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Re: MacArthur and Intelligence
You all,
Stanley Weintraub's MacArthur's War: Korea and the undoing of an American
Hero was published last year. It is well worth everyone reading. A review
of mine was published a number of places. I will try to paste it to this.
My week with Task Force Smith and the year following with Love Company, 21st
Infantry loaded me with particular perceptions. My war time service and that
with the 7th Marines in Hopei Province after Hiroshima prejudiced me some
amount. I just found it!
Best regards,
Carl Bernard
MACARTHUR'S WAR, Korea and the Undoing of an American Hero
by Stanley Weintraub
Vietnam happened, in large part, because we learned the wrong lessons from
Korea. The enormous human, social and monetary costs of those two
misadventures demand that we never again commit the same errors. What
missteps allowed those disasters to ambush us? Ignoring history is often
proclaimed to be the certain way to repeat it. Misunderstanding history will
have the same effect. Weintraub's contribution may enable us to hear what
history has long been screaming at us by clearly showing how General
MacArthur wasted his resources and ruined his own reputation. Will such
inanities recur? MacArthur's primary advisors in Korea-Ignorance, Innocence
and Arrogance-are Siamese triplets who still decree repeated military
blunders. The mere passage of time (fifty years now!) does not cure folly, as
Somalia and Kosovo demonstrate.
An unconscious betrayal of MacArthur by the uniformed sycophants cultivated
by and attracted to him, was almost inevitable. Few persons had the courage,
conviction or capability to contest the hasty, illogical decisions made by
the Army's famous five-star general. That obviated any application of a
Hegelian process to ameliorate or even validate MacArthur's hasty decisions.
Moreover, MacArthur's ego, bolstered by his demonstrated potency during
W.W.II, forbade his stooping to serious consideration of advice or counsel
from underlings. Pity. A reasoned examination of his extemporaneous
directives in Korea could have prevented the loss of many young soldiers.
In the five years between W.W.II and the North Korean attack on the South,
our military had become seriously unprepared to manage exigent events. The
War was over! Focused on peace, we were disarming. Our intelligence services
were woefully ignorant of the plans and ambitions of other governments. They
were far more concerned with Soviet activities than anything in Asia, thus
made little effort to trace policy evolutions in the two Koreas and China.
Had they better assessed the behavior of those countries, it is still
unlikely that they could have conveyed its significance to policy makers in
Washington or Tokyo. Senator Joseph McCarthy's shocking accusations early in
February, 1950, significantly disrupted the State Department as well as
Congress, and absorbed their attention from the events that led to open
hostilities in Korea five months later. McCarthy's charges had much greater
consequences than the reduction of knowledgeable Asian specialists. The
courage of many persons at policy levels sank noticeably when they noticed
the Senator had turned his attention toward them.
Merely innocent within the American public, but dangerously ignorant at high
military and political levels, a general attitude prevailed that future
conflicts would certainly be fought with nuclear weapons. We believed that
awe of our massive nuclear superiority would hold most aggressive nations in
check. Further, the Army chiefs assumed that the psychological and
operational impact of the two nuclear weapons we had used earlier, and the
more than 300 others available to us, trivialized any offensive threat of
only ten in the Soviet's possession. Most deplorable, the Army chiefs
accepted that infantry fighting skills developed during W.W.II were made
irrelevant by nuclear weapons.
This unexamined acceptance of a nuclear weapon defense was extended to an
excessive confidence in our air power, despite its failures in W.W.II.
(Hollywood, intending to promote preteen movie attendance, unconsciously
prompted an unwarranted faith in aircraft by portraying them in B-movies as
invincible. Lesson yet to be learned: Ban movie producers from the Pentagon.)
Contrarily, our reorientation to nuclear and air warfare gave low priority to
the readiness of infantry units. This, and a lamentable personnel policy that
readily transferred individuals from unit to unit before they became well
acquainted with one another, or even with their jobs, made the tragic fate of
my first unit, Task Force Smith, understandable. One shameful aspect of this:
our Army adopted General Sullivan's "No More Task Force Smith's" as a motto
and then did nothing to eliminate the chronic causes of such calamities.
Now, half century after Korea, we are still preparing to refight W.W.II.
Compounding the errors in Korea, Vietnam and all the other failed military
escapades since, the highest ranks of our military still pattern their
strategy after forms developed in W.W.II. None of the engagements since that
time have been nuclear. None are analogous to Pacific island hopping or
European air warfare. We have paid scant attention to covert "peoples' war"
even though this is likely to be the form of conflict most common in
tomorrow's world. t
Other lessons to be learned from MacArthur's War:
· Washington and FECOM (Far Eastern Command) suspected the Soviets were
trying to get us committed in an area extraneous to our (and their) real
interest-Europe. They succeeded in swaying our highest commands because it
justified what we wanted to believe. Our focus on Europe obscured our
ignorance about the reality and significance of U.S./Chinese relations, thus
insuring that critical problems we faced would be ignored.
· We failed to understand our personnel failures from W.W.II (see Stouffer's
The American Soldier), causing far higher than necessary casualties in Korea
(and succeeding conflicts) as a consequence.
· We were hobbled by our "Bible Belt" mentality, i.e. "GOD is on our side."
Under this perspective the existence of "evil kummunism" becomes proof (not
mere evidence) of an active devil, boosting our natural belief in the
justness of our cause.
· U.S. military staff officers distrusted Syngman Rhee with a passion
bordering on racism. That led to a pre-hostilities policy of keeping
essential "offensive" weapons from him. Perhaps this kept Rhee from
initiating attacks, but it guaranteed the failure of South Korea's response
to the initial North Korean assault, a defeat that sapped SK morale during
the entire "Police Action."
· Our near total unawareness of the Chinese Army's provisions for attack was
an unacceptable intelligence gaffe far superseding the naivete that pervaded
most of our data gathering. We ignored what little we knew about the
psychological integration and arming of veteran forces captured from Chiang,
i.e., "speak bitterness" and "auto critique" programs (techniques we usually
refer to as "brainwashing"). American intelligence also discounted the
possibility of Chinese intervention in Korea despite the Chinese alert of
their intentions to the Indians.
·
· The inability of JCS to confront/control MacArthur before Inchon, and
their abject obeisance to his perceptions and intentions afterward,
demonstrate clearly that the selection process for staff officers (seniority)
had failed.
·
· Despite Ridgway's best efforts, command of the 10th Corps from the Dai Ichi
building-resulting in the continued division of our committed forces-lasted
until MacArthur's actual departure.
·
· The Army's attempts to control the media's reportage of happenings in the
field were unsuccessful.
· At the Wake Island conference with President Truman, MacArthur misled the
President in several areas, including the potential effectiveness of a
Chinese intervention in the war. His prognosis for success: "It will be over
by Thanksgiving."
· The UN (illogically, then) called for reunification of the two Koreas
despite the paucity of forces available for this. The upcoming meeting of
their two chiefs fifty years later (June 12-14, 2000) may be different.
· Chiang Kai Shek's blunders certainly led to his defeat by Mao Zedong's
army, but the psychological, military, and political strength of the Red Army
should not have been discounted. They had beaten the Nationalist forces, as
they would do with us north of the 38th parallel.
· Our projection of the "Fulda Gap" mentality to Vietnam points up our lack
of intellectual preparation for both. Korea, only 5 years after W.W.II, was
strikingly different from that conflict. Vietnam was a quantum leap from both
previous wars. We seem not to have learned that we must depart from the
strategies and tactics that served earlier. Covert "Peoples' Wars" require
altogether different methodologies.
Best