There were plots and bloodshed in South Korean prison camps; riots in Seoul; and an angry president who refused to sit down and negotiate a peace treaty; planning instead to invade North Korea with his own troops. Never mind the US/UN forces and the armistice! When I got to my assigned unit in Korea; Bed-Check Charlie had stopped dropping grenades over the compound at night; from his single-prop plane. The Gook grenadier hoped in the darkness to hit something or somebody in this communications outfit in Bupyong. The cease-fire had stopped the thunder at the front but fighting went on after the armistice. This war -was not over. Hell broke loose in Korea-five years after World War II-when Soviet-backed North Korea invaded South Korea. As US and other UN troops rushed in to keep South Korea out of the jaws of Communist North Korea; the question on many minds was: is this the start of World War III? The Soviet Union was armed with nuclear warheads and nervous Americans built bomb shelters. 1.8 million of us were sent to Korea between 1950 and 1953 to stop the aggression. In those three years; on a peninsula between China and Japan; one-third the size of California; over 36;000 American servicemen lost their lives. The total death toll was over two million. A peace treaty was never signed. How many Americans know that our troops-some 30;000 strong-are in Korea today; facing the same enemy we did more than 50 years ago? What other armed conflict keeps producing veterans after half a century! This intense little book tells who we were and what sent us off to war. It sketches the role of a radio company; reports a chilling moment during prisoner exchange; takes a trip to the DMZ; samples first-hand accounts of GIs before the cease-fire; and speaks of the Korean people and their culture during those war-torn years. The book is illustrated with photos I took there; including rare ones found in the company dark room taken at Panmunjom during the prisoner exchange. It is dedicated to all who served and still serve in Korea and written to highlight a decisive chapter in our history; sadly almost forgotten.
#1639752 in Books The History Press 2009-06-08 2009-06-08Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x .31 x 6.00l; .95 #File Name: 1596297433224 pages
Review
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Civil War espionage; romance; and famous historical figures - all in one bookBy Jessica James; historical fiction authorThis is a well researched book that gives readers a glimpse back in time through the signers of a secret album presented to Fairfax County resident Laura Ratcliffe by Confederate General J.E.B. Stuart "as a token of his high appreciation of her patriotism; admiration of her virtues; and pledge of his lasting esteem."The album contains four poems; two written by Stuart to Laura and two he copied. It also contains 40 signatures - 26 Confederate soldiers and 14 civilians. The author has tracked down the personal history of each one and gives possible dates as to when each may have signed the album.The signers of the album will be well known to those who follow Mosby - Willie Mosby; William Chapman; William Farley; Walter Frankland; John Edmonds and Fitzhugh Lee; to name a few.This book provides a wonderful history of Fairfax County during the War Between the States; and gives a unique glimpse into the more personal side of the life of J.E.B. Stuart. I especially enjoyed the communications written by Stuart to Ratcliffe. His poems and letters are romantic and eloquent.This is a keeper that I highly recommend to anyone who enjoys reading about life during the War Between the States.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Fascinating read!By Charles V. MauroThis books provides keen insight into covert operations between soldiers and southern women during the Civil War. It describes how Southern women depended on men in society at the beginning of the war; and how the confederate soldiers came to depend on southern women during the war. Also includes the evidence to prove this change in relationaships.