Korean War - U.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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During the summer of 1949, South Korea had expanded its army to about 90,000 troops, a strength the North matched in early 1950.
The North had about 150 SovietT-34 tanks and a small but effective air force of 70 fighters and 62 light bombers—weapons either left behind when Soviet troops evacuated Korea or bought from theUSSR and China in 1949 and 1950.
By June 1950 American data showed the two armies at about equal strength, with roughly equal numbers amassed along the 38thparallel.
However, this data did not account for the superior battle experience of the North Korean army, especially among the troops who had returned from China.
The fighting began around 3 or 4 AM on June 25 at the western end of the parallel.
Initial intelligence reports were indeterminate as to who started the fighting, but by 5:30 AM the formidable 6th Division of the (North) Korean People’s Army (KPA) had joined the fighting in the west.
At roughly the same time, KPA forces in the center of the peninsula dealt a heavy blow to the ROK Army (ROKA) south of Cheorwon.
The ROKA fell back and two KPA divisions and an armored brigade crashed through the38th parallel, beginning a daunting march toward Seoul, which lay just 50 km (30 mi) to the south.
Just 20 km (12 mi) north of Seoul stood the town of Uijeongbu, a critical line of defense for the South maintained by an ROKA division.
By the morning of June 26, thedivision at Uijeongbu had not committed its forces to battle, probably because it was waiting to be reinforced by another division from the interior of South Korea.However, when the reinforcing division finally arrived on June 26, troops panicked, mutinied, and fled.
The reasons for the mutiny were many, including the relative lackof ROKA firepower, poor training, and ultimately the unpopularity of the Rhee government—which had nearly been voted out of office in relatively free elections held amonth earlier.
The collapse at Uijeongbu left a gaping hole in the South Korean defensive line, and North Korean troops poured through.
The ROK government fledSeoul, which was taken on June 28 by a force of about 37,000 North Korean troops.
VI U.S.
TROOPS TO KOREA
The quick and virtually complete collapse of resistance in the South energized the United States to enter the war in force.
Secretary of State Acheson dominated thedecision making and soon committed American air and ground forces to the fight.
Acheson successfully argued that the United States should increase military aid to theROK and provide air cover for the evacuation of Americans from Korea.
He also persuaded the president to place the Seventh Fleet of the U.S.
Navy in the TaiwanStrait.
This was needed, he argued, to prevent the Communist Chinese government on the mainland from invading the island of Taiwan, where the Nationalist Chinesegovernment had retreated after the mainland fell to the Communists in 1949.
The following day Acheson developed the fundamental strategy for committing Americanair and naval power to the Korean War, a strategy approved by Truman that evening but not yet approved by the United Nations, the Department of Defense, or theU.S.
Congress.
UN support for the defense of South Korea enabled Truman and Acheson to gain public support for U.S.
intervention.
Only two days after the invasion, on June 27, atthe urging of the United States, the UN Security Council voted to repel the North Korean invasion.
The USSR, which could have vetoed the vote, instead boycotted it.The USSR claimed its boycott was a response to the UN’s refusal to admit Communist China; however, historians have been unconvinced by this argument.
On June 25Stalin explicitly told the USSR’s UN representative not to return to the Security Council, but Stalin's reasons for this order are not known.
Some historians speculate thatStalin either wanted to draw U.S.
forces into a war that would drain the country of troops and money, or that he hoped to reveal the UN as an American tool.
American ground troops were finally committed in the early morning of June 30, over the reluctance of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (the United States’ top military officers).The Joint Chiefs were concerned about the limits of American power.
In June 1950 the total armed strength of the U.S.
Army was 593,167, with an additional 75,370Marines.
North Korea alone was capable of mobilizing perhaps 200,000 combat soldiers, in addition to the immense reserve of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA).Nonetheless, Truman and others were motivated by the news that the ROKA had mostly ceased to fight.
Truman did not seek a declaration of war from the U.S.Congress, relying instead on the United Nations’ support.
In July, World War II hero General Douglas MacArthur was placed in command of U.S.
troops in Korea.
At first MacArthur wanted only a regimental combat team.
Withina week, however, he cabled Washington that the KPA was “operating under excellent top level guidance and had demonstrated superior command of strategic andtactical principles.” He consequently asked for a minimum of 30,000 American combat soldiers in the form of four infantry divisions, three tank battalions, and assortedartillery.
VII THE BUSAN PERIMETER
In the summer of 1950 the Korean People’s Army pushed southward with dramatic success, inflicting one humiliating defeat after another on the American forces.
Anarmy that had defeated Germany and Japan in World War II found itself overwhelmed by what many thought was a hastily assembled, ill-equipped peasant army saidto be doing the bidding of a foreign imperial power.
By the end of July 1950, the combined U.S.
and ROK forces numbered 92,000 at the front (47,000 wereAmericans), compared with 70,000 KPA soldiers at the front.
Nonetheless, the KPA advance continued until the North Korean forces occupied roughly 90 percent ofSouth Korea.
Kim Il Sung later said that his plan had been to win the war in a single month, and by the end of July he nearly had done so.
In the first week of August the U.S.
1st Marine Brigade arrived and finally stabilized the U.S.
and ROK forces, which by that time guarded only a small area on thesoutheasternmost part of the peninsula.
The right-angled front, known as the Busan Perimeter, stretched 80 km (50 mi) from Pohang on Yŏgil Gulf to Daegu in theinterior before bending south 110 km (70 mi) to the coastal Jinju-Masan region.
The port city of Busan lay behind the front on the peninsula’s southeastern tip.
The city of Daegu became a symbol of the American determination to halt the KPA's advance, and many attacks were repelled there.
However, it was probably due to atactical error at Pohang, on the northeastern perimeter, that the KPA failed to occupy Busan and unify the peninsula.
The official American historian of the war, RoyAppleman, wrote that the 'major tactical mistake' of the North Koreans was not to press their advantage on the eastern coastal road between Pohang and Busan.
TheKPA division near Pohang was concerned about covering its flanks and so held its position.
Had it instead moved quickly on Pohang and then combined with other KPAdivisions, Appleman concluded that Busan in all likelihood would have fallen.
In any event, the perimeter held for most of August.
At the end of August KPA forces launched their last major offensive at the perimeter, severely straining the American-Korean lines for the next two weeks.
On August28 three of the advancing KPA battalions succeeded in breaching the critical parts of the perimeter.
The cities of Pohang and Jinju were both lost, with KPA forcesadvancing along both coasts to Busan.
Another assault was being launched on the city of Daegu, with enough success that U.S.
commanders evacuated the EighthArmy headquarters from Daegu to Busan.
Prominent South Koreans began leaving Busan for the nearby Tsushima Islands of Japan.
Only in mid-September did itbecome clear that the U.S.
and ROK armies would stop the advance.
The decisive factor was numbers.
MacArthur succeeded in committing most of the battle-readydivisions in the entire American armed forces to the Korean fighting; by September 8 the 82nd Airborne Division was the only combat-trained Army unit not in Korea.Although many of these units were with the pending amphibious operation that would land at Incheon, near Seoul, some 83,000 American soldiers and another 57,000South Korean and British troops faced the North Koreans at the Busan front.
North Korean forces at the front, including guerrillas and a sizable number of femalesoldiers, numbered 98,000.
The Americans had also accumulated five times as many tanks as the KPA and vastly superior artillery.
They also had complete control ofthe air, which they had maintained since the early days of the war.
The price for repelling the assault was steep casualties, totaling 20,000 Americans, with 4,280 dead,by September 15.
VIII INVASION AT INCHEON.
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