This quick
guide is one of a series of publications published by the Parliamentary Library
for the commemoration of Anzac Day 2020.
The Korean War
The 70th anniversary of the act that precipitated the Korean
War falls on 25 June 2020. On that day in 1950, seven infantry divisions, an
armoured brigade and several independent regiments of the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea (DPRK) Army in the north crossed the border, known as the 38th parallel, into the
Republic of Korea (ROK) in the south capturing the capital Seoul
within the week and driving ROK forces down into the south-western corner (the
Pusan perimeter).
Background and overview
The Korean War had its roots in
the end of the Second World War. Korea had been under Japanese control since
1910 and had no existing government which could be restored to power. As a
result the United States (US) and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(USSR) agreed during August 1945 to separate the Korean
Peninsula into two administrative spheres at the 38th parallel, with the US
occupying the south and the USSR the north. A plan to hold elections and form a
unified Korean government could not be agreed and by 1947 the United Nations (UN)
became responsible for resolving the Korean ‘problem’. During 1948 the UN had
accepted that the south would have its own elected government and in August
1948 the Government of the Republic of Korea was formed with its leader President
Syngman Rhee. There was continued tension and periodic violence across the
border throughout this period.
Australia, keen to support the newly formed UN, had played a
small but important role in the years before the Korean War and at the start of
the conflict itself. Australia had been involved at the UN in attempting to
find a way to reunify the two halves of the Korean Peninsula. Australia was one
of nine members of the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea (UNTCOK)
and, after the election had taken place in the south, its successor the
United Nations Commission on Korea (UNCOK). In March 1950 the UN requested
that Australia provide two military observers (in their request they described
the climate in Korea as temperate).[1]
Australia agreed and in the period immediately before the invasion Major FSB Peach and Squadron Leader RJ Rankin
were sent to the 38th parallel to report
on the situation. They delivered a report the day before the attack that stated:
The principal impression left with the observers after the
field tour along the parallel is that the South Korean army is organised
entirely for defence, and is in no condition to carry out an attack on a large
scale against the forces of the north.[2]
The Australian observers were the only UNCOK members at the
38th parallel when the north invaded the south on 25 June 1950. As such, their
report to the UN was instrumental in proving the origin of the hostilities came
from the north, which allowed the UN to intervene.[3]
US President Harry Truman decided quickly that the US would
intervene militarily on behalf of the ROK and the UN Security Council adopted a
series of resolutions about the invasion in late June and early July 1950.
These resolutions were not vetoed by the USSR because it had boycotted the
Security Council over the latter’s refusal to recognise the communist People’s
Republic of China as the legitimate government of China and therefore as a permanent
member of the Council. UNSC
Resolution 84 passed on 7 July 1950 authorising the establishment of a
multinational force known as the United Nations Command (UNC) in South Korea,
with US leadership under a UN flag.
Australia became the second nation after the US to join the
UNC, offering the services of the Royal Australian Air Force’s (RAAF) No. 77 squadron
and the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) ships HMA Ships Shoalhaven and Bataan,
all of which were involved in the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF)
in Japan. Twenty-one nations contributed to the UNC in differing ways and
strengths.[4]
On 30 June Prime Minister Robert Menzies gave approval for
military action and moved
a motion in the House of Representatives on 6 July seeking approval of the
Government’s actions. Menzies justified Australia’s actions by invoking
Australia’s responsibilities under the UN Charter:
If there is to be a world organization
for peace there must be a world acceptance of the responsibilities to maintain
it. In one breath to speak of our allegiance to the Charter, and in the next to
ignore the resolution of the Security Council would be either hypocrisy or
cowardice, of neither of which has Australia ever been adjudged guilty.
The increase in military forces by the US, the Commonwealth
countries and others led to a second phase of the war. This involved the famous
landings at Inchon that outflanked the North Koreans and the rapid pushing back
of their forces into the northern part of the peninsula. In turn, the
intervention of large numbers of Chinese troops (the Chinese People’s
Volunteers) during October 1950 resulted in the United Nations forces being
pushed back down the peninsula, and despite the so-called Fifth Phase offensive
by the Chinese during April and May of 1951, a more static phase of the war.
Negotiations for a
ceasefire commenced in July 1951 but it took most of two years to achieve
an outcome. The armistice,
signed on 27 July 1953 by representatives of UNC and military commanders from
China and North Korea, suspended open hostilities and was only meant to be a
ceasefire until a longer term peace settlement could be reached. It also
created the infamous demilitarised zone.
Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF)
As noted above the RAAF entered the Korean War in the first
week and remained in action during the entire war.[5]
No. 77 Squadron was the first Australian unit to be involved when it flew its
first sorties on 2 July 1950. Airpower was critical in deciding the outcome of
the war. Climatic extremes, such as the freezing cold Korean winters, and the
high operational tempo (No. 77 Squadron flew over 15,000 sorties during the
course of the war) made the RAAF task particularly difficult.
No. 77 Squadron initially flew P-51 Mustangs, which were
robust and useful for ground attack activities at which the Australian pilots
were skilled. However, once the Chinese military entered the war the Mustang
proved unable to compete with the Soviet supplied MiG-15 jet fighters used by
the Chinese. In response, the Australian Government ordered 36 Gloster Meteors
during December 1950 and RAAF pilots were retrained and flew their first jet
fighter in combat.[6]
Beginning in 1951, the RAAF Nursing Service (a branch of the
RAAF since 1940) provided personnel for aeromedical evacuation flights from
Korea to Iwakuni in Japan.[7]
The nurses assisted with the evacuation of 12,000 patients until July 1956.
Royal Australian Navy (RAN)
The RAN deployed to the Korean War on 29 June 1950, four
days after the war commenced. RAN action included the landing at Inchon in September
1950, the evacuation of Chinnampo in November 1950 and HMAS Murchison’s
bombardment of enemy positions on the northern shore of the Han Estuary during
July 1951. As with the RAAF, the cold of the Korean winters added to the
challenges of the region, such as high seas, blizzards and extreme tidal
conditions. RAN ships included HMA Ships Warramunga, Murchison, Shoalhaven,
Bataan, Anzac, Tobruk, Condamine and Culgoa. HMAS Sydney with
its air group served
in Korean waters from October 1951 to January 1952, giving the RAN valuable
experience operating an aircraft carrier in conflict:
There were armed reconnaissance flights, ground attack
missions, rescue patrols, and defensive patrols around Sydney against a
potential aircraft or submarine threat. Pilots generally flew only once or
twice during the day and there was no night flying.[8]
This rate of work included 89 sorties in one day on 11
October 1951 and surviving a battering at sea from Typhoon Ruth just three days
later.
Australian Army
The Australian
Army also contributed to the defence of the ROK. Third Battalion (3RAR) was
already based in Japan and, once it had been brought up to strength, commenced
operations in early October 1950 as part of the 27th Commonwealth Brigade and
remained in Korea throughout the war. The Commonwealth Brigade advanced north
with the other UN troops, crossing the 38th parallel on 7 October and saw
serious action during 1950 against both North Korean and Chinese forces. The
latter had entered the war due to UN forces crossing into North Korean
territory and therefore getting close to the Chinese border. 3RAR undertook
battles during the mobile phase of the war at Sariwon, Yongju, Pakchon, and
Chingju. On 5 November in Pakchon
was the first time the Australians fought against a larger group of Chinese
troops and the furthest north they would get before the combined Chinese and
North Korean forces pushed the UN forces back down the peninsula.[9]
The entry of Chinese forces into the war caused grave
concern in Australia and abroad. Menzies
again addressed the House in December 1950, stating:
The entry into the contest of something like 250,000 Chinese
Communist troops has presented new and tremendous problems of a military kind.
It has, in fact, among other things, served as n timely reminder to us that
even great superiority in the air and in ground weapons can be matched by large
numerical superiority in point of trained manpower. The military problems will,
of course, be dealt with by a very distinguished military commander. It would
be difficult to run an effective campaign by committee. But I confidently
anticipate that no military decision which might have international political
implications will be made without full consultation between the governments
concerned.
Above and beyond the purely military considerations, there
are political implications in the Chinese intervention which are of great
magnitude and delicacy. I would not assist in their determination by provoking
any premature discussion about them. All I need say is that our own best
endeavours will be in the direction of isolating the Korean campaign and making
it abundantly clear to the Chinese people that the participating countries of
the United Nations have no desire to inflict injury upon Chinese lives or
property but are engaged in a military operation in which Chinese citizens can
become involved only by their own choice. For myself, I have every hope that
the meeting now proceeding between the leaders of the two great democratic
powers in the world will materially help to produce a state of affairs in
which, while the action taken by the United Nations is upheld and proceeds to
success, there may be no unnecessary spreading of the conflict of such a kind
as to involve the world in a great war, the very thought of which is detestable
to the overwhelming majority of the world’s people.
What Menzies meant by a ‘great war’ was the possibility
that the West could be drawn into a larger war with China and the USSR. Since
the latter had developed its own atomic weapons by this point this was a source
of some fear on all sides. The
USSR provided support in various ways to the North Korean and Chinese
forces but was careful not to do so in a way that might provoke direct
confrontation with the US.
Two other battalions (1RAR and 2RAR) served on rotation from
1952 to 1953, although both served to train reinforcements for 3RAR before they
were themselves sent. 3RAR fought major battles at Kapyong
during April 1951 and Maryang
San during October of the same year. The last
20 months of the war was more static and took place in tandem with ongoing
efforts to negotiate an armistice between the two sides. One notable Australian
soldier, Lieutenant-Colonel (later General) Frank Hassett compared this last
stage to the First World War:
The soldier lives underground in a hole. The earth is red and
soft and now in the rainy season becomes sticky mud. The soldier moves very
little in the mud because he may be very close to the enemy.
He surrounds himself and his mates with barbed wire which lies
over the hills of Korea like a blue mist. Extensive mine fields are everywhere.
Most of the action takes place at night.
Korea cannot be clinched by either side grabbing more of what
the soldiers call real estate.
The infanteer is almost exclusively the only soldier who gets
hit in Korea to-day and almost all Australian troops there are infanteers. However,
they are sticking it out cheerfully and will stick it out as long as they are
asked to do so.
He added that Australian troops were "keen, intelligent
and aggressive," well-equipped and lacked for nothing.[10]
Notable incidents include 1RAR’s attack against Chinese
positions at Hill
227 (Operation Blaze) and Operation
Fauna. In the days before the signing of the armistice 1RAR fought the last
action of the War at the
Hook when they were attacked by large numbers of Chinese troops.
During the course of the Korean War the army suffered 293
killed, 1,210 wounded and 24 prisoners of war.
Of the numerous battle honours won by the Australian Army in
Korea, three major honours are emblazoned on Regimental Colours: ‘Korea’ 1950–53
(1RAR, 2RAR, 3RAR), Kapyong
April 1951 (3RAR), and Maryang
San October 1951 (3RAR).
Historical perspective
For Australians, the
Korean War was more important than most realise. Firstly, it demonstrated
that despite Australia’s cultural and social links to Europe, the strategic
future of Australia was in its own geographic region of Asia. Secondly, it
reinforced the importance of Australia’s alliance with the US (negotiations for
the ANZUS Treaty
took place during the early stages of the Korean War and the Treaty was signed in
1951). In one sense the Korean War set the stage for Australia’s subsequent
involvement in the conflicts in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan.
To the modern eye, Australians who served in Korea look not
dissimilar to those who served in the Second World War and indeed many of them
had done exactly that. In reality, the Korean War served as a link between
Australians who had served in the earlier war and those who served in later
conflicts—they certainly shared the difficulties, hardship and sacrifice of
both. As noted by historian Michael Evans:
It was both an epilogue to the Second World War and a
prologue to the new age of the Cold War, as the conflict reflected the old and
the new ... The actual fighting in Korea seemed to recall not only the Second
World War but also the First World War ... [Yet] the Korean War was the
birthplace of the doctrine of limited war and was fought against a background
of atomic weapons, new jet aircraft and new psychological warfare techniques.[11]
To most Australians the war was far from the national crisis
that had accompanied the direct attacks of the Second World War or the high
casualty rates of the First World War. The war did not excite the domestic
opposition that accompanied the Vietnam War and, particularly once the more
static phase of the war set in, received less media coverage as well. Soldiers
returning from Korea gave a forewarning of the conditions that would once again
occur with Vietnam, as soldiers returned home from the battlefront to a largely
unknowing and sometimes seemingly uncaring public.
As noted by one veteran:
No one knew I was home from Korea. ‘What are those medals
for?’—they just didn’t have a clue, really.[12]
After the signing of the armistice, Australian forces were
gradually reduced, with 3RAR withdrawing during 1954 and 1RAR leaving in April
of the following year. A small number of Australian personnel remained in Korea
until 1957.[13]
Between 29 June 1950 and 27 July 1953, some 17,000 Australian
military personnel served in the defence of the ROK. In total, Australia
suffered 340 killed, 1,216 wounded and 29 prisoners of
war.
Of the 340 listed as having been killed, 43 were listed as missing in action.