Korea’s
V-Day
July
27 is a significant day in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. This day
61 years previously the United States, which had boasted of being “strongest”
in the world, surrendered to the Korean people.
Day
of Victory
Early
in the morning of June 25, 1950, the United States started the Korean war by
instigating the south Korean puppet army, in pursuit of its wild ambition of
securing a bridgehead leading to its realization of world supremacy.
To
this end, it hurled into the war a huge armed force two million strong,
including its armed forces, troops of 15 vassal states, south Korean puppet
army and even the remnants of the former Japanese army. It vouched that the
destiny of Korea would be “finished within 72 hours” at the outset of the war.
However,
the Korean war produced an event worthy of special mention in the war history
of mankind.
The
US suffered tremendous losses in the war: over 1 567 120 soldiers, including
some 405 490 US soldiers, were killed or captured, and over 12 220 aircraft, 3
250 tanks and armoured vehicles, 13 350 vehicles, 560 warships and vessels of
various types, 7 690 guns, 925 150 small arms and other war equipment were
destroyed. The loss it suffered was nearly 2.3 times as much as that it had
suffered in the four-year Pacific War during WWII. It had boasted of having won
in more than 110 wars of aggression previously, but was defeated for the first
time since its founding.
The
DPRK, a small country in the East, wrought a miracle unprecedented in history
of the world of repulsing the multinational force in disguise of the “United
Nations Forces.”
The
army and people of the DPRK defeated the enemy’s numerical and technical
superiorities by means of their ideological, strategic and tactical ones. Such
adroit strategies and tactics as immediate and decisive counteroffensive of the
Korean People’s Army, strategic temporary retreat and the formation of the
second front by the regular army, position and tunnel warfare, ambush, and
movements of aircraft- and tank-hunting and snipers’ teams smashed to
smithereens the military and technological superiorities much vaunted by the
West.
The
United States had no other option but to sign the Korean Armistice Agreement,
similar to their surrender documents, on July 27, 1953. The then US President
Dwight Eisenhower spoke through the radio 59 minutes after the AA was signed
that it was tragically bitter.
July
27 was marked as the day of great victory for the Korean people who shattered
the myth of “mightiness” of the US and reliably defended freedom and
independence of the country.
History
of Victory
The
United States, instead of drawing due lesson from the past Korean war, has
aggravated the tension on the Korean peninsula through ceaseless military
provocations.
Typical
is the incident of the US armed spy ship Pueblo that occurred in January 1968.
The
armed spy ship of the US navy, having intruded into the territorial waters of
the DPRK, was captured by the Korean People’s Army navy. When this happened,
the United States made such a racket as to immediately start a war, deploying a
large armed force in and around the Korean peninsula. US politicians demanded
the DPRK should apologize and return the Pueblo. If the latter would refuse to
do so, they threatened, nuclear weapons would be used.
In
the face of the US blackmails the DPRK gave a resolute answer that it would
“retaliate for the ‘retaliation’ of the enemy and return an all-out war for an
all-out war” and became fully prepared for an all-out confrontation with the
US. Overpowered, the US could not but sign a document on apologizing to the
DPRK for the espionage and hostile acts the Pueblo had committed and assuring
no more violation of the territorial waters of the DPRK by any warship in the
future.
The
then US President Johnson deplored that it was the first letter of apology in
the history of the US.
Afterwards
the US constantly committed provocations, such as the incident of its large
espionage plane EC-121 in April, 1969, Panmunjom Incident in August, 1976, the
first nuclear crisis on the Korean peninsula between 1993 and 1994 and the
recurrent nuclear crisis in the new century, driving the situation on the
Korean peninsula to the verge of war. All the incidents, however, ended in its
failure and in victory of the Korean people.
Recently
the US has continuously conducted manoeuvres of war provocation jointly with
south Korea by enlisting huge armed forces and military hardware, including
nuclear-powered submarines, such as Key Resolve and Foal Eagle war rehearsals.
To
cope with the ever more undisguised anti-DPRK policies and nuclear war games by
the US, the DPRK has taken resolute measures. One of them was the missile
launches taken place in the DPRK.
The
Korean army and people hold it as their steadfast principle and firm will to
answer the provocation with immediate counterattack and return a sacred war of
national reunification for a war of aggression.
The
DPRK knows no idle talk and is countering the nuclear threats by the hostile
forces with nuclear weapons, and their missiles with the same ones.
July
27, V-day of the Korean people, will shine forever along with the DPRK’s
ever-victorious showdowns with the US.
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