William
Blum on the Korea War
Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions
Since World War II - Chapter 5
By William Blum
To die for an idea; it is unquestionably
noble. But how much nobler it would be if
men died for ideas that were true. -
H L Mencken, 1919
September
16, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- How is it that the Korean War escaped the
protests which surrounded the war in Vietnam?
Everything we've come to love and cherish about
Vietnam had its forerunner in Korea; the support of
a corrupt tyranny, the atrocities, the napalm, the
mass slaughter of civilians, the cities and villages
laid to waste, the calculated management of the
news, the sabotaging of peace talks. But the
American people were convinced that the war in Korea
was an unambiguous case of one country invading
another without provocation. A case of the bad guys
attacking the good guys who were being saved by the
even better guys; none of the historical, political
and moral uncertainty that was the dilemma of
Vietnam. The Korean War was seen to have begun in a
specific manner: North Korea attacked South Korea in
the early morning of 25 June 1950; while Vietnam ...
no one seemed to know how it all began, or when, or
why.
And there was little in the way of accusations about
American "imperialism" in Korea. The United States,
after all, was fighting as part of a United Nations
Army. What was there to protest about? And of course
there was McCarthyism, so prevalent in the early
1950s, which further served to inhibit protest.
There were, in fact, rather different
interpretations to be made of what the war was all
about, how it was being conducted, even how it
began, but these quickly succumbed to the heat of
war fever.
Shortly after the close of the Second World War, the
Soviet Union and the United States occupied Korea in
order to expel the defeated Japanese. A demarcation
line between the Russian and American forces was set
up along the 38th Parallel. The creation of this
line in no way had the explicit or implicit
intention of establishing two separate countries,
but the cold war was soon to intrude.
Both powers insisted that unification of North and
South was the principal and desired goal. However,
they also desired to see this carried out in their
own ideological image, and settled thereby into a
routine of proposal and counter-proposal, accusation
and counter-accusation, generously intermixed with
deviousness, and produced nothing in the way of an
agreement during the ensuing years. Although both
Moscow and Washington and their hand-picked Korean
leaders were not always displeased about the
division of the country (on the grounds that half a
country was better than none), officials and
citizens of both sides continued to genuinely call
for unification on a regular basis.
That Korea was still one country, with unification
still the goal, at the time the war began, was
underscored by the chief US delegate to the UN,
Warren Austin, in a statement he made shortly
afterwards:
"The artificial barrier which, has divided North and
South Korea has no basis for existence either in law
or in reason. Neither the United Nations, its
Commission on Korea, nor the Republic of Korea
[South Korea] recognize such a line. Now the North
Koreans, by armed attack upon the Republic of Korea,
have denied the reality of any such line." {1}
The two sides had been clashing across the Parallel
far several years. What happened on that fateful day
in June could thus be regarded as no more than the
escalation of an ongoing civil war. The North Korean
Government has claimed that in 1949 alone, the South
Korean army or police perpetrated 2,617 armed
incursions into the North to carry out murder,
kidnapping, pillage and arson for the purpose of
causing social disorder and unrest, as well as to
increase the combat capabilities of the invaders. At
times, stated the Pyongyang government, thousands of
soldiers were involved in a single battle with many
casualties resulting. {2}
A State Department official, Ambassador-at-large
Philip C Jessup, speaking in April 1950, put it this
way;
"There is constant fighting between the South Korean
Army and bands that infiltrate the country from the
North. There are very real battles, involving
perhaps one or two thousand men. When you go to this
boundary, as I did ... you see troop movements,
fortifications, and prisoners of war." {3}
Seen in this context, the question of who fired the
first shot on 25 June 1950 takes on a much reduced
air of significance. As it is, the North Korean
version of events is that their invasion was
provoked by two days of bombardment by the South
Koreans, on the 23rd and 24th, followed by a
surprise South Korean attack across the border on
the 25th against the western town of Haeju and other
places. Announcement of the Southern attack was
broadcast over the North's radio later in the
morning of the 25th.
Contrary to general belief at the time, no United
Nations group - neither the UN Military Observer
Group in the field nor the UN Commission on Korea in
Seoul-witnessed, or claimed to have witnessed, the
outbreak of hostilities. The Observer Group's field
trip along the Parallel ended on 23 June. Its
statements about what took place afterward are
either speculation or based on information received
from the South Korean government or the US military.
Moreover, early in the morning of the 26th, the
South Korean Office of Public Information announced
that Southern forces had indeed captured the North
Korean town of Haeju, The announcement stated that
the attack had occurred that same morning, but an
American military status report as of nightfall on
the 25th notes that all Southern territory west of
the Imjin River had been lost to a depth of at least
three miles inside the border except in the area of
the Haeju "counter attack".
In either case, such a military victory on the part
of the Southern forces is extremely difficult to
reconcile with the official Western account,
maintained to this day, that has the North Korean
army sweeping south in a devastating surprise
attack, taking control of everything that lay before
it, and forcing South Korean troops to evacuate
further south.
Subsequently, the South Korean government denied
that its capture of Haeju had actually taken place,
blaming the original announcement, apparently, on an
exaggerating military officer. One historian has
ascribed the allegedly incorrect announcement to "an
error due to poor communications, plus an attempt to
stiffen South Korean resistance by claiming a
victory". Whatever actually lay behind the
announcement, it is evident that very little
reliance, if any, can be placed upon statements made
by the South Korean government concerning the start
of the war {4}.
There were, in fact, reports in the Western press of
the attack on Haeju which made no mention of the
South Korean government's announcement, and which
appear to be independent confirmations of the event.
The London Daily Herald, in its issue of 26 June,
stated that "American military observers said the
Southern forces had made a successful relieving
counter-attack near the west coast, penetrated five
miles into Northern territory and seized the town of
Haeju". This was echoed in The Guardian of London
the same day: "American officials confirmed that the
Southern troops had captured Haeju".
Similarly, the New York Herald Tribune reported,
also on the 26th, that "South Korean troops drove
across the 38th Parallel, which forms the frontier,
to capture the manufacturing town of Haeju, just
north of the line. The Republican troops captured
quantities of equipment". None of the accounts
specified just when the attack took place.
On the 25th, American writer John Gunther was in
Japan preparing his biography of General Douglas
MacArthur. As he recounts in the book, he was
playing tourist in the town of Nikko with "two
important members" of the American occupation, when
"one of these was called unexpectedly to the
telephone. He came back and whispered, 'A big story
has just broken. The South Koreans have attacked
North Korea!'" That evening, Gunther and his parry
returned to Tokyo where "Several officers met us at
the station to tell us correctly and with much
amplification what had happened ... there was no
doubt whatever that North Korea was the aggressor".
And the telephone call? Gunther explains: "The
message may have been garbled in transmission.
Nobody knew anything much at headquarters the first
few hours, and probably people were taken in by the
blatant, corrosive lies of the North Korean radio".
{5}
There is something a little incongruous about the
picture of American military and diplomatic
personnel, practicing anti-communists each one,
being taken in on so important a matter by communist
lies-blatant ones no less.
The head of South Korea, Syngman Rhee, had often
expressed his desire and readiness to compel the
unification of Korea by force. On 26 June the New
York Times reminded its readers that "on a number of
occasions, Dr Rhee has indicated that his army would
have taken the offensive if Washington had given the
consent". The newspaper noted also that before the
war began: "The warlike talk strangely [had] almost
all come from South Korean leaders".
Rhee may have had good reason for provoking a
full-scale war apart from the issue of unification.
On 30 May, elections for the National Assembly were
held in the South in which Rhee's party suffered a
heavy setback and lost control of the assembly. Like
countless statesmen before and after him, Rhee may
have decided to play the war card to rally support
for his shaky rule. A labor adviser attached to the
American aid mission in South Korea, Stanley Earl,
resigned in July, expressing the opinion that the
South Korean government was "an oppressive regime"
which "did very little to help the people" and that
"an internal South Korean rebellion against the Rhee
Government would have occurred if the forces of
North Korea had nor invaded". {6}
Soviet Jeader Nikita Khrushchev, in his
reminiscences, makes it plain that the North Koreans
had contemplated an invasion of the South for some
time and he reports their actual invasion without
any mention of provocation on that day. This would
seem to put that particular question to rest.
However, Khrushchev's chapter on Korea is a wholly
superficial account. It is not a serious work of
history, nor was it intended to be. As he himself
states:
'My memories of the Korean War are unavoidably
sketchy". (He did not become Soviet leader until
after the war was over.) His chapter contains no
discussion of any of the previous fighting across
the border, nothing of Rhee's belligerent
statements, nothing at all even of the Soviet
Union's crucial absence from the UN which, as we
shall see, allowed the so-called United Nations Army
to be formed and intervene in the conflict.
Moreover, his reminiscences, as published, are an
edited and condensed version of the tapes he made. A
study based on a comparison between the
Russian-language transcription of the tapes and the
published English-language book reveals that some of
Khrushchev's memories about Korea were indeed
sketchy, but that the book fails to bring this out.
For example, North Korean leader Kim Il-sung met
with Stalin to discuss Kim's desire "to prod South
Korea with the point of a bayonet". The book then
states unambiguously: "Kim went home and then
returned to Moscow when he had worked everything
out". In the transcript, however, Khrushchev says:
"In my opinion, either the date of his return was
set, or he was to inform us as soon as he finished
preparing all of his ideas. Then, I don't remember
in which month or year, Kim Il-sung came and related
his plan to Stalin" (emphasis added). {7}
On 26 June, the United States presented a resolution
before the UN Security Council condemning North
Korea for its "unprovoked aggression". The
resolution was approved, although there were
arguments that "this was a fight between Koreans"
and should be treated as a civil war, and a
suggestion from the Egyptian delegate that the word
"unprovoked" should be dropped in view of the
longstanding hostilities between the two Koreas. {8}
Yugoslavia insisted as well that "there seemed to be
lack of precise information that could enable the
Council to pin responsibility", and proposed that
North Korea be invited to present its side of the
story. {9} This was not done. (Three months later,
the Soviet foreign minister put forward a motion
that the UN hear representatives from both sides.
This, too, was voted down, by a margin of 46 to 6,
because of North Korea's "aggression", and it was
decided to extend an invitation to South Korea
alone.) {10}
On the 27th, the Security Council recommended that
members of the United Nations furnish assistance to
South Korea "as may be necessary to repel the armed
attack". President Truman had already ordered the US
Navy and Air Force into combat by this time, thus
presenting the Council with a fait accompli, {11} a
tactic the US was to repeat several times before the
war came to an end. The Council made its historic
decision with the barest of information available to
it, and all of it derived from and selected by only
one side of the conflict. This was, as journalist I
F Stone put it, "neither honorable nor wise".
It should be kept in mind that in 1950 the United
Nations was in no way a neutral or balanced
organization. The great majority of members were
nations very dependent upon the United States for
economic recovery or development. There was no Third
World bloc which years later pursued a UN policy
much more independent of the United States. And only
four countries of the Soviet bloc were members at
the time, none on the Security Council. {12}
Neither could UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie, of
Norway, be regarded as neutral in the midst of cold
war controversy. In his memoirs, he makes it
remarkably clear that he was no objective outsider.
His chapters on the Korean War are pure knee-reflex
anti-communism and reveal his maneuvering on the
issue. {13} In 1949, it was later disclosed, Lie had
entered into a secret agreement with the US State
Department to dismiss from UN employment individuals
whom Washington regarded as having questionable
political leanings. {14}
The adoption of these resolutions by the Security
Council was possible only because the Soviet Union
was absent from the proceedings due to its boycott
of the United Nations over the refusal to seat
Communist China in place of Taiwan. If the Russians
had been present, they undoubtedly would have vetoed
the resolutions. Their absence has always posed an
awkward problem for those who insist that the
Russians were behind the North Korean invasion. One
of the most common explanations offered is that the
Russians, as a CIA memorandum stated, wanted "to
challenge the US specifically and test the firmness
of US resistance to Communist expansion". {15}
Inasmuch as, during the existence of the Soviet
Union, the same analysis was put forth by American
political pundits for virtually every encounter
between the United States and leftists anywhere in
the world, before and after Korea, it would appear
that the test was going on for an inordinately long
period and one can only wonder why the Soviets never
came to a conclusion.
"The finishing touch", wrote I F Stone, "was to make
the 'United Nations' forces subject to MacArthur
without making MacArthur subject to the United
Nations. This came on July 7 in a resolution
introduced jointly by Britain and France. This is
commonly supposed to have established a United
Nations Command. Actually it did nothing of the
sort." {16} The resolution recommended "that all
members providing military forces and other
assistance ... make such forces and other assistance
available to a unified command under the United
States" (emphasis added). It further requested "the
United States to designate the commander of such
forces". {17} This would be the redoubtable
MacArthur.
It was to be an American show. Military personnel of
some sixteen other countries took part in one way or
another but, with the exception of the South
Koreans, there could be little doubt as to their
true status or function. Eisenhower later wrote in
his memoirs that when he was considering US military
intervention in Vietnam in 1954, also as part of a
"coalition", he recognized that the burden of the
operation would fall on the United States, but "the
token forces supplied by these other nations, as in
Korea, would lend real moral standing to a venture
that otherwise could be made to appear as a brutal
example of imperialism" (emphasis added). {18}
The war, and a brutal one it was indeed, was fought
ostensibly in defense of the Syngman Rhee regime.
Outside of books published by various South Korean
governments, it is rather difficult to find a kind
word for the man the United States brought back to
Korea in 1945 after decades of exile in America
during the Japanese occupation of his country. Flown
into Korea in one of MacArthur's airplanes, Rhee was
soon maneuvered into a position of prominence and
authority by the US Army Military Government in
Korea (USAMGIK). In the process, American officials
had to suppress a provisional government, the Korean
People's Republic, that was the outgrowth of a
number of regional governing committees set up by
prominent Koreans and which had already begun to
carry out administrative tasks, such as food
distribution and keeping order. The KPR's offer of
its services to the arriving Americans was dismissed
out of hand.
Despite its communist-sounding name, the KPR
included a number of conservatives; indeed, Rhee
himself had been given the leading position of
chairman. Rhee and the other conservatives, most of
whom were still abroad when chosen, perhaps did not
welcome the honor because the KPR, on balance, was
probably too leftist for their tastes, as it was for
the higher echelons of the USAMGIK. But after 35
years under the Japanese, any group or government
set up to undo the effects of colonialism had to
have a revolutionary tinge to it. It was the
conservatives in Korea who had collaborated with the
Japanese; leftists and other nationalists who had
struggled against them; the make-up of the KPR
necessarily reflected this, and it was reportedly
more popular than any other political grouping. {19}
Whatever the political leanings or intentions of the
KPR, by denying it any "authority, status or form",
{20} the USAMGIK was regulating Korean political
life as if the country were a defeated enemy and not
a friendly state liberated from a common foe and
with a right to independence and self-determination.
The significance of shunting aside the KPR went
beyond this. John Gunther, hardly a radical, summed
up the situation this way: "So the first-and
best-chance for building a united Korea was tossed
away". {21} And Alfred Crofts, a member of the
American military government at the time, has
written that "A potential unifying agency became
thus one of the fifty-four splinter groups in South
Korean political life". {22}
Syngman Rhee would be Washington's man: eminently
pro-American, strongly anti-Communist, sufficiently
controllable. His regime was one in which landlords,
collaborators, the wealthy, and other conservative
elements readily found a home. Crofts has pointed
out that "Before the American landings, a political
Right, associated in popular thought with colonial
rule, could not exist; but shortly afterward we were
to foster at least three conservative factions".
{23}
Committed to establishing free enterprise, the
USAMGIK sold off vast amounts of confiscated
Japanese property, homes, businesses, industrial raw
materials and other valuables. Those who could most
afford to purchase these assets were collaborators
who had grown rich under the Japanese, and other
profiteers. "With half the wealth of the nation 'up
for grabs', demoralization was rapid". {24}
While the Russians did a thorough house-cleaning of
Koreans in the North who had collaborated with the
Japanese, the American military government in the
South allowed many collaborators, and at first even
the Japanese themselves, to retain positions of
administration and authority, much to the
consternation of those Koreans who had fought
against the Japanese occupation of their country. To
some extent, these people may have been retained in
office because they were the most experienced at
keeping the country running. Another reason has been
suggested: to prevent the Korean People's Republic
from assuming a measure of power. {25}
And while the North soon implemented widespread and
effective land reform and at least formal equality
for women, the Rhee regime remained hostile to these
ideals. Two years later, it enacted a land reform
measure, but this applied only to former Japanese
property. A 1949 law to cover other holdings was not
enforced at all, and the abuse of land tenants
continued in both old and new forms. {26}
Public resentment against the US/Rhee administration
was aroused because of these policies as well as
because of the suppression of the KPR and some very
questionable elections. So reluctant was Rhee to
allow an honest election, that by early 1950 he had
become enough of an embarrassment to the United
States for Washington officials to threaten to cut
off aid if he failed to do so and also improve the
state of civil liberties. Apparently because of this
pressure, the elections held on May 30 were fair
enough to allow "moderate" elements to participate,
and, as mentioned earlier, the Rhee government was
decisively repudiated. {27}
The resentment was manifested in the form of
frequent rebellions, including some guerrilla
warfare in the hills, from 1946 to the beginning of
the war, and even during the war. The rebellions
were dismissed by the government as
"communist-inspired" and repressed accordingly, but,
as John Gunther observed, "It can be safely said
that in the eyes of Hodge [the commander of US
forces in Korea] and Rhee, particularly at the
beginning, almost any Korean not an extreme rightist
was a communist and potential traitor". {28}
General Hodge evidently permitted US troops to take
part in the repression. Mark Gayn, a correspondent
in Korea for the Chicago Sun, wrote that American
soldiers "fired on crowds, conducted mass arrests,
combed the hills for suspects, and organized posses
of Korean rightists, constabulary and police for
mass raids". {29} Gayn related that one of Hodge's
political advisers assured him (Gayn) that Rhee was
not a fascist: "He is two centuries before fascism -
a pure Bourbon". {30}
Describing the government's anti-guerrilla campaign
in 1948, pro-Western political scientist John Kie-Chiang
Oh of Marquette University has written: "In these
campaigns, the civil liberties of countless persons
were often ignored. Frequently, hapless villagers,
suspected of aiding the guerrillas, were summarily
executed." {31} A year later, when a committee of
the National Assembly launched an investigation of
collaborators, Rhee had his police raid the
Assembly: 22 people were arrested, of whom sixteen
were later found to have suffered either broken
ribs, skull injuries or broken eardrums. {32}
At the time of the outbreak of war in June 1950,
there were an estimated 14,000 political prisoners
in South Korean jails. {33}
Even during the height of the war, in February 1951,
reported Professor Oh, there was the "Koch'ang
Incident", again involving suspicion of aiding
guerrillas, "in which about six hundred men and
women, young and old, were herded into a narrow
valley and mowed down with machine guns by a South
Korean army unit". {34}
Throughout the war, a continuous barrage of
accusations was leveled by each side at the other,
charging the enemy with engaging in all manner of
barbarity and atrocity, against troops, prisoners of
war, and civilians alike, in every part of the
country (each side occupied the other's territory at
times), trying to outdo each other in a verbal war
of superlatives almost as heated as the combat. In
the United States this produced a body of popular
myths, not unlike those emerging from other wars
which are widely supported at home. (By contrast,
during the Vietnam War the inclination of myths to
flourish was regularly countered by numerous
educated protestors who carefully researched the
origins of the war, monitored its conduct, and
publicized studies sharply at variance with the
official version(s), eventually influencing the mass
media to do the same.)
There was, for example, the consensus that the
brutality of the war in Korea must be laid
overwhelmingly on the doorstep of the North Koreans.
The Koch'ang Incident mentioned above may be
relevant to providing some counterbalance to this
belief. Referring to theincident, the British Korea
scholar Jon Halliday observed:
"This account not only serves to indicate the level
of political violence employed by the UN side, but
also confers inherent plausibility on DPRK [North
Korea] and Southern opposition accusations of
atrocities and mass executions by the UN forces and
Rhee officials during the occupation of the DPRK in
late 1950. After all, if civilians could be mowed
down in the South on suspicion of aiding (not even
being) guerrillas - what about the North, where
millions could reasonably be assumed to be
Communists, or political militants? {35} (Emphasis
in original.)
Oh's account is but one of a number of reports of
slaughter carried out by the South Koreans against
their own people during the war. The New York Times
reported a "wave of [South Korean] Government
executions in Seoul" in December 1950. {36} Rene Cut
forth, a ncorrespondent for the BBC in Korea, later
wrote of "the shooting without trial of civilians,
designated by the police as 'communist'. These
executions were done, usually at dawn, on any patch
of waste ground where you could dig a trench and
line up a row of prisoners in front of it". {37} And
Gregory Henderson, a US diplomat who served seven
years in Korea in the 1940s and 1950s, has stated
that "probably over 100,000 were killed without any
trial whatsoever" by Rhee's forces in the South
during the war. {38} Following some of the massacres
of civilians in the South, the Rhee government
turned around and attributed them to Northern
troops.
One way in which the United States contributed
directly to the war's brutality was by introducing a
weapon which, although used in the last stage of
World War II, and in Greece, was new to almost all
observers and participants in Korea. It was called
napalm. Here is one description of its effect from
the New York Times.
"A napalm raid hit the village three or four days
ago when the Chinese were holding up the advance,
and nowhere in the village have they buried the dead
because there is nobody left to do so ... The
inhabitants throughout the village and in the fields
were caught and killed and kept the exact postures
they had held when the napalm struck - a man about
to get on his bicycle, fifty boys and girls playing
in an orphanage, a housewife strangely unmarked,
holding in her hand a page torn from a Sears-Roebuck
catalogue crayoned at Mail Order No 3,811,294 for a
$2.98 "bewitching bed jacket - coral". There must be
almost two hundred dead in the tiny hamlet." {39}
The United States may also have waged germ warfare
against North Korea and China, as was discussed
earlier in the chapter on China.
At the same time, the CIA reportedly was targeting a
single individual for termination - North Korean
leader Kim II Sung. Washington sent a Cherokee
Indian, code-named Buffalo, to Hans V Tofte, a CIA
officer stationed in Japan, after Buffalo had agreed
to serve as Kim II Sung's assassin. Buffalo was to
receive a considerable amount of money if his
mission succeeded. It obviously did not, and nothing
further has been revealed about the incident. {40}
Another widely-held belief in the United States
during the war was that American prisoners in North
Korean camps were dying off like flies because of
Communist neglect and cruelty. The flames of this
very emotional issue were fanned by the tendency of
US officials to exaggerate the numbers involved.
During November 1951, for example - long before the
end of the war - American military announcements put
the count of POW deaths at between 5,000 and 8,000.
{41} However, an extensive study completed by the US
Army two years after the war revealed that the POW
death toll for the entire war was 2,730 (out of
7,190 held in camps; an unknown number of other
prisoners never made it to the camps, being shot in
the field because of the inconvenience of dealing
with them in the midst of combat, a practice engaged
in by both sides).
The study concluded that "there was evidence that
the high death rate was not due primarily to
Communist maltreatment ... it could be accounted for
largely by the ignorance or the callousness of the
prisoners themselves". {42} "Callousness" refers
here to the soldiers' lack of morale and collective
spirit. Although not mentioned in the study, the
North Koreans, on several occasions, claimed that
many American POWs also died in the camps as a
result of the heavy US bombing.
The study of course could never begin to catch up
with all the scare headlines to which the Western
world had been treated for three years. Obscured as
well was the fact that several times as many
Communist prisoners had died in US / South Korean
camps - halfway through the war the official figure
stood at 6,600 {43} - though these camps did hold
many more prisoners than those in the North.
The American public was also convinced, and probably
still is, that the North Koreans and Chinese had
"brainwashed" US soldiers. This story arose to
explain the fact that as many as thirty percent of
American POWs had collaborated with the enemy in one
way or another, and "one man in every seven, or more
than thirteen per cent, was guilty of serious
collaboration - writing disloyal tracts ... or
agreeing to spy or organize for the Communists after
the war". {44} Another reason the brainwashing theme
was promoted by Washington was to increase the
likelihood that statements made by returning
prisoners which questioned the official version of
the war would be discounted.
In the words of Yale psychiatrist Robert J Lifton,
brainwashing was popularly held to be an
"all-powerful, irresistible, unfathomable, and
magical method of achieving total control over the
human mind". {45} Although the CIA experimented,
beginning in the 1950s, to develop just such a
magic, neither they nor the North Koreans or Chinese
ever possessed it. The Agency began its
"behavior-control" or "mind-control" experiments on
human subjects (probably suspected double agents),
using drugs and hypnosis, in Japan in July 1950,
shortly after the beginning of the Korean War. In
October, they apparently used North Korean prisoners
of war as subjects. {46} In 1975, a US Navy
psychologist, Lieutenant Commander Thomas Narut,
revealed that his naval work included establishing
how to induce servicemen who may not be naturally
inclined to kill, to do so under certain conditions.
He referred to these men using the words "hitmen"
and "assassin". Narut added that convicted murderers
as well had been released from military prisons to
become assassins. {47}
Brainwashing, said the Army study, "has become a
catch phrase, used for so many things that it no
longer has any precise meaning" and "a precise
meaning is necessary in this case". {48}
"The prisoners, as far as Army psychiatrists have
been able to discover, were not subjected to any
thing that could properly be called brainwashing.
Indeed, the Communist treatment of prisoners, while
it came nowhere near fulfilling the requirements of
the Geneva Convention, rarely involved outright
cruelty, being instead a highly novel blend of
leniency and pressure ... The Communists rarely used
physical torture ... and the Army has not found a
single verifiable case in which they used it for the
specific purpose of forcing a man to collaborate or
to accept their convictions." {49}
According to the study, however, some American
airmen, of the ninety or so who were captured, were
subjected to physical abuse in an attempt to extract
confessions about germ warfare. This could reflect
either a greater Communist resentment about the use
of such a weapon, or a need to produce some kind of
corroboration of a false or questionable claim.
American soldiers were instead subjected to
political indoctrination by their jailers. Here is
how the US Army saw it:
"In the indoctrination lectures, the Communists
frequently displayed global charts dotted with our
military bases, the names of which were of course
known to many of the captives. "See those bases?"
the instructor would say, tapping them on the chart
with his pointer. 'They are American - full of war
materiel. You know they are American. And you can
see they are ringing Russia and China. Russia and
China do not have one base outside their own
territory. From this it's clear which side is the
warmonger. Would America have these bases and spend
millions to maintain them were it not preparing to
war on Russia and China?' This argument seemed
plausible to many of the prisoners. In general they
had no idea that these bases showed not the United
States' wish for war, but its wish for peace, that
they had been established as part of a series of
treaties aimed not at conquest, but at curbing Red
aggression." {50}
The Chinese Communists, of course, did not invent
this practice. During the American Civil War,
prisoners of both the South and the North received
indoctrination about the respective merits of the
two sides. And in the Second World War,
"democratization courses" were held in US and
British POW camps for Germans, and reformed Germans
were granted privileges. Moreover, the US Army was
proud to state that Communist prisoners in American
camps during the Korean War were taught "what
democracy stands for". {51}
The predicted Chinese aggression manifested itself
about four months after the war in Korea began. The
Chinese entered the war after American planes had
violated their air space on a number of occasions,
had bombed and strafed Chinese territory several
times (always "in error"), when hydro-electric
plants on the Korean side of the border, vital to
Chinese industry, stood in great danger, and US or
South Korean forces had reached the Chinese border,
the Yalu River, or come within a few miles of it in
several places.
The question must be asked: How long would the
United States refrain from entering a war being
waged in Mexico by a Communist power from across the
sea, which strafed and bombed Texas border towns,
was mobilized along the Rio Grande, and was led by a
general who threatened war against the United States
itself?
American airpower in Korea was fearsome to behold.
As would be the case in Vietnam, its use was
celebrated in the wholesale dropping of napalm, the
destruction of villages "suspected of aiding the
enemy", bombing cities so as to leave no useful
facilities standing, demolishing dams and dikes to
cripple the irrigation system, wiping out rice crops
... and in those moving expressions like
"scorched-earth policy", "saturation bombing", and
"operation killer". {52}
"You can kiss that group of villages good-bye",
exclaimed Captain Everett L Hundley of Kansas City,
Kansas after a bombing raid. {53}
"I would say that the entire, almost the entire
Korean Peninsula is just a terrible mess", testified
Major General Emmett O'Donnell before the Senate
when the war was one year old. "Everything is
destroyed. There is nothing standing worthy of the
name." {54}
And here, the words of the venerable British
military guide, Brassey's Annual, in its 1951
yearbook:
"If is no exaggeration to state that South Korea no
longer exists as a country. Its towns have been
destroyed, much of its means of livelihood
eradicated, and its people reduced to a sullen mass
dependent upon charity and exposed to subversive
influences. When the war ends no gratitude can be
expected from the South Koreans, but it is to be
hoped that the lesson will have been learned that it
is worse than useless to destroy to liberate.
Certainly, western Europe would never accept such a
'liberation'." {55}
The worst of the bombing was yet to come. That began
in the summer of 1952 and was Washington's way of
putting itself in a better bargaining position in
the truce discussions with the Communists, which had
been going on for a full year while the battles
raged. The extended and bitter negotiations gave
rise to another pervasive Western belief - that it
was predominantly Communist intransigence,
duplicity, and lack of peaceful intentions which
frustrated the talks and prolonged the war.
This is a lengthy and entangled chapter of the
Korean War story, but one does not have to probe too
deeply to discover the unremarkable fact that the
barriers were erected by the anti-Communist side as
well. Syngman Rhee, for example, was so opposed to
any outcome short of total victory that both the
Truman and Eisenhower administrations drew up plans
for overthrowing him; {56} which is not to suggest
that the American negotiators were negotiating in
the best of faith. The last thing they wanted to be
accused of was having allowed the commies to make
suckers of them. Thus it was that in November of
1951 we could read in the New York Times:
"The unadorned way that an apparently increasing
number of them [American soldiers in Korea] see the
situation right now is that the Communists have made
important concessions, while the United Nations
Command, as they view it, continues to make more and
more demands ... The United Nations truce team has
created the impression that it switches its stand
whenever the Communists indicate that they might go
along with it." {57}
At one point during this same period, when the
Communists proposed chat a cease fire and a
withdrawal of troops from the combat line should
take place while negotiations were going on, the
United Nations Command reacted almost as if this
were a belligerent and devious act. "Today's stand
by the Communists", said the UNC announcement, "was
virtually a renunciation of their previously stated
position that hostilities should continue during
armistice talks". {58}
Once upon a time, the United States fought a great
civil war in which the North attempted to reunite
the divided country through military force. Did
Korea or China or any other foreign power send in an
army to slaughter Americans, charging Lincoln with
aggression?
Why did the United States choose to wage full-scale
war in Korea? Only a year earlier, in 1949, in the
Arab-Israeli fighting in Palestine and in the
India-Pakistani war over Kashmir, the United
Nations, with American support, had intervened to
mediate an armistice, not to send in an army to take
sides and expand the fighting. And both these
conflicts were less in the nature of a civil war
than was the case in Korea. If the US/UN response
had been the same in these earlier cases, Palestine
and Kashmir might have wound up as the
scorched-earth desert that was Korea's fate. What
saved them, what kept the US armed forces out, was
no more than the absence of a communist side to the
conflict.
William
Blum is an American author, historian, and critic of
United States foreign policy.
https://williamblum.org/books/killing-hope
Notes
1. New York
Times, 1 October 1950, page 3.
2. The US Imperialists Started the Korean War is the
subtle title of the book published in Pyongyang
North Korea, 1977, pages 109-10.
3. Radio address of 13 April 1950, reprinted in The
Department of State Bulletin, 24 April 1950, page
627.
4. For a discussion of the war's immediate origin,
see:
a) Karunakar Gupta, "How Did the Korean War Begin?",
The China Quarterly (London) October/ December 1972
No 52, pages 699-716.
b) "Comment; The Korean War", The China Quarterly,
April/June 1973, No 54, pages 354-68. This consists
of responses to Gupta's article in issue No, 52 and
Gupta's counter-response.
c) New York Times, 26 June 1950. Page 1 - South
Korea's announcement about Haeju. Page 3 - North
Korea's announcement about Haeju.
d) Glenn D Paige, The Korean Decision (June 24-30,
1950) (New York, 1968) passim, particularly page
130.
e) I F Stone, The Hidden History of the Korean War
(New York, 1952) chapter 7 and elsewhere.
5. John Gunther, The Riddle of MacArthur (London,
1951), pages 151-2.
6. New York Times, 25 July 1950, page 4; 30 July,
page 2.
7. Khrushchev Remembers (London, 1971) chapter 11.
Study of transcription vs book: John Merrill, Book
Reviews, Journal of Korean Studies (University of
Washington, Seattle) Vol 3, 1981, pages 181-91.
8. Joseph C Goulden, Korea: The Untold Story of the
War (New York, 1982) page 64
9. New York Times, 26 June 1950.
10. Ibid, 1 October 1950, page 4.
11. Goulden, pages 87-8; Stone, pages 75, 77.
12. For further discussion of the UN's bias at this
time see Jon Halliday, "The United Nations and
Korea", in Frank Baldwin, editor , Without Parallel:
The American-Korean Relationship Since 1945 (New
York, 1974), pages 109-42.
13. Trygve Lie, In the Cause of Peace (New York,
1954) chapters 18 and 19.
14. Shirley Hazzard, Countenance of Truth: The
United Nations and the Waldheim Case (New York,
1990), pages 13-22. In his book, page 389, He states
that it was he who initiated this practice.
15. CIA memorandum, 28 June 1950, Declassified
Documents Reference System (Arlington, Virginia)
Retrospective Volume, Document 33C.
16. Stone, pages 77-8.
17. The full text of the Security Council Resolution
of 7 July 1950 can be found in the New York Times, 8
July 1950, P. 4.
18. Dwight Eisenhower, The White House Years:
Mandate for Change, 1953-1956 (New York, 1963) page
340.
19. For a discussion of post-war politics in South
Korea see:
a) Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War:
Liberation and the Emergence of Separate Regimes,
1945-1947 (Princeton University Press, New Jersey,
1981) passim.
b) E. Grant Mcade, American Military Government in
Korea (King's Crown Press, Columbia University, New
York, 1951) chapters 3-5.
c) George M McCune, Korea Today (Institute of
Pacific Relations, New York, 1950) passim, pages
46-50 (KPR). Professor McCune worked with the US
Government on Korean problems during World War II.
d) D F Fleming, The Cold War and its Origins,
1917-1960 (Doubleday & Co, New York, 1961) pages
589-97.
e) Alfred Crofts, "The Case of Korea: Our Falling
Ramparts", The Nation (New York) 25 June 1960, pages
544-8. Crofts was a member of the US Military
Government in Korea beginning in 1945.
20. Crofts, page 545.
21. Gunther, page 165.
22. Crofts, page 545.
23. Ibid.
24. Ibid, page 546.
25. Collaborators: Cumings, pages 152-6; Mcade, page
61; McCune, page 51; plus elsewhere in these
sources, as well asin Fleming and Crofts. Japanese
and collaborators retaining positions to thwart the
KPR: Cumings, pages 138-9.
26. McCune, pages 83-4, 129-39, 201-9.
27. 1946 election: Mark Gayn, Japan Diary (New York
1948) page 398; 1948 election: Crofts, page 546;
Halliday, pages 117-22; 1950 election and US
warning; Fleming, page 594. For a discussion of
Rhee's thwarting of honest elections in 1952 and
later, and his consistently tyrannical rule, see
William J. Lederer, A Nation of Sheep (W W Norton &
Co, New York, 1961), chapter 4.
28. Gunther, pages 166-7.
29. Gayn, page 388.
30. Ibid, page 352.
31. John Kie-Chiang Oh, Korea: Democracy on Trial
(Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York, 1968)
page 35.
32. The Nation (New York), 13 August 1949, page 152.
33. Gunther, page 171.
34. Oh, page 206; see also New York Times, 11 April
1951, page 4 for an account of a massacre of some
500 to 1000 people in March in the same place, which
appears to refer to the same incident.
35. Jon Halliday, "The Political Background", in
Gavan McCormack and Mark Selden, editors, Korea,
North and South: The Deepening Crisis (New York,
1978) page 56.
36. New York Times, 11 April 1951, page 4.
37. Rene Cutforth, "On the Korean War", The Listener
(BBC publication, London) 11 September 1969, page
343.
38. Gregory Henderson, Korea: The Politics of the
Vortex (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass,
1968 page 167.
39. New York Times, 9 February 1951, George Barrett.
40. Goulden, pages 471-2. This information derives
from Goulden's interview of Tofte.
41. New York Times, 27 November 1951, page 4.
42. Eugene Kinkead, Why They Collaborated (London,
1960) page 17; published in the US in 1959 in
slightly different form as In Every War But One, The
Army study was not contained in any one volume, but
was spread out over a number of separate reports.
Kinkead's book, written with the full co-operation
of the Army, is composed of a summary of some of
these reports, and interviews with many government
and military officials who were directly involved in
or knowledgeable about the study or the subject. For
the sake of simplicity, I have referred to the book
as if it were the actual study. It is to the Army's
credit that much of the results of the study were
not kept secret; the study, nonetheles contains some
anti-communist statements of the most bizarre sort:
lying is often punished in China by death ...
communists live like animals all their lives ...
[pages 1903 193)
43. Keesings Contemporary Archives, 5-12 January
1952, page 11931, an announcement on 31 December
1951 from General Ridgeway's headquarters.
44. Kinkead, page 34.
45. Robert J Lifton, Thought Reform and the
Psychology of Totalism; A Study of brainwashing in
China (London, 1961) page 4.
46. John Marks, The Search for the Manchurian
Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control (New York,
paperback edition, 1988), page 25, based on CIA
documents.
47. Sunday Times (London), 6 July 1975, page 1.
Narut at the time was working at a US naval hospital
in Naples, Italy, and made his remarks at a
NATO-sponsored conference held in Oslo, Norway the
week before.
48. Kinkead, page 31.
49. Ibid, pages 17, 34.
50. Ibid, pages 105-6.
51. Ibid, page 197.
52. For a concise description of the "terror
bombing" of 1952-53, see John Gittings, "Talks,
Bombs and Germs: Another Look at the Korean War",
Journal of Contemporary Asia (London) Vol 5, No 2,
1975, pages 212-6.
53. Air Force Communique, 2 February 1951, cited by
Stone, page 259
54. Military Situation in the Far East, Hearings
Before the Senate Committees on Armed Services end
Foreign Relations, 25 June 1951, page 3075.
55. Louis Heren, "The Korean Scene", in Rear-Admiral
H G Thursfield, editor, Brassey's Annual: The Armed
Forces Year-Book 1951 (London, 1951) page 110.
56. San Francisco Chronicle, 15 December 1977, page
11, based on documents released under the Freedom of
Information Act.
57. New York Times, 12 November 1951, page 3.
58. Ibid, 14 November 1951, page 1.
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