of 28 May
    five outpost positions of the U.S. 25th Division came under attack by an enemy regiment. These outposts, about 1,000 yards
    forward of the division’s main line, guarded
    routes of approach to the division’s center.
    Nicknamed Carson, Elko, Vegas, Berlin,
    and East Berlin, they were defended by
    platoons from the division’s Turkish Brigade. Moving under extremely heavy artillery support, one Chinese battalion advanced on Carson and Elko. At the same
    time another enemy battalion, concealed
    by a smoke screen, attacked the center position, Vegas, while a third assaulted outposts
    Berlin and East Berlin on the right. Three
    hours after the attack began the enemy had
    reached the Turkish positions on Carson
    and Elko and were engaging the defenders
    in hand-to-hand combat. Unable to overcome the Turks the enemy withdrew, evidently to re-form, then attacked again. At
    outpost Elko, the action continued intermittently until midmorning of 29 May
    when the Chinese broke contact. A few
    minutes later they struck again at Elko. The
    fight continued about the outpost as the enemy pressed the attack. Finally, near midnight, the division ordered the outpost
    abandoned and the Turks withdrew to their
    main line of resistance.
    Meanwhile, a furious fight had developed around outpost Vegas. One half hour
    after the Chinese began the attack on
    Vegas they reinforced their attacking elements with another battalion. Pushing forward through the artillery and mortar fire
    of both sides, they broke into the defensive
    positions and engaged the Turks in close
    combat. A Turkish company, rushed to reinforce the outpost, found hand-to-hand
    fights going on around the position. Two
    hours later the enemy began to break off
    the attack, once again suffering numerous
    casualties as the 25th Division artillery
    raked the enemy routes of withdrawal.
    Just after daylight the Chinese attacked
    again with two battalions. This assault was
    also unsuccessful and the attackers withdrew. Two hours later the Turks counterattacked enemy elements on the north slope
    of the hill that contained outpost Vegas and
    drove them back. The Turks now had control of the entire outpost, but the Chinese
    seemed determined to seize Vegas at any
    cost. At midafternoon of the same day, 29
    May, another battalion struck the battered
    position. The fight raged around the outpost for the remainder of the afternoon.
    Then at 2300, the order to withdraw came
    from division and the defenders fell back to
    their main line of resistance.
    The enemy attack on outposts Berlin and
    East Berlin did not last long. After a bitter
    two-hour fire fight the enemy gave up the
    effort on these two positions and withdrew.
    The Chinese had succeeded in occupying
    outposts Carson, Elko, and Vegas, but they
    paid a heavy price. The 25th Division reported evaluated enemy casualties in the
    battle as 2,200 killed and 1,057 wounded.
    In contrast the Turks reported their losses as
    104 killed, 324 wounded, and 47 missing.
    By the first of June it appeared certain to
    intelligence officers of the Eighth Army that
    the Chinese planned to strike a major blow
    281
    soon. Their failure to follow up the May attacks against the U.S. I Corps indicated
    that those had been diversionary efforts to
    screen their real intentions. The continued
    movement and realignment of troops on the
    enemy front and rear and the large buildup of supplies near the battle zone further
    confirmed the army’s belief that a largescale Chinese attack impended. When the
    enemy blow would fall or where remained
    a matter of conjecture. As the first week of
    June passed the front remained relatively
    quiet. On the night of 10 June, the Chinese
    struck.
    The enemy directed his efforts against
    the ROK II Corps, whose line bulged out
    to form a salient in the vicinity of Kumsong.
    Striking down both sides of the Pukhan
    River with two divisions the Chinese succeeded in forcing the right wing and center
    of the corps back about 4,000 yards in six
    days of heavy fighting. Not since the spring
    offensive of April–May 1951 had fighting
    on such a scale occurred.
    The main enemy blow fell on the II
    Corps’ right wing and center. Shortly after
    dark on 10 June a Chinese division attacked
    the right regiment of the ROK 5th Division, whose lines lay east of the Pukhan
    River. By seizing Hill 973, the dominant
    height in the regiment’s sector, the enemy
    forced the South Koreans to fall back about
    1,000 yards. Counterattacks by the reserve
    regiment of the 5th and a regiment from
    corps reserve the following morning failed
    to restore the main line of resistance or halt
    the enemy advance. The Chinese kept up
    their unrelenting pressure, forcing the 5th
    to withdraw again, and by 15 June the
    South Koreans had been pushed back to the
    east bank of the river at a point where the
    stream cut sharply eastward. There the division formed a new main line of resistance.
    In the corps center the situation was just
    as critical. On the night of 12 June elements
    of another Chinese division struck the
    ROK 8th Division’s right, which rested on
    the Pukhan. As the Chinese pressed forward they made several penetrations during the next twenty-four hours. Counterattacks by the reserve regiment of the 8th
    failed to halt the advance, and the Chinese
    began exploiting their gains. Attacking in
    regimental strength early on the morning of
    14 June they soon enveloped the division’s
    right regiment. The hard-pressed South
    Koreans began falling back under the
    weight of the enemy attack.
    While the Chinese were attacking the II
    Corps’ right, a smaller enemy force struck
    the ROK 20th Division, on the left of the X
    Corps. Evidently this was a holding attack,
    for the Chinese did not press their assault.
    But the collapse of the ROK 5th Division,
    on the II Corps’ right, threatened the left of
    the X Corps. Lt. Gen. I. D. White, the X
    Corps commander, therefore narrowed the
    front of the 20th Division on 16 June and
    committed the ROK 7th Division, in corps
    reserve, on the left of the 20th to strengthen
    that flank. Other changes were being made
    to meet the situation in the ROK II Corps.
    The failure of the 8th Division’s right to
    hold coupled with the withdrawal of the
    5th east of the river opened a gap between
    the divisions. The ROK II Corps commander filled this gap by committing the
    ROK 3d Division, in corps reserve, between the 8th and 5th Divisions on 15 June.
    At the same time General Taylor, in order
    to facilitate control, temporarily shifted the
    boundary between the II and X Corps
    westward to the river and gave the ROK
    5th Division to the X Corps. To replace the
    ROK 3d, the army commander shifted the
    ROK 11th Division from the ROK I Corps
    over to the II Corps but kept it under army
    control.
    282
    The Chinese continued their attacks
    against the 8th Division, this time concentrating on the division’s right and center.
    Under the heavy blows of the Chinese
    assault the South Koreans reeled back. A
    counterattack by elements of the division
    on 16 June failed to push the enemy back,
    and the 8th drew up on a new main line of
    resistance 3,000 yards south of the original
    one.
    While the enemy concentrated his main
    effort against the ROK II Corps, he delivered several attacks on other parts of the
    front. Two outpost positions in front of the
    ROK 1st Division, in the U.S. I Corps, fell
    to the enemy near the end of June, after a
    prolonged attack by a Chinese regiment.
    Farther east, in the sector of the IX Corps,
    the Chinese employed forces in battalion
    and regimental strength in a thrust against
    the U.S. 3d and ROK 9th Divisions. They
    made minor penetrations in the lines of the
    3d, but counterattacks quickly restored the
    positions. In the ROK 9th Division’s sector
    the Chinese failed to make a dent. In the
    eastern sector of the Eighth Army’s front,
    North Korean attacks forced a minor readjustment of main line of resistance positions
    on the X Corps’ right wing. At the same
    time enemy forces were successful in seizing
    Hill 351, the northern anchor of the ROK
    I Corps line.
    By 18 June, a slackening of enemy pressure enabled the corps to stabilize its front.
    General Taylor directed the commanders of
    the ROK II and U.S. X Corps to readjust
    their forces so as to permit the relief of the
    ROK 5th and 7th Divisions and to reestablish the boundary that existed between
    the corps before 15 June. The enemy made
    no further attacks on the II Corps front
    until the middle of July, just before the termination of hostilities.
    Meanwhile a major airborne movement
    brought General Taylor additional troops
    from Japan. The 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team assembled at two air
    bases in Japan on 21 June. In a matter of
    hours the entire unit, completely equipped
    for combat with vehicles, artillery, ammunition, and rations, was flown to forward air
    bases near the front. A few days later a
    similar movement took place. The 34th
    Regimental Combat Team (less one rifle
    battalion) of the 24th Division, similarly
    equipped, boarded aircraft at an air base
    near Tokyo and was flown to Pusan and
    Taegu.
    Measured in terms of ground gained, the
    enemy attacks of mid-June on the ROK II
    Corps front were successful. The Chinese
    succeeded in pushing 15,000 yards of the
    corps front back about 4,000 yards. Moreover, their attacks caused three ROK divisions to be redeployed in reinforcing and
    counterattacking roles. Both sides incurred
    heavy casualties. The Chinese lost an estimated 6,628 men, and the II Corps reported 7,377 casualties as a direct result of
    the attacks.
    Enemy attacks against the II Corps subsided after 18 June and by the end of the
    month action along the entire army front
    returned to routine patrolling and light attacks. But the army commander felt that
    the Chinese would again launch an attack
    in strength. It was not long in coming, this
    time against the left flank of the II Corps
    and the right flank of the IX Corps. The
    Capital Division, defending the IX Corps
    right-flank sector, faced northwest.
    On the night of 13 July, the Chinese attacked the IX Corps’ right flank with three
    divisions and soon broke through the South
    Korean lines. A good deal of confusion ensued as the Capital Division’s right and
    center fell back. Some of the troops with-
    283
    drew into the zone of the II Corps as units
    became entangled and lateral communication was lost. On the division’s extreme left,
    things went somewhat better. There the
    units fell back in an orderly fashion under
    the crushing weight of Chinese attacks. But
    the collapse of the Capital Division made
    matters worse for the II Corps, whose situation was already serious.
    The Chinese had timed their assault on
    the Capital Division with another attack, in
    division strength, against the ROK 6th
    Division, protecting the II Corps’ left. After
    vainly trying to hold back the onslaught,
    the South Koreans began giving way. Their
    left flank was exposed by the withdrawal of
    the Capital Division, and the enemy was
    threatening to get into the rear of the 6th
    and cut it off. To prevent an enemy envelopment the division had no choice but to
    pull back. Retiring slowly, the 6th took
    a heavy toll of the attacking Chinese while
    farther to the east the ROK 8th and 3d
    Divisions moved back under heavy enemy
    pressure.
    To meet the situation in the Eighth
    Army’s center, General Taylor directed the
    commanders of the IX and II Corps to
    establish and hold a new main line of resistance along the south bank of the Kumsong River, a tributary of the Pukhan. In
    order to restore the line in the Capital Division zone, he permitted the U.S. 3d Division to be moved from its sector in the vicinity of Ch’orwon to the right wing of the IX
    Corps. The U.S. 2d Division extended its
    sector to the right to cover the position vacated by the 3d. The corps commander reinforced the 2d by attaching to it the 187th
    Airborne Regimental Combat Team, which
    dug in on the division’s right. At the same
    time the 34th Regimental Combat Team
    (less one battalion) came up from Pusan
    and assumed the role of a counterattacking
    force. It took up positions in rear of the 2d
    Division.
    In the II Corps the ROK 11th Division,
    in reserve, moved up to relieve the hardpressed 6th. The ROK 7th Division on the
    left wing of X Corps moved out of the line,
    and its place was taken by the U.S. 45th
    Division. The 7th then came over to the II
    Corps. Further changes occurred in the
    corps when the ROK 6th hastily reorganized and moved into the sectors held by the
    ROK 3d and 5th Divisions. The two latter
    divisions went into corps reserve. After this
    reorganization the II Corps counterattacked on 17 July with three divisions in an
    attempt to seize the high ground along the
    Kumsong and establish a new main line of
    resistance. By 20 July the II Corps attained
    its objective and held it. No attempt was
    made to restore the original line, inasmuch
    as the imminence of an armistice made it
    tactically unnecessary to expend lives for
    terrain not essential to the security of the
    Eighth Army’s front.
    Enemy losses in July were tremendous.
    The army estimated that the Chinese lost
    over 72,000 men, more than 25,000 of them
    killed. Out of the five Chinese armies that
    had been identified in the attacks upon the
    II and IX Corps, the enemy had lost the
    equivalent of seven divisions.
    While the fighting raged on the central
    front, the negotiators at Panmunjom rapidly
    approached an agreement on armistice
    terms. On 19 July agreement was reached
    on all points by both sides. The next day
    liaison and staff officers began the task of
    drawing up the boundaries of the demilitarized zone. All details of the armistice
    agreement and its implementation were
    completed in a week. At 1000 hours on 27
    July Lt. Gen. William K. Harrison, Jr., the
    senior United Nations delegate to the armistice negotiations, signed the armistice pa-
    284
    pers. At the same time the senior enemy
    delegate, General Nam Il, placed his signature on the documents. The signing took
    place at this time to permit the armistice to
    go into effect at 2200 hours of the same day,
    as required by the agreement. Later General Clark, for the United Nations, General
    Kim Il Sung, for North Korea, and General
    Peng Teh-Huai, for the Chinese forces on
    the peninsula, affixed their signatures.
    ment, “not peace in the world. We may
    not now relax our guard nor cease our
    quest.”
    Despite the failure to settle the issue in
    Korea, the United States and its partners in
    the fight against aggression had gained
    some insight into the manner of foe that opposed them. They learned that the communist adversary would use every means at
    his command to gain an advantage, both
    political and military; that he was willing,
    as in his use of human-sea tactics, to expend
    his soldiers’ lives prodigally in order to offset superior fire power. And, most important, they learned that the enemy, though
    powerful, was not invulnerable.
    The countries that fought under the flag
    of the United Nations to prevent the conquest of South Korea had demonstrated
    their ability to put aside differences and act
    in concert against a common enemy. That
    nations of highly diverse cultural, religious,
    and racial background were willing to place
    their forces under a single command, in this
    case the United States, was evidence that
    free men could rise above national pride in
    their never-ending fight to remain free.
    The conflict in Korea had lasted three
    years, one month, and two days. It had destroyed Korean homes, fields, and factories,
    wrecked the nation’s economy, and threatened the populace with famine and disease.
    It had consumed the lives of hundreds of
    thousands of civilians and soldiers from nations all over the face of the globe. Many
    had died who a short time before had
    known Korea only as an exotic place name
    on a map. The signing of the armistice
    brought an end to the shooting; it did not
    bring an end to the ideological war. “We
    have won an armistice on a single battleground,” said President Eisenhower as the
    Panmunjom negotiators reached agree-
    SECTION 8
    1 July–31 December 1952
    286
    287
    288
    TREATING A ROK SOLDIER wounded on Capital Hill, 8 September, right.
    BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF CAPITAL HILL, dominated by enemy terrain, background.
    289
    290
    QUAD .50’S adding fire power to a counterattack on Old Baldy, 21 September.
    291
    BATTLE WEARY from fighting on Old Baldy.
    292
    ROK MP’s TRYING TO GET WARM near White Horse, 8 October.
    293
    ASSEMBLY POINT for ROK 9th Division infantrymen.
    WHITE HORSE (Hill 395) one of two key heights
    northwest of Ch’orwon attacked by enemy units in
    October. Vehicle is a 90-mm. gun motor carriage
    M36.
    294
    WOUNDED ON WHITE HORSE, two ROK 9th Division soldiers head for medical treatment.
    295
    MEDICAL AID MEN DRESSING WOUNDS at an aid station near base of White Horse.
    296
    F-86 SABREJETS OVER NORTH KOREA hunting for MIG-15’s. During September pilots from the
    Fifth Air Force shot down sixty-four MIG’s at a cost of seven Sabrejets.
    297
    ADJUSTING ROCKETS on the wing of an AD Skyraider before take-off
    BANSHEES returning to the USS Kearsarge after a mission over Korea.
    298
    WINTER 1952
    T66 MULTIPLE ROCKET LAUNCHERS in action, 40th
    Division sector, 26 November. Except for brief encounters with the enemy, most of the front remained relatively quiet during November and
    December.
    299
    300
    301
    PRESIDENT-ELECT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER in Korea, December 1952. Above, the President-elect
    is with Maj. Gen. James C. Fry, Commanding General, 2d Division. Left page above, he has
    dinner with 3d Division troops, south of Ch’orwon. Below, he leaves 3d Division area by jeep;
    in back seat are Lt. Gen. Reuben E. Jenkins, Commanding General, IX Corps (left), and Maj.
    Gen. George W. Smythe, Commanding General, 3d Division.
    SECTION 9
    1 January–27 July 1953
    305
    306
    CLEANING SNOW OFF THE FLIGHT DECK of an aircraft carrier.
    TROOPS FROM THAILAND arriving at Inch’on, January 1953.
    307
    DESTINATION KOJE-DO. Troops from the 23d Infantry, scheduled for guard duty at the prisoner
    compound, board ship via cargo net.
    308
    INSIDE A BUNKER on Hill 200.
    PHILIPPINE SOLDIERS attached to the 45th Division put on snow suits before leaving on a night
    patrol mission, north of Yanggu.
    309
    LUNCH PICNIC-STYLE. The men are from Company K, 15th Infantry.
    NAVY MEN WORKING IN A SNOWSTORM at an emergency airfield.
    310
    PATROL OF THE 35TH INFANTRY studying a map of enemy terrain. Armored vests are clearly visible
    on the two men at left.
    311
    ENTERTAINMENT for 55th Transportation Truck Battalion, Eighth Army. The cast is from the
    motion picture, “The Girls of Pleasure Island.”
    312
    TROOPS BOARDING A HELICOPTER to be airlifted up to the line.
    ENEMY TERRAIN as seen through chicken wire in front of an outpost. The wire helped to keep
    grenades from coming into the bunkers; often the wire was used as a base for supporting
    camouf lage material.
    313
    GENERAL MARK W. CLARK, Commander in Chief, U.N. Command (right), at the Greek
    Battalion headquarters. With him are (from left) Lt. Gen. Reuben E. Jenkins, Commanding
    General, IX Corps; Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Commanding General, Eighth Army; and
    Lt. Col. George Koumanacos, Commanding Officer of the Greek Battalion.
    314
    WOUNDED 7TH DIVISION INFANTRYMAN is rushed away from the fight on Pork Chop Hill.
    315
    CARTING AWAY TWO CHINESE PRISONERS captured on Pork Chop Hill, 17 April 1953.
    316
    U.N. AND NORTH KOREAN OFFICERS acknowledging receipt of returnees.
    EMACIATED AND WOUNDED AMERICAN receiving new clothing at Freedom Village, Panmunjom.
    317
    LIBERATED AMERICANS are escorted down the ramp of a C-124 upon arrival in Japan for
    medical treatment before continuing the trip back to the United States.
    OPERATION LITTLE SWITCH, April 1953. On 11 April agreement was reached for the exchange of
    605 U.N. prisoners for 6,030 enemy prisoners.
    318
    SIGNING THE ARMISTICE AGREEMENT at 1000 hours, 27 July 1953, Panmunjom. Lt. Gen. William K.
    319
    Harrison, Jr., signs for the United Nations (left), and General Nam Il for the Communists (right).
    320
    7TH DIVISION POSITION just before it was abandoned, 31 July.
    321
    1ST MARINE DIVISION MEN after receiving word of the armistice.
    40TH DIVISION TROOPS all packed and ready to leave Heartbreak Ridge.
    322
    FIRST SHIPMENT OF REPATRIATED MEN from Korea docking at San Francisco, 23 August.
    323
    MAJ. GEN. WILLIAM F. DEAN boarding a plane at Tokyo for home, 21 September.
    325
    List of Pictorial Sources
    Page
    31
    32–33
    34
    35
    36–37 (top)
    36 (bottom)
    37 (bottom)
    38 (top)
    38 (bottom)
    39 (top)
    39 (bottom)
    40 (top)
    41 (top)
    40–41 (bottom)
    42
    43
    44 (top)
    44 (bottom)
    45 (top)
    45 (bottom)
    46 (top left)
    46 (top right)
    46 (bottom)
    47
    48
    49
    53
    54 (top)
    Source
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    Number
    79347 AC
    355931
    355593
    355566
    355553
    425403
    425473
    355563
    355565
    355547
    356269
    355576
    355574
    356475
    356295
    356682
    356636
    356696
    356347
    356713
    355939
    355940
    356671
    356736
    375189
    (cartoon)
    FEC–51–4601
    356902
    Page
    54 (bottom)
    55 (top)
    55 (bottom)
    56 (top)
    56 (bottom)
    56–57 (center)
    57 (top)
    57 (bottom)
    58
    59
    60 (top)
    60 (bottom)
    61 (top)
    61 (bottom)
    62-63
    64 (top)
    64 (bottom)
    65
    66–67
    68 (top)
    68 (bottom)
    69
    70 (left)
    70 (right)
    71
    72
    73 (top)
    73 (bottom)
    Source
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Number
    356897
    357169
    357402
    362393
    362139
    78972 AC
    356733
    356880
    361469
    (cartoon)
    357386
    357227
    357742
    357320
    358042
    358094
    358093
    (cartoon)
    unknown
    358336
    358494
    358774
    359414
    358263
    358159
    358508
    358624
    358622
    The following list gives the origin of all photographs and cartoons
    which appear in this book. The photographs were selected from those
    in the files of the Army Signal Corps (SC), the Air Force (USAF), the
    Navy (USN), and the Marine Corps (USMC). The cartoons were
    published originally in the Pacific Edition of the Army newspaper,
    Stars and Stripes. Further information concerning photographs may be
    secured from the agency of origin, Washington 25, D. C. Inquiries
    should include the number of the photograph.
    326
    Page Source Number Page Source Number
    74–75 (top)
    74–75 (bottom
    76–77
    77
    80–81 (top)
    80–81 (bottom)
    82
    83 (top)
    83 (bottom)
    84–85
    85
    86
    87 (top)
    87 (bottom)
    88 (top)
    88 (bottom)
    89
    90
    90–91
    92
    93
    94
    95
    96
    97
    98–99
    121
    122 (top)
    122 (middle)
    122 (bottom)
    123 (top)
    123 (middle)
    123 (bottom)
    124 (top left)
    124 (top right)
    124 (bottom)
    125 (top left)
    125 (top right)
    125 (bottom)
    126
    127 (top)
    127 (bottom)
    128 (left)
    128 (right)
    129
    132
    133 (top)
    133 (bottom)
    USN
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    USAF
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    USMC
    USMC
    USMC
    USMC
    USAF
    USAF
    USN
    USMC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USAF
    USAF
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    USMC
    426777
    426781
    359744
    359404
    359910
    359805
    360254
    360255
    362325
    361405
    79951 AC
    362092
    362126
    362114
    79676 AC
    79638 AC
    79628 AC
    361980
    362117
    A–8613
    A–7091
    A–8941
    A–8759
    79649 AC
    80332 AC
    708178
    A–7797
    365854
    365440
    365791
    365849
    365755
    365760
    365542
    365570
    365544
    365547
    FEC–51–23765
    365537
    428635
    428637
    428678
    79842 AC
    A–79842–AC
    80333 AC
    368493
    368504
    A–156986
    134 (top)
    134 (bottom)
    135
    136 (top)
    136 (bottom)
    137 (top)
    137 (bottom)
    138 (top)
    138 (bottom)
    139 (top)
    139 (bottom)
    140 (top)
    140 (bottom)
    141
    142 (top)
    142 (bottom)
    143 (top)
    143 (bottom)
    144
    145 (top)
    145 (bottom)
    146
    147
    148 (top)
    148 (bottom)
    149
    150 (top)
    150 (bottom)
    151
    152 (top)
    152 (bottom)
    153 (top)
    153 (bottom)
    157
    158
    158–59
    160
    161 (top)
    161 (bottom)
    162
    163 (top)
    163 (bottom)
    164 (top)
    164 (bottom)
    165
    166
    167 (top)
    167 (bottom)
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USN
    USMC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    USAF
    USAF
    USAF
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    367550
    368661
    368660
    368676
    368540
    368543
    369065
    368815
    369479
    368813
    368690
    369492
    369216
    368735
    429640
    368949
    369402
    370299
    429680
    429857
    429641
    430064
    430052
    429644
    429685
    429504
    A–8615–A
    369995
    369801
    (cartoon)
    80508 AC
    79848 AC
    79852 AC
    428390
    373296
    372740
    373647
    372280
    374102
    374889
    80703 AC
    375088
    FEC–51–26651
    376086
    376744
    376719
    FEC–51–27649
    376599
    327
    Page Source Number Page Source Number
    168
    169
    170 (top)
    170 (bottom)
    171
    172
    173
    174 (top)
    174 (bottom)
    175 (top)
    175 (bottom)
    176 (top)
    176 (bottom)
    177 (top)
    177 (bottom)
    178
    179 (top)
    179 (bottom)
    180–81
    182 (top left)
    182 (top right)
    182 (bottom)
    183
    184 (top)
    184–85 (bottom)
    185 (top)
    186
    187 (top)
    187 (bottom)
    188
    189
    190 (top)
    190 (bottom)
    191
    192 (top)
    192 (bottom)
    193
    194
    195 (top)
    195 (bottom)
    196
    197 (left)
    197 (right)
    198
    199 (top)
    199 (bottom)
    200–201
    SC
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    USAF
    USN
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USMC
    SC
    USMC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    375862
    79336 AC
    378047
    376996
    376379
    80647 AC
    378951
    378054
    378191
    378612
    378297
    378289
    FEC–51–30742
    (cartoon)
    378303
    80805 AC
    430680
    431295
    379463
    379465
    382525
    379470
    379512
    380915
    381464
    (cartoon)
    381110
    381108
    381111
    381467
    382532
    380802
    381292
    380947
    A-9765
    380918
    A–156727
    382462
    382556
    382887
    381452
    381453
    378205
    383938
    383177
    382914
    435681
    221
    222
    223 (top)
    223 (bottom)
    224–25
    226 (top)
    226 (bottom)
    227 (top)
    227 (bottom)
    228
    229 (top)
    229 (bottom)
    230 (top)
    230 (bottom)
    231
    232–33
    234
    235 (top)
    235 (bottom)
    236 (top)
    236 (bottom)
    237 (top left)
    237 (top right)
    237 (bottom)
    238 (top)
    238 (bottom)
    239 (top)
    239 (bottom)
    240
    241
    242 (left)
    242 (right)
    243
    244 (top)
    244 (bottom)
    245
    246
    247
    248
    249
    250
    251 (top)
    251 (bottom)
    252
    253 (top)
    253 (bottom)
    254 (top)
    254 (bottom)
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    USMC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    385806
    385608
    386280
    386281
    385200
    385330
    385420
    385430
    385331
    385280
    (cartoon)
    385790
    385626
    (cartoon)
    385627
    385807
    386490
    386482
    385444
    386546
    386547
    386505
    386508
    389599
    386823
    386824
    386877
    386878
    FEC–52–37820
    387033
    (cartoon)
    388645
    A–157778
    388736
    387445
    388474
    387049
    (cartoon)
    387456
    388477
    388566
    388754
    388755
    392561
    392995
    390105
    421650
    405822
    328
    Page Source Number Page Source Number
    255 (top)
    255 (bottom)
    256
    257 (top)
    257 (bottom)
    258–59
    260 (top)
    260 (bottom)
    261 (top)
    261 (bottom)
    262 (top)
    262 (bottom)
    263
    264 (top)
    264 (bottom)
    265
    266
    286–87
    288
    289
    290 (top)
    290 (bottom)
    291
    292–93
    292 (bottom)
    293 (bottom)
    294
    295
    296
    297 (top)
    297 (bottom)
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    USN
    USAF
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USAF
    USN
    USN
    421635
    405834
    390177
    390612
    390129
    392504
    399346
    395043
    397517
    398702
    83054 AC
    444157
    81504 AC
    (cartoon)
    406096
    406069
    443864
    423081
    407539
    426124
    (cartoon)
    408532
    404701
    418366
    418372
    418362
    418375
    418380
    82042 AC
    448324
    480057
    298
    299 (top)
    299 (bottom)
    300 (top)
    300 (bottom)
    301
    305
    306 (top)
    306 (bottom)
    307
    308 (top)
    308 (bottom)
    309
    310 (top)
    310 (bottom)
    311
    312 (top)
    312 (bottom)
    313
    314
    315 (top)
    315 (bottom)
    316 (top)
    316 (bottom)
    317
    318–19
    320
    321 (top)
    321 (bottom)
    322
    323
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    USN
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    SC
    Stars and Stripes
    SC
    USN
    USN
    USAF
    USN
    SC
    SC
    USN
    SC
    SC
    449917
    411730
    411732
    416354
    416389
    412361
    416204
    478280
    426136
    416243
    424253
    422625
    415948
    480136
    419512
    FEC–53–2238
    422077
    424400
    428313
    422963
    (cartoon)
    422968
    633215
    481024
    82929 AC
    625914
    431799
    432931
    626455
    425766
    435044

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