Crushing
Defeat Suffered by the United States
The
Korean war (1950-1953) was the first war in which the United States, having
boasted of its being the “strongest” in the world, suffered an ignominious
defeat.
While
starting a war in Korea, the US had reckoned that it could easily occupy the
country by means of its numerical and technical superiorities. The then US
military brasshats bragged to the press that the war would be finished within
72 hours.
The
US hurled into it a huge armed force over two million strong, including the
one-third of its ground force, one-fifth of its air force, and most of its
Pacific Fleet, troops of 15 vassal states, the south Korean puppet army,
state-of-the-art combat and technical equipment, including B-29 strategic
bomber, called as “air fortress,” and enormous amounts of war supplies worth
over 73 million tons.
However,
the US suffered in the Korean war tremendous loss nearly 2.3 times as much as
that it had suffered in the Pacific war: 1 567 128 men including 405 498 US
soldiers were killed, wounded or captured, and over 12 220 aircraft, 3 250
tanks and armoured vehicles, 13 350 trucks, 560 warships, 7 690 artillery guns,
and 925 150 small arms were lost.
The
US military celebrities, known as famous generals of the Pacific War, were
either killed or sacked from their posts, being responsible for defeat in the
war. The “General Christmas Offensive” at the end of November 1950 so vaunted
by the US resulted in the “December general retreat.” Anti-war protests gained
momentum within the US mainland, arousing the impeachment of the US President
and the replacement of the State Secretary. Douglas MacArthur and Matthew
Ridgway, who served as commander of the UN Forces, were ousted from their
posts, and those in command of US 1st, 2nd, 7th
and 25th Divisions fired. “Smith’s special attack unit” which was
the first American unit that engaged in ground operation was smashed to bits,
and the US 24th Division, which had boasted of being
“ever-victorious,” was encircled and completely routed, and many US army units
were destroyed in succession. General Walker, commander of the US 8th
Army, was killed in a military operation of the Korean People’s Army, and Dean,
US 24th Division commander, was captured by a KPA soldier.
The
myth of US “mightiness” was shattered in the sky and on the sea, as well.
On
October 30, 1951, US B-29s under the aegis of 90 fighter-bombers made sorties
to the Korean front. But three B-29s were shot down and five damaged. That day
was listed as “Black Tuesday” in the US Air Force. In the following week alone,
20 “air fortress B-29s” were destroyed. Since the breakout of the Korean war 2
200 US pilots were seized with war phobia and evaded their flying service.
On
July 2, 1950, four torpedo boats of the KPA navy attacked on the sea off
Jumunjin the US heavy cruiser Baltimore of 17 000 tons with an escort of a
light cruiser and destroyer, sinking it deep in the sea, and damaging the light
cruiser.
Omar
Bradley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, confessed at a Congressional
hearing in May 1951 that the US waged the wrong war at the wrong place and with
the wrong enemy. It proved that the US already recognized its defeat in the
Korean war when the war was at its height.
The
US News and World Report wrote that
the loss in the Korean war was over two times of the total of those the US had
suffered in five great wars, the War of Independence, the War of 1812, the
Mexican War, the Spanish-American War and the Philippine War.
After
the Korean war the former US Defense Secretary George Marshall deplored, “The
myth exploded to atoms, and it became clear to everyone that the United States
was not so strong as others thought her to be.” Mark Clark, commander of the US
Far East forces and concurrently commander of the UN forces in Korea, recalled
the time when he signed the Korean Armistice Agreement, saying: In carrying out
the instructions of my government I gained the unenviable distinction of being
the first United States Army Commander in history to sign an armistice agreement
without victory. I suffered a sense of frustration…”
The
ignominious defeat suffered by the US was the first of its kind in American
history. It can neither be retrievable nor removed, no matter how long time
passes.
The
US should never forget the loss in the past Korean war.
If
it becomes oblivious of the lesson from it and starts another war in the Korean
peninsula, it will suffer its complete doom beyond comparison with the past.
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