The Riverside Press-Enterprise
REMEMBERING THE FORGOTTEN
Seventy years ago, U.S. troops were engaged in the Korean conflict. It has been called the forgotten war but is making headlines lately.
A look at the conflict
Korea was first divided after Japan was defeated in 1945. The Soviets protected the North and the American allies the South. The two sides failed to agree on one governmental system for the whole region, and the two nations have become vastly different.
On June 25, 1950, the Soviet-supported North Koreans crossed the 38th parallel and attacked the pro-western Republic of Korea. American troops entered the war on South Korea's behalf to prevent what was seen as a spread of communism. When the war came to an end three years later, 5 million soldiers and civilians had lost their lives. The Korean Peninsula remains divided today.
China and the Soviet Union
After the partition of the Korean Peninsula in 1945, the Soviet Union was instrumental in purging its zone of political dissidents and supporting the ruling Communist Party. The USSR backed communist leader Kim Il-sung's 1950 invasion of South Korea. When the invasion was beaten back, China sent a formidable expeditionary force into Korea, first to drive the U.N. Command out of the north.
Within three months of the initial attack, North Korea engulfed nearly the entire Korean peninsula. The U.S. called for a meeting of the United Nations Security Council and condemned the invasion. In September that same year, the U.N. sent forces composed of troops from 15 nations to the peninsula to stop the communist advance. The forces, led by U.S. Gen. Douglas Macarthur, pushed north back to Seoul near the 38th parallel. Despite warnings from China, the U.N. forces continued north, nearly reaching the Yalu River, which boarders China and the Korean peninsula. China reacted by sending troops into North
Korea, which quickly forced Macarthur's troops to retreat behind the 38th parallel.
Jet warfare
By the end of hostilities, F-86 Sabre pilots had shot down 792 Soviet Migs, with a kill ratio of about 8:1. More than 5,500 F-86 fighters were built in the U.S. and Canada. Air forces of 20 other nations flew the F-86.
Did we declare war?
Technically no. The U.S. military led the UNS' expeditionary force. The UN itself cannot declare war. Consequently, the conflict in Korea did not technically constitute a war.
More than 30,000 U.S. troops died and more than 100,000 were wounded.