Victoria Cross Winners of the Korean War
By Stephen Wynn
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About this ebook
Stephen Wynn
Stephen is a retired police officer having served with Essex Police as a constable for thirty years between 1983 and 2013. He is married to Tanya and has two sons, Luke and Ross, and a daughter, Aimee. His sons served five tours of Afghanistan between 2008 and 2013 and both were injured. This led to the publication of his first book, Two Sons in a Warzone – Afghanistan: The True Story of a Father’s Conflict, published in October 2010. Both Stephen’s grandfathers served in and survived the First World War, one with the Royal Irish Rifles, the other in the Mercantile Marine, whilst his father was a member of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps during the Second World War.When not writing Stephen can be found walking his three German Shepherd dogs with his wife Tanya, at some unearthly time of the morning, when most normal people are still fast asleep.
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Victoria Cross Winners of the Korean War - Stephen Wynn
Introduction
This book is, in the main, about four men: Lieutenant Colonel James Power Carne, DSO; Major Kenneth Muir; Lieutenant Philip Kenneth Edward Curtis, and Private William Speakman, who were soldiers in the British Army and were awarded the Victoria Cross for their actions during the Korean war, 25 June 1950 - 27 July 1953.
It will also look at the awarding of the George Cross to Lieutenant Terence Edward Waters and Fusilier Derek Godfrey Kinne. The George Cross holds an equivalent level of importance to the Victoria Cross, but is awarded to civilians and military personnel who displayed conspicuous bravery that was not carried out in the face of the enemy.
To fully tell their story I have to provide you with some background, not only about each of these six brave men, but first about how they came to be fighting in a war 5,500 miles away, in a country that many of them would not only never have heard of, but probably wouldn’t know where to find it on a map.
To achieve this, I will begin by looking at a timeframe that covers the period from May 1945 to June 1950, during the build-up to the outbreak of the war, and how and why the war started, just five years after the end of the Second World War. I will also touch on the war itself, relevant to the actions that saw each of the men awarded their medals.
Despite the Second World War having come to an end in 1945, there were numerous military conflicts which took place in the following years, as the world went through a period of readjustment. Countries and territories that had previously been ruled and occupied by other nations, wanted their freedom and independence in this big new world. There were some countries in the post war era, more commonly referred to as the Cold War, who, for want of a better word, became enslaved. In particular those who became satellite states of the Soviet Union, and were often referred to as Eastern Bloc countries. These included Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania and Yugoslavia. This not only made the Soviet Union a more powerful entity, but also acted as a security blanket to protect Mother Russia from any potential threat from the West.
Chapter One
Build up to the war
After the end of the Second World War, the Allied powers decided that the control of Korea, which had been annexed by Japan in 1910, would be shared. The move was only ever intended to be short term, prior to a return to Korean independence. The Soviet Union would take control of the north of the country above the 38th parallel, while the rest of the nation, south of that line, would be controlled by American military authorities under the command of General Douglas MacArthur.
Taking into account this was only ever intended to be for the short term, it was quite alarming to some in the political arena when not only did the Soviet Union oversee what was already in place, it also backed a Stalinist regime under Kim Il-sung, created the North Korean People’s Army, and then equipped it with Russian tanks and artillery. In the south of the country, the political situation was somewhat chaotic, as one might expect during such changes to a country’s normal way of life. This eventually led to an American-backed administration under President Syngman Rhee, who was determined to see his nation once again reunited, if not through political means, then by force if necessary. Unlike the Soviet Union’s stance in the north, however, America had trained a South Korean army to be no more than a lightly armed gendarmerie. There had been no influx of heavily armoured American battle tanks or state-of-the-art combat aircraft, just a very limited number of artillery pieces.
All that had really been achieved by the division of the country was an atmosphere of mistrust, uncertainty, and a belief by either side that a new united Korea should be based on their model. This simply raised the tension between the two halves of the country, until it came to a head on 25 June 1950, when the North Korean People’s Army crossed over the 38th parallel and began an invasion of the South. This would not have taken place without the direct intervention and approval of Joseph Stalin.
In response to the North’s unprovoked actions, the United Nations sent a mainly American force to assist South Korean forces.
Strangely enough, despite North Korea being under the control of the Soviet Union, it was Chinese forces who fought alongside the North Korean People’s Army, and by July 1953 it was estimated that the combined number of Korean and Chinese forces involved in the conflict had reached 1,200,000 men, so determined were they to overrun the South. When it came to the United Nations, they had a number of countries they could call upon to send troops to the stricken region to prevent the North from achieving their aims. Besides the United States and Britain, other countries including Australia, Canada, Columbia, France, Holland, the Philippines, and Turkey, also sent troops. It was the United States who made the largest contribution of troops and equipment with Britain second. By spring 1951 Britain’s contribution to the troop numbers of the United Nation’s forces had reached 12,000, and by 1952, the combined number of United Nations and Republic of Korea forces had reached 932,000.
The United Nations estimated that by the end of the war the total number of Koreans, both civilian and military forces, who had been killed on both sides was in the region of some 3 million people, while Chinese losses were put at around 900,000. The economic effect on the country as a whole was staggering, and there had been massive social upheaval for large parts of the civilian population. What made the situation even worse was the fact that neither side had actually won the war. The 38th parallel still divided the country.
American losses were recorded as 33,651, with more than 100,000 wounded. More than 100,000 British service personnel served during the Korean war, of whom more than 1,000 were killed. 2,674 were wounded, 179 reported missing in action and just under 1,000 taken as PoWs.
Technically, North and South Korea have remained at war ever since, although in 1991 they signed a non-aggression pact. The difference in the fortunes of the two countries has become vast. Today South Korea is a developed nation which currently has the twelfth largest economy in the world. But that was not always the case. After the end of the war in July 1953, a period of social and economic instability followed, which in 1960 led to the April Revolution that saw mass protests against the South Korean President, Syngman Rhee, that lasted for sixteen days and cost the lives of 142 civilians, who were shot dead by the police. This resulted in the downfall of the government and the resignation of President Rhee, who fled to the United States.
In 1961, there was a military coup d’etat which brought with it a period of economic and social stability, and by 1965 South Korea had developed in such a way that she was able to send a number of her well trained troops to assist South Vietnam during the Vietnam war, support which continued until the end of that war. During that same timeframe the South Korean authorities received $235,560,000 in financial aid and military procurement.
For North Korea, it was a different story altogether. Extensive bombing by the United States Air Force during the war had virtually destroyed the North’s industry. Things became so bad that the North Korean President, Kim Il-Sung, had to ask the Soviet Union for economic and industrial assistance. The Soviet government agreed to Kim’s request and began by cancelling or postponing all of North Korea’s debt. On top of this the Soviets agreed to pay £1 billion in monetary aid, which to provide some idea of perspective would, in 1953, have been worth approximately £11,500,000, which at today’s value would be somewhere in the region of £323,000,000. But this was not all in cash, it also included industrial equipment as well as consumer goods. Other member states of the Soviet Union also assisted with a combination of logistical support, technical aid and medical supplies. China also played her part in helping to transform North Korea’s situation by cancelling their war debt, as well as promising cooperation over trade deals, and sent thousands of her troops to help rebuild North Korea’s broken infrastructure. As if that wasn’t enough China also handed over ¥800 million, which at today’s value would be worth nearly £7 billion.
Chapter Two
Countries involved in the war
Although the Korean war was fundamentally a civil war between the Communist - led northern half of the country against a democratically led southern half, there was a much bigger picture to the events. In essence this was a fight between two politically held beliefs, the communism and socialism of the Soviet Union against that of Western capitalism and democracy.
The Russian led Soviet Union wanted to increase the number of Communist countries under her control, while America in particular wanted to prevent communism when and wherever she could, regardless of the fact that Korea and the United States are separated by the Pacific Ocean and a distance of some 6,410 miles.
In the case of Korea, here was a country that in essence had been a closed state, especially to European countries, until about October 1873, when Yi Ha-ung, King Gojong’s father, retired as regent. There then followed a period of instability throughout Korea, with many government officials supporting the idea of opening the country up to trade agreements with foreign powers, including France, the United Kingdom and the United States, all of whom had expressed an interest.
Throughout the early to middle 1800s there had been a number of attempts by Western countries to directly trade with Korea, all of which had been rebuffed. As early as 1832, the Lord Amherst, a vessel of the British East India Company, appeared off the north-west coast of Korea looking to trade, but her attempts were turned down. In 1845 HMS Samarang surveyed the southern coastal regions of Jeolla province and Jeju Island, although made no attempt to trade with the Koreans.
The south-west province of Chungcheong was the next part of Korea to experience a foreign ship at anchor in its coastal waters when three French vessels arrived in June 1846. On this occasion there was no attempt to seek trade, but to convey a letter of protest in relation to the persecution of Catholics throughout Korea. Two Russian vessels sailed along the country’s north-east coast in April 1854. In an unprovoked act of aggression they opened fire, killing and injuring a number of Korean civilians inland. The German explorer and adventurer Ernst Oppert, made two unsuccessful attempts to conduct trade with the Koreans in 1866, and in the same year the crew of an American vessel, the General Sherman, also made attempts to trade, which were turned down. The Americans responded by kidnapping a Korean official and taking him on board their ship before the crew opened fire on Korean officials and civilians on shore. They followed that up by coming ashore and ransacking the town, killing a number of Koreans in the process. In an attempt to leave, the General Sherman ran aground in the Taedong River; Korean forces set fire to her, killing all twenty-three members