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Re: "The Inchon Landing: An Example of Brilliant Generalship"
Dan,
>>At 09:50 PM 8/12/2003 -0400, you wrote:
Why did not the UN perform another end round operation after the Chinese
entered the war?
Or was there suxh a plan if the war had continued.?
This is woulda shoulda coulda question. <<
There was a lot of pressure from the UN to negotiate a ceasefire and the US
went that route thinking the negotiations would take only a few months. As
it turned out, it was two years. The Chinese, the North Koreans and their
Soviet Union backers didn't get real serious until Eisenhower sent word
shortly after taking office in 1953 either this stalling would end or he
would settle the matter militarily. At this point he ordered the military
to begin preparing logistics for a two-airborne, one Marine and two
(additional) Army infantry division landing in North Korea with
Wonsan-Hungnam as the initial landing area. The preparations began very
openly in Japan, South Korea and the US so everyone would know, or believe,
Eisenhower was serious. I don't know if he was or this was a bluff but,
given his military background, think he was dead serious. Apparently this
was enough to get the ceasefire talks off center since a couple of months
after logistics began being established, the Chinese and North Koreans got
serious and the war ended.
Ed