Wednesday, November 20, 2019

The Korean War Was More Brutal Than We Remember

Gregory Peck, Pork Chop Hill
I was seven when the movie Pork Chop Hill starring Gregory Peck was released. I probably saw it on Saturday Night at the Movies a year or two later. At the time, it seemed like a pretty good war movie. It was intense, had characters you could root for, and had heroes. I was too you, though to catch the real message of the film, that men are being asked to put their lives on the line for a meaningless objective.

U.S. howitzer position near the Kum River
There's a sense in which the Korean War is something of a forgotten war. The objectives in World War II seemed clear. The Axis powers had to be stopped. The Korean war was a different kind of war, the beginning of a series of conflicts that had fuzzier rationales.

At the end of World War II my father enlisted in the army and was sent first to the Philippines and then Korea. This was before the Korean conflict escalated to what it became several years later.

Combat in the streets of Seoul.
As I've been reading Don't Know Much About History the past ten days or so, I just finished Ken Davis's section on the Korean War. Last year I learned from Paul Thomas Chamberlin's The Cold War's Killing Fields that Korea was not some innocent escapade. Civilians suffered terribly in that conflict. It's hard to believe that we almost used atomic bombs in that war. In an interview published posthumously General Douglas MacArthur recommended dropping between 30 and 50 atomic bombs on targets across Manchuria. One shudders to consider the implications of this.

While pulling together some research for this blog post I came across another blog post that tied to my thoughts here. The title of this November 15, 2019 story by Darien Cavanaugh is The Korean War Was So Brutal That America's Most Hardened Soldiers Were Shaken.

Cavanaugh wrote, "On a per-capita basis, the Korean War was one of the deadliest wars in modern history, especially for the civilian population of North Korea. The scale of the devastation shocked and disgusted the American military personnel who witnessed it, including some who had fought in the most horrific battles of World War II."

It was Chamberlin's book that brought my attention to what Cavanaugh went on to say.

B-29 Superfortress
"Several factors contributed to the high casualty ratios. The Korean Peninsula is densely populated. Rapidly shifting front lines often left civilians trapped in combat zones. Both sides committed numerous massacres and carried out mass executions of political prisoners. Modern aircraft carried out a vast bombing campaign, dropping massive loads of napalm along with standard bombs."

The U.S. dropped 20% more bombs on North Korea than were dropped in the Pacific during the entire World War II. In addition we dropped over 32,000 tons of napalm, which has to be one of the most inhuman weapons ever conceived by humans.

By the war's end North Korea lost ten percent of its population, chiefly due to this scorched earth bombing campaign.

But the worst of this conflict was what Paul Thomas Chamberlin draws attention to in his book, which is a devastating indictment of our post WWII behavior in the various theaters beginning with Korea. This is what we never heard about before, that we openly massacred civilians. Writes Cavanaugh:

It wasn’t until 1999 that the United States acknowledged—after a lengthy investigation by the Associated Press—that a 1950 letter from U.S. Ambassador John J. Muccio authorized commanders in the field to adopt a policy of openly massacring civilians.

USS Missouri firing 16-inch guns.
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Related Links
Interview with Paul Thomas Chamberlin, author of The Cold War's Killing Fields
Photo of Gregory Peck, source: imdb.com
All other photos on page: GoodFreePhotos.com
If you're a blogger looking for Free Historical Photos, here is a website you may wish to consider bookmarking:
https://www.goodfreephotos.com/historical-battles/korean-war/column-of-the-us-1st-marine-division-move-through-chinese-lines-battle-of-chosin-reservoir.jpg.php

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