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Page 2: Korean War

Topic: Slide #

Background 3 - 6

6 stages of the war 7 - 14

Ceasefire Agreement 15 - 16

Heroes 17 - 23

Casualties 24

Korean Memorial 25 - 26

Page 3: Korean War

Background…• Korea had been a unified

country since the 7th century.

• During the 19th century, Imperial Japan began an occupation of the Korean Peninsula which lasted until the end of WW II.

• At the close of World War II, forces of both the Soviet Union and the United States occupied the Korean peninsula.

Page 5: Korean War

Post-War Plans…• Initially, it was the intention

of both sides to establish a stable and unified Korea in order to withdraw their military forces from the area.

• However, neither the Soviet Union or the U.S. wanted the peninsula to fall into the other's hand.

• The division of Korea that ensued set the stage for a civil war.

Page 6: Korean War

Prelude to War• North Korean General

Secretary Kim Il-Sung was intent on reuniting the peninsula under communism. – An offensive against the

South was planned

• On January 30, 1950, Stalin, via telegram, informed Kim Il Sung that he was willing to help Kim in his plan to unify Korea.

Page 7: Korean War

Stage 1: North Korea attacks

• 1st Phase of Conflict– June 25, 1950

• North Korea launches a surprise attack against South Korea triggering the Korean War.

• By the night of June 28, Seoul (capital of South Korea) had fallen and the South Korean forces were in disarray.

Page 8: Korean War

United Nations Involvement

• The United Nations Security Council called for an immediate end to hostilities.

• When its further demand that North Korea withdraw forces from the southern half of the Korean peninsula fell on deaf ears, the UN Security Council recommended that members of the United Nations join forces to repel the attack.

• Twenty-one nations agreed to contribute arms, money, medical supplies, and/or troops to rid South Korea of the Communist aggressor.

Page 9: Korean War

United Nations Force• Gen. Douglas MacArthur

was put in charge of the U.N. Command, which included combat and medical units from 22 nations.

• The United States provided 50% of the ground forces (South Korea provided most of the remainder), 86% of the naval power, and 93% of the air power.

Page 10: Korean War

Stage 2: Americans pushed to the Pusan Perimeter

• Unable to slow the enemy advance, the Americans and South Koreans fought desperate delaying operations, buying time with blood as more American units were rushed to Korea.

• By the end of July 1950, the North Koreans had pushed the U.N. forces to the southeast corner of the peninsula, where they dug in around the port of Pusan.

Page 11: Korean War

Stage 3: Inchon • MacArthur completely

changed the course of the war overnight by ordering an amphibious invasion at the port of Inchon, near Seoul.

• The Americans quickly gained control of Inchon, recaptured Seoul within days, and cut the North Korean supply lines.

• American and ROK forces broke out of the Pusan Perimeter and chased the retreating enemy north.

Page 12: Korean War

Stage 4: Approaching the Yalu • Despite warnings from the

Chinese that "American intrusion into North Korea would encounter Chinese resistance," MacArthur's forces continued to push north.

• On October 25, 1950, however, things turned ominous. The Chinese army, which had been massing north of the Yalu River after secretly slipping into North Korea, struck with considerable force.

Page 13: Korean War

Stage 5: An entirely new war • Roughly 180,000 Chinese

troops shattered the right flank of the US Eighth Army in the west, while 120,000 others threatened to destroy the X Corps near the Chosin Reservoir.

• On November 28, a

shaken MacArthur informed the Joint Chiefs, "We face an entirely new war."

Page 14: Korean War

Stage 6: Stalemate • Beginning January 15, Ridgway

led the U.N. in a slow advance northward, in what his troops began to call the "meatgrinder."

• Inflicting heavy casualties on the Chinese and North Koreans, the U.N. re-recaptured Seoul.

• In the meantime, General MacArthur had been steadily pushing Washington to remove the restrictions on his forces.

• Not only did Truman decline for fear of widening the war, but he fired MacArthur, who had been publicly challenging him for months, for insubordination on April 11.

Page 15: Korean War

Ceasefire Agreement

• The Korean War end, when an armistice was signed on July 27, 1953.

• The armistice was only ever intended as a temporary measure and provided for: – A suspension of open hostilities – A fixed demarcation line with a four kilometer (2.4 mile)

buffer zone - the so-called demilitarization zone• SEE next slide

– A mechanism for the transfer of prisoners of war.

Page 16: Korean War
Page 17: Korean War

Heroic Americans in Korea

• The Medal of Honor is the highest award for valor in action against an enemy force which can be bestowed upon an individual serving in the Armed Services of the United States.

• There were a total of 131 Medal of Honor recipients from the Korean War.

• Here are a few of their stories…

Page 18: Korean War

Col. William E. Barber• Earned the Medal of

Honor during the bitter Chosin Reservoir campaign.

• Fighting in sub-zero temperatures against overwhelming odds, he was wounded on the first night of the action, but refused evacuation and remained in action in command of his company.

Page 19: Korean War

Private Herbert K. Pililaau • Pililaau, earned the Medal of Honor

on "Heartbreak Ridge" near Pia-ri, Korea, on Sept. 17, 1951.

• The company's ammunition nearly exhausted, Pililaau stayed behind to cover the withdrawal.

• He fired his automatic weapon into the ranks of the assailants, threw all his grenades and, with ammunition exhausted, closed in hand-to-hand combat with his trench knife and fists until falling mortally wounded.

• PFC Pililaau is credited with killing 40 enemy soldiers.

Page 20: Korean War

Cpl. Hiroshi H. Miyamura

• Awarded the Medal of Honor for action that took place on 24 April 1951, at which time he was wounded and taken prisoner by the Communist Chinese Forces, being released some 27 months later.

Page 21: Korean War

story continued…• As the enemy force overran the Americans' position, Corporal

Miyamura, a machine-gun squad leader, leaped from his shelter and, in close hand-to-hand combat, killed 10 of the enemy with his bayonet.

• After the first attack, while Miyamura administered first aid to the wounded and ordered the evacuation of his men, the enemy dealt another savage blow.

• Miyamura delivered devastating fire with his machine gun until he ran out of ammunition.

• He then bayoneted his way to a second gun emplacement and covered the withdrawal of his unit with machine gun fire until his ammunition was depleted.

• Miyamura killed more than 50 of the enemy before he was severely wounded and later captured.

Page 22: Korean War

Battle of Chosin Reservoir

• The U.S. Marines consider the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir to be one of the proudest parts of their own history.

• The Marines mauled the Chinese divisions they faced so badly that the Chinese had to be withdrawn from the front; the Marines then marched out in an orderly fashion and intact .

• The “Frozen Chosin” or the “Chosin Few”

Page 23: Korean War
Page 24: Korean War

Korean War Casualties

0

50000

100000

150000

200000

250000

300000

350000

400000

USA NorthKorea

SouthKorea

China

Wounded

Killed

Page 25: Korean War

Korean War Memorial• The Korean War Veterans Memorial

was authorized by the U.S. Congress on October 28, 1986.

• President George H. W. Bush conducted the groundbreaking for the Memorial on June 14, 1992, Flag Day.

• It was dedicated on July 27, 1995, the 42nd anniversary of the armistice that ended the war, by President Bill Clinton and Kim Young Sam, President of the Republic of Korea, to the men and women who served during the conflict.

Page 26: Korean War