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Combat
Action in Korea - 259 pgs.
by Russel A. Gugeler
This book was originally published in 1954,
the year following the close of the Korean War. The accounts
of small-unit actions were written primarily for junior
officers, noncommissioned officers, and privates of the
United States Army who had not yet been in battle. The
object was to acquaint them with the recent combat experiences
of others and thus better prepare them for the realities
of their own fields.
Since the Korean War, some of the tools and procedures
of battle have changed, but the basic conditions of combat
have not. Indeed, the surprises, confusion, and problems
faced on one battlefield generally resemble the difficulties
met on another. Accounts of battle experience at other
times in other places, then, continue to have instructive
value. It is with this fact in mind that this book is reprinted.
One of the accounts contained in the original version was
omitted after a review of the source material on which
it was based revealed several irreconcilable errors. All
of the other episodes appear in their original form. Those
who absorb the lessons they offer can substantially increase
their competence as leaders and members of small units
in battle, and all students of military history should
find profit in these intimate and objective stories of
combat action.
Coauthor of Okinawa: The Last Battle in the series
UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR Il, Russell A. Gugeler
returned to active duty as a combat historian in the Korean
War. He subsequently served as historian for the Pacific
Theater of Operations and later as historian for Supreme
Headquarters, Allied Powers, Europe, retiring as a lieutenant
colonel in 1968. He is presently the civilian historian
for the United States European Command.
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Combat
Support in Korea - 247 pgs.
by John G. Westover
The contributions of combat service support soldiers to
the success of American armies have often been overlooked
by both historians and the public. Thus, it is altogether
fitting that this first volume in the Army in Action Series
should be John G. Westover's compilation of short, but
instructive, pieces on service and support activities during
the Korean War. While the details of combat actions in
America's wars have been studied extensively, comparatively
little has been done to enlighten the soldier of today
regarding how logistical operations were conducted at the
small unit level. This book will serve to repair that omission.
Westover compiled this book primarily from a series of
interviews conducted with men actually involved in the
events at ground level. The oral history technique, which
Army historians did much to develop in World War II and
later, is now an accepted historical method. The value
of oral history as a means of getting to the details is
amply demonstrated here. |
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Ebb & Flow:
November 1950 - July 1951 - 566 pgs.
by Billy C. Mossman
Ebb and Flow records an important chapter in the Korean War.
It begins with the last weeks of the pell-mell rush of United
Nations forces to the Chinese border and goes on to describe
in great detail the test January 4, 2007urces posed by the taxing retreat of the Eighth Army and
X Corps across the frozen wastes of North Korea. It also examines
the special problems posed to a fighting army during the deadly
months of stalemate in the summer of 1951. The part of the
war described in this volume raises many questions for the
military strategist and provides a treasure trove of lessons
for the student of the art of war. The book emphasizes the
limitations imposed by terrain and weather on the fighting
capabilities of an American army facing surprise attack from
a large, disciplined enemy. The operations it describes in
such careful detail will help vivify the principles of war
for those who would study the profession of arms. |
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History
of U.S. Naval Operations: Korea - 509pgs.
by James A. Field, Jr.
Perhaps the simplest way to describe the Korean War is
to say that it was different, for it fell, or seemed to
fall, outside the pattern of all previous American experience.
It was a surprising war in a surprising place at a surprising
time, and one which imperatively called for answers to
neglected problems of national defense. It was begun as
a police action; it developed rapidly into an undeclared
war of no small magnitude; it ended as an unpopular and
seemingly profitless stalemate. It was conducted, at least
in theory, less as a national enterprise in defense of
an easily apprehended national interest than as an exercise
in collective security under the aegis of the United Nations.
And while partial precedents can doubtless be discerned
in battles long ago, the package was a new and unsettling
one. This is the story of the United States Navy operations
in this conflict. |
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Korea
1950 - 292pgs.
By its participation in the Korean
conflict the Army of the United States, in a determined
effort to restore international peace and security, has
been for the first time committed to battle under the
flag of the United Nations. Confronted by most arduous
conditions, the American soldier has fought with traditional
bravery and skill against communist aggression in Korea.
He has met every test with honor. This volume briefly
records, by text and photograph, the first six months
of the conflict that began
in Korea on 25 June 1950.
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Korea
1951-1953 - 318pgs.
This volume records briefly, by text and photograph, the
Korean conflict from January 1951 to the cessation of hostilities
in July 1953. Like its predecessor, Korea 1950, it attempts
to provide an accurate outline of events in order to show
the U.S. Army veteran of the Korean conflict how the part
he played was related to the larger plans and operations
of the United Nations forces. For this reason Korea 1951-1953
focuses on the operations of the United States Army but
summarizes the achievements of the sister services and
of the other United Nations troops in order to make clear
the contributions of all to the successful resistance against
armed aggression. The text, which is based upon records
and reports of the Far East Command, the United Nations
Command, and the Eighth Army, was written by Dr. John Miller,
Jr. |
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Military
Advisors in Korea: KMAG In Peace and War - 223pgs.
by Major Robert K.
Sawyer & Walter G. Hermes
In an era when United States military assistance groups
are scattered all over the world and probably will be for
some time to come, the story of one of the earliest of
these groups is of more than passing interest. The U.S.
Military Advisory Group to the Republic of Korea, or KMAG
as it was frequently called, was not only one of the first
advisory groups to be formed but also one of the few that
had to operate both in peace and war. This is their story. |
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Policy & Direction:
The First Year - 483 pgs.
by James F. Schnabel
This volume describes the initial direction and strategy
of the first major though limited war that the United States
was to fight on the continent of Asia in the era of global
tension that followed World War II. There are marked similarities
as well as some basic differences between the war in Korea
and the war that would follow a decade later in Southeast
Asia, and certainly the study of both is necessary to understand
the limitations on armed conflict under the shadow of nuclear
holocaust. One can also discern in this volume the importance
of individuals in altering the course of human events and
the face of nations, the wider concerns that preclude the
massing by a world power of its military strength in one
direction, and many other facets of the nation's recent
military history it behooves all thoughtful Americans to
ponder.
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The
Medics War - 406pgs.
by Albert E Cowdrey
The Medics' War views this conflict from an uncommon angle.
It documents the efforts of American Army doctors, nurses,
and enlisted medics to save life and repair the damages
wrought by wounds and disease. Though the charges of biological
warfare made at the time are shown to have no foundation,
the disease-ridden environment of wartime Korea aided the
side with the best medical care. The real MASH clearly
emerges in this study, along with the variety of technical
innovations produced by the conflict that have advanced
medical science. The perspective of The Medics' War is
an enlightening one, showing that the compassionate treatment
of both United Nations and enemy wounded pre-served human
values in the midst of bitter, unforgiving strife. Civilian
and military readers alike will gain from it a deeper understanding
of the processes, destructive and reconstructive, that
together made up the human experience of the Korean War. |
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The U.S. Air Force
in Korea - 844pgs.
by Robert F. Futrell
Utilizing the fullest availability of
sources in research for this volume on the USAF in Korea,
the author has sought to record the story of the air war
as it was - or as it appeared to informed participants
- without yielding very often to speculations of what might
have been if different decisions had been made or the facts
had somehow been changed. Air Force failings have been
stressed fully as much as accomplishments, for failures
(and the reasons for them) must be evaluated if the Air
Force is to progress. In this record of Air Force experience
in Korea there was much that was heroic and there were
other events that were unpleasant, but a military historian
must freely record the mistakes and controversies if a
reader or a student of military history is to understand
the full meanings of military accomplishments and failures.
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Truce
Tent & Fighting Front - 607pgs.
by Walter G. Hermes
Truce Tent and Fighting Front covers the last
two years in the Korean War and treats the seemingly interminable
armistice negotiations and the violent but sporadic fighting
at the front. The scene therefore frequently shifts from the
dialectic, propaganda, and frustrations at the conference table
to the battles on key hills and at key outposts. The author
presents a solid and meaningful reconstruction of the truce
negotiations; he develops the issues debated and captures the
color of the arguments and the arguers. The planning and events
that guided or influenced the proceedings on the United Nations
side are thoroughly explained. The volume abounds in object
lessons and case studies that illustrate problems American
officers may encounter in negotiating with Communists. Problems
encountered by the U.N. high command in handling recalcitrant
Communist prisoners of war within the spirit and letter of
the Geneva Convention are explained with clarity and sympathy.
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South
to the Naktong: North to the Yalu - 800pgs.
by Colonel Roy E.
Appleman
At the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950, the U.S.
Army combat units nearest the scene were the four infantry
divisions performing occupation duties in Japan. When the
Army of the Republic of Korea, supported only by U.S. air
and naval forces, was unable to halt the North Korean aggressors,
these divisions, seriously under strength and only partially
trained and equipped for fighting, provided the troops
that were committed initially to action in response to
the call of the United Nations Security Council. Colonel
Appleman's narrative portrays vividly the grimness of limited
war against a fanatical enemy, and the tragic consequences
of unpreparedness. His writing recaptures the dismay that
most Americans experienced in the realization that a small,
little-known country could achieve military success against
a coalition that included this, the world's most powerful
nation. Here is the story of how U.S. Army combat units,
thrown piecemeal into the battle to slow Communist advances,
fought a desperate and heroic delaying action, buying time
until the United Nations forces could attain the military
strength necessary to take the offensive. When that offensive
was launched, it quickly crushed the North Korean forces,
only to be met with the massive intervention of a more
formidable adversary, Communist China. |
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