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THE KOREAN WAR
NIGEL THOMAS, PETER ABBOTT,
MIKE CHAPPELL,EDITOR: MARTIN WINDROW
ANETTA S174
THE KOREAN WAR
1950-53
Text by
NIGEL THOMAS
and PETER ABBOTT
Colour plates by
MIKE CHAPPELLFirst published in Great Britain in 1986
by Osprey, an imprint of Reed Consumer Books Limited
Michelin House, 81 Fulham Road
London SW3 6RB
and Auckland, Melbourne, Singapore and Toronto
© 1986 Reed International Books Limited
Reprinted 1986, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993
All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the
purpose of private study, research, criticism or review,
as permitted under the Copyright Designs and Patents
Act, 1988, no part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical,
chemical, mechanical, optical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of
the copyright owner. Enquiries should be addressed to
the Publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Nigel Thomas and Abbott, Peter
‘The Korean War 1950-53.—(Men-at-arms seri
1, Korean War, 1950-1953
I. Title II. Thomas, Nigel. 1946
951.9'042 DSg18
ILL, Series
ISBN o.
5045-685-1
Filmset in Great Britain
Printed through Bookbuilders Lid, Hong Kong
Acknowledgements
A work such as this would not have been possible
without the generous help of others. Special thanks
are due to Mike Cox, Shelby Stanton, Y. C. Choe
(Korean Veterans’ Association), Lee Russell, and Gol.
Amott (DLI, Ret.). We would also like to thank
Lt.Col. (Ret.) L. Turcott (Royal 22° Regt.), Ted
Zuber, W. A. B. Douglass (Canadian Defense HQ),
John Scurr, P. J. Burness (Australan War Memorial),
Shaun Bland, Lt.Col. H. L. Zwitzer (Royal Neth-
erlands Army), Pierre ©. T. Verheye, J. Ludriksen
(R.No.A.F,), Capt, Togas (Hellenic Navy), Col. M.
S. Okcay (Turkish Army), Office of Military History
USMG, J. Anker Nielsen (Royal Danish Embassy)
and Capt. H. Stradiot (Belgian Navy).The Korean War 1950-53
Lhe Course of the Har
Korean sula, miles
‘The peni 450
averaging 160 miles wide, is about the size of Great
Britain or Southern California, Some 3,000 small
islands ring the coast; and the Yalu and Tumen
Rivers separate it from the People’s Republic of
China and the Soviet Union. ‘The countryside is
mostly forest, and the Tacback mountain range
forms a central spine close to the east coast. In
summer there is blinding heat, choking dust and
monsoon thunderstorms; in winter, bitter cold.
Korea, the isolated ‘hermit kingdom’ inhabited
by a Buddhist people related racially to the
Japanese and Manchurians, was occupied by
Imperial Japan after August 1910. In 1943 the
Allies promised Korea independence; and in
August 1945 Japanese troops north of the
arbitrarily chosen 38th Parallel surrendered to
Soviet occupying forces, and those in the south to
the US Army. Thereafter the Soviet-American
‘Cold War’ intensified; in August 1948 President
Syngman Rhee proclaimed the ‘Republic of Korea’
(‘ROK’) on behalf of 21 million South Koreans,
long and
followed in September by the declaration of
President Kim Il-Sung’s Communist ‘Democratic
Republic of Korea’ for nine million North Koreans.
Both states claimed sole legitimacy over all Korea,
leading to considerable mutual suspicion and
border tension
At 4.am (Korean time) on Sunday 25 June 1950
powerful North Korean forces invaded South
Korea, advancing down the Uijongbu Corridor,
the historic invasion route, towards the Southern
capital of Seoul, in a determined attempt to reunite
Korea by force. ROK troops resisted bravely, but
were crushed by overwhelming Northern superi-
ority. Later that day the United Nations Security
Council condemned the aggression, and on 7 July
appointed US General of the Army Douglas
MacArthur to command UN forces which would be
sent to save South Korea. The Soviet Union, which
ings, missed the
had been boycotting UN mee
chance to veto the decision.
Meanwhile, the North Koreans advanced relent-
lessly southwards; a mob of refugees and disorien-
tated ROK troops fled before them, choking roads
already turned into quagmires by the monsoon. On
27 June the invaders took Seoul; on 5 July they
‘The cotton summer uniform of a North Korean KPA corporal
modelled by a Japanese employee of the US Army in July 1953:
‘compare with Plate Ax, This is the earlier style, with two
pockets and wrist bands. The detachable shoulder boards are
blive green, piped red, with gold bars. Note the interesting
canvas-and-leather personal equipment. (US Army via Lee
Russell)brushed aside a token force of US troops at Osan;
and on 20 July they crushed a more determined
stand at Taejon. US reinforcements were now
pouring in and, with ROK troops, they established
a 200-mile defensive line in south-eastern Korea,
around the port of Pusan
The Battle of the Pusan Perimeter began on 1
Augustas US forces (now designated the 8th Army)
and ROK troops defended an area 80 miles long
by 50 miles wide. The North Koreans mistakenly
deployed their forces along the entire perimeter
instead of concentrating them for a definitive
breakthrough. Although they did make some
advances, they were always repulsed. On 28 August
British troops—the first of many UN contingents-
arrived in the perimeter; North Korean pressure
cased as UN aircraft bombed their supply-lines, and
local peasants withheld food. By 14 September the
UN had won the battle, and the initiative now lay
with the 8th Army.
On 15 September 1950 a US amphibious force
from Japan stormed ashore on the west coast at
Inchon, and 11 days later recaptured Scoul against
heavy North Korean resistance. Meanwhile, on 16
September, US/ROK troops burst out of the Pusan
Perimeter in several directions; a mobile force
stormed north-westwards and linked up with US
forces at Seoul on the 26th, thereby trapping
considerable numbers of enemy troops in the South.
By 30 September organised North Korean re-
sistance in South Korea was practically over. Now
the UN, after initial hesitation, mandated
MacArthur to invade North Korea. UN troops
advanced in the west, capturing the North Korean
—
Chogadionya none
ka
a
\
capital of P'yongyang on 19 October, while ROK
forces pressed forward in the east, actually reaching
the Chinese border on 26 October. Just as North
Korea, her territory now reduced to frontier
enclaves in the north-west and north-east, seemed
doomed, Chinese forces intervened on 14 October;
they counter-attacked strongly in the north-west,
forcing the UN advance to a standstill as the cruel
North Korean winter began to break.
On 24 November MacArthur launched the final
offensive against North Korea; but the very next
day his central front collapsed, as massive Chinese
forces broke through and advanced southwards
Now UN forces began a fighting retreat through
blizzards and across frozen rivers out of North
Korea; and it was not until mid-December that
they were able to organise a defensive line roughly
on the 38th Parallel, where they braced themselves
for the expected offensive by Chinese and new
North Korean divisions. Meanwhile, UN troops
marooned in north-eastern North Korea executed a
classic fighting retreat to the coast at Hingnam,
whence the US Navy evacuated them to South
Korea.
The end of 1950 saw the conclusion of this first
phase of the war: mobile warfare characterised by
spectacular offensives alternating with apparently
hopeless retreats. Chinese involvement meant that
outright victory was now unattainable for either
side, but the prospect of defeat was also unthink-
able. As the vast manpower of China confronted the
almost unlimited firepower of the United Nations,
the conflict degenerated into a static war of attrition
centred on the 38th Parallel.the
At dawn on New Year's Day 1951
Communists attacked all along the front, forcing
UN troops back. Scoul was abandoned once more:
but on 15 January the front stabilised, in appalling
snowstorms, 40 miles south of the capital. On 25
January UN forces began a cautious advance;
repelled a Chinese counter-attack on 11 February;
and pushed forward relentlessly until 21 April, as
exhausted Communist units retreated before them.
By late February the thaw had transformed the
of mud, but on 15 March
ad the border into
countryside into a se
‘oul was retaken once again, :
North Korea was crossed. Then, on 11 April,
President Truman abruptly dismissed Gen.
MacArthur over ‘political differences’ and appoin-
ted Gen, Ridgway as UN/ROK Commander.
On 22 April 1951 the Communists began their
‘First Spring Offensive’, breaching UN lines in the
central sector, and forcing a retreat to a new line
north of Seoul. By 30 April the attack was spent,
and the UN edged forward before taking the full
force of the ‘Second Spring Offensive’ on 16 May,
which again ruptured the central sector, but which
was contained after a limited retreat in the east.
Now the UN advanced, determined on astrategy to
carry the battle into North Korea, but not to
attempt another full-scale invasion. By 10 June they
had established a line 20 miles above the 38th
Parallel, astride the crucial enemy supply and
communications centre called the ‘Iron Triangle’.
On 23 June Jacob Malik, the Soviet Deputy
Foreign Minister, proposed a ceasefire; and on 10
July talks opened at Kaesong, in ‘No Man’s Land”
just north of Seoul. In anticipation of an imminent
agreement, fighting was restricted to patrolling and
local skirmishes; but when talks broke down at the
end of August the UN recommenced the offensive,
making valuable gains before discussions resumed
on 25 October at Panmunjom, near Kaesong.
In November 1951 the war reached its third and
final phase—stalemate. While talks continued the
UN ceased active operations and maintained a
static defence line with minimum casualties, while
continuing air attacks on enemy communications
and naval bombardment of North Korean ports.
On the ground, action was limited to patrolling,
gimental-size engagements, and artillery bar-
rages. This continued until May 1952, when the
Chinese became more aggressive, escalating their
own artillery fire and in June launching an
tral sector.
unsuccessful attempt to breach the ce
By July 1952 both armies had constructed such
strong defensive lines that
undertake a major offensiv
unacceptable losses. The Communists therefore
sent infantry supported by artillery and tanks
against tactically important hills along the UN line
in the so-called ‘Battle of the Outposts’. These
attacks often succeeded initially, but the UN
usually retook the hills, although not without
ignificant losses. UN and ROK forces retaliated
with surprise raids, and these skirmishes intensified
into heavy fighting until the onset of winter brought,
them to a halt. In March 1953 the ‘Final Battles’
commenced with a Chinese attack in the west,
followed by heavy pressure on the central sector in
June and July, forcing UN lines back three miles.
neither side could
without incurring
‘Socialist realism’ in war art: a North Korean painting
showing ‘valiant KPA soldiers’ in hand-to-hand combat with
Sbrutal imperialists’ of the US 7th Division.Finally, on 27 July 1953, the long-awaited
Armistice was signed at Panmunjom, and the three-
year-old Korean War was over.
‘The Armistice left the Western democracies with
a sense of anticlimax. North and South Korea were
utterly devastated, totally dependent on the USSR
or the United economic survival.
Casualties had been unexpectedly high: 84,000
N/ROK, 140,000 Chinese and North Koreans,
and two million civilians, all dead. And yet the war
had brought real achievements and changes. ‘The
People’s Republic of China took its place as a world
States for
power, China and the other Communist states were
exposed as aggressive, ruthless, formidable, but not
invincible, opponents, breeding in the West a sense
of insecurity that led to a strengthening of the
NATO alliance (and a reliance on the deterrent
effect of nuclear weapons which many believe to be
excessive).
South Korean independence had been success-
fully defended; but this achievement, and the
heroism and sacrifice of the UN/ROK forces, now
seem to pale before the shining triumphs of the
Second World War and the stark tragedy of
Vietnam. This continuing sense of anticlimax is
preserved today at Panmunjom where, 22 years
after the Armistice, the opposing sides still argue
about the agenda of the fature Peace Conference.
North Korea
One of the guerrilla leaders opposing the 1931
Japanese invasion of China was the young Korean
Communist Kim Il-Sung (formerly Kim Sung
Chu), who in 1930 had formed the Korean People’s
Revolutionary Army in China. On 25 April 1932
this combined with other nationalist groups in the
Anti-Japanese Guerrilla Amy operating on the
Manchuria-Korea border. Captured in 1940, Kim
escaped to the Soviet Union in 1941, returning in
1945 as a Soviet Army Major to the Soviet Zone of
Korea (already under local nationalist control). By
February 1946 Kim and his 150,000-strong
People’s Militia had taken power; and in Septem-
ber 1948 he became President of the new
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
The KPA—Korean People’s Army (Cho-sin In-
Lt.Gen. Nam Il (centre) leading the delegation of North Korean
and Chinese generals at the Armistice Talks in July 19521 of
Plate Ag for general characteristics of KPA officers uniform,
As ‘volunteers’ the green-clad Chinese follows normal P.L.A.
practice in Korea in wearing no military insignia.
Min Kun)—was established on 8 February 1948
from former guerrilla units and the Korean
Volunteer Corps—Korean Communists in the
Chinese People’s Liberation Army. By December
1948 Soviet troops had officially left, but ‘advisers’
remained; while the Maoist guerrilla model was
rejected in favour of Soviet military organisation,
subversion and border raids continued against
South Kor
In June 1950 the 223,080-strong KPA was
organised into ten Infantry Divisions, each with
three three-battalion regiments, an artillery regi-
ment (three 12-gun battalions), a self-propelled gun
battalion (12 SU-76s) and services, totalling 12,092
men, Some 102,000 served in other units. The KPA
order of battle was:
1st Div. (HQ Sinmak) . .
(one regt. ex-PLA)
end Div. (HQ Wonsan) ... 4, 6,1
jrd Guards Div. (HQ.Wonsan) ... 7
4th Div. (HQ Changnyon)
(one regt. ex-PLA)
5th Div. (HQ Namhung) .
(ex-PLA 164th Div.)
6th Div. (HQ Sariwon) .. .
(ex-PLA 166th Div.)
7th Div. (HQ Hagju) ... 1, 2,3 InfRegts. (ex-PLA
139, 140, 141, 156 Div.) L
20, 22, 24 InfRegws.
7 InfRegts.
8,9 Inf Regts.
8 Inf.Regts.
0, 11, 12 InfRegts
14, 15 InfRegts.|
=a)
roth Div. (HQ Unsanni) . . . 25, 27, 29 InfRegts.
(formed March 1950)
13th Div. (HQ Chonju) . .
(formed June 1950)
15th Div. (HQ Yongdaeri)
(formed March 1950)
105th Armd.Bde. . . . 107, 109, 203 Regts. 206
Mech.Inf. (each with 4o T-34/85 tanks)
19, 21, 23 InfRegts
45-48, 50 InfRegts
Other units were the 122 mm Artillery Regt.
(1,300 men); Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regts. (1,200);
603rd Motorcycle Reconnaissance Regt. (3,500);
the Engineer Brigade (2,500); Signal Regt. (1,000);
Ist and end Military Academies (4,000); Guerrilla
and Commando Forces (2,500); Internal Security
(34,000); and other forces (15,700). There was also
a Navy (13,700), Air Force (2,000) and Marines
(9,000). The Ministry of the Interior controlled the
19,000-strong Border Constabulary (Bo An Dae)
with five brigades (1-3, 5, 7) each with six to seven
battalions, formed from Koreans originally living in
the Soviet Union.
‘The KPA commander was Gen. Choi Yung Kun
under the Supreme Commander, Field Marshal
Kim Il-Sung. KPA generals were battle-hardened
China veterans, skilled in Soviet-style mobile
leading well-armed, disciplined and
ated troops who were initially more than a
match for the lightly-armed South Korea
For the invasion, seven combat-ready divisions
were grouped into a ‘Front’ (equivalent to a
Western Army) under Gen. Kim Chack, control-
ling two ‘Armies’ (Army Corps): rst Army (1st, 3rd,
4th, 6th Divs. rosth Armd.Bde.), and 2nd Army
(ond, 5th, 7th Divs.). 1st Army swiftly overran the
warfare
moti
exposed Ongjin Peninsula and sent 3rd and 4th
Divs. and 105th Bde. to occupy Seoul; while and
Army advanced in the cast, reinforced by 886th
Commando and 549th Marine units, and 766th
Commando unit landed on the coast behind ROK
lines.
Afier the fall of Seoul the formations were
reorganised. grd and 4th Divs. each received the
honour-title ‘Scoul Division’, and roth Brigade
became the 105th ‘Seoul’ Armoured Division,
adding the 3o8th SPG Bn. to its strength. On 2 July
7th Div. was redesignated 12th ‘Antung’ Div.; 7th
Border Bde. was expanded to become the new 7th
Div.; 8th Div. was activated; gth Div. (rst-grd
Border Regts.) was raised from 3rd Border Bde.,
and roth, 13th and 15th Divs. were mobilised
When the seemingly irresistible KPA was finally
stopped on the Pusan Perimeter, time began to
work against the North Koreans; their over-
stretched supply-lines were vulnerable, and their
best units were committed on the Perimeter, leaving
their homeland dangerously exposed. The 1st Army
in the west (24th, 6th, 7th, gth, roth, 105th Divs.)
and 2nd Army in the north (1st, 5th, 8th, 12th,
13th, 15th Divs.) battered the UN lines, but by mid-
September their offensive had run out of steam.
‘The oth Div. rushed from Pusan to join the 18th
Div. and 549th Marines in opposing the Inchon
landing; but Seoul soon fell, cutting off supplies to
the south. The 1st Army was smashed by US Divs.
advancing westwards, while 2nd Army managed to
retreat northwards before collapsing. Some units
jued to operate as guerrillas in northern South
Korea; and 30,000 demoralised stragglers fled into
North Korea with US/ROK forces in hot pursuit. A
7
conWeary ROK troops—note extreme youth of soldier at left
centre—making their way into British lines after the Chinese
breakthrough in the offensive of late 1950. See Plate B,
(Imperial War Museum)
temporary defensive line was established to cover
P’yongyang with seven divisions including some
newly designated formations (gth, 14th, 17th, 18th,
gist, 32nd, 42nd and one other), while three (1st,
24gth, and one other) fought in the east; but on 19
October the capital fell, and Kim Il-Sung fled to
Sinuiju on the Yalu. The KPA had lost 335,000
men, and the survivors were sheltering on the
Chinese border
Now the Chinese PLA intervened to save North
Korea. A Combined Headquarters was established
at Mukden, Manchuria, with Kim Il-Sung
nominal Commander-in-Chief but with the Chin-
ese holding the real power. The KPA was
re-organised with amazing speed, and by early
December there were four armies: in the west 1st
Army (105th Armd., 17th, 47th Divs.) and 5th
Army (3rd, 4th 7th, gth 42nd); and in the east ond
Army (2nd, 6th, 10th, 31st Divs.) and grd Army
(8th, 18th). Appearances were deceptive, however,
for 1st Army, with only 19,800 men, was equivalent
to a division. As the rebuilt KPA pushed
southwards with the Chinese, 20,000 former and
8
as
Army troops operated behind UN lines, disrupting
the UN retreat. By the end of 1950 all North Korea
had returned to Communist control.
In the 1951 New Year offensive 1st Army (8th,
r7th Mech., 47th Divs.) and 5th Army (6th, 7th,
rth, 32nd, 43rd) helped retake Seoul; but the main
effort was in the east, opposing less formidable
ROK forces. grd Army (1st, grd, 5th Divs.) stayed
in reserve, but end Army (2nd, 3rd, gth, roth, 27th,
gist) and rath Div. broke through, infiltrating
guerrillas behind UN lines. roth Div. penetrated
deep into South Korea, and in March, under
constant attack by US Marines, staged an epic
fighting retreat back to KPA lines, In the face of the
UN counter-attack, however, 1st Army abandoned
Seoul, and the other armies also suffered heavily.
In the two 1951 Spring Offensives rst Army
, but the and,
grd and 5th Armies made little progress against
ROK forces. In May 6th Army and 7th Army were
hastily organised to defend P’yongyang and
Wonsan respectively; but the expected UN
offensive never materialised, and in July Lt.Gen.
Nam I], the KPA Commander and a former Soviet
citizen, opened Armistice talks.
Stalemate set in, and Scoul now
permanenily unattainable; so 1st Army (8th, th,
advanced with the Chinese in the w
seemed47th Divs.) transferred in December 1951 to join
and Army (2nd, 13th, 27th) and grd Army (1st,
15th, 45th) in the east. Meanwhile 4th Army (4th,
ath, 105th Armd, Divs., 26th Bde.), 5th Army (6th,
rath, 32nd), 6th Army (gth, 17th Mech., 18th,
agrd) and 7th Army (3rd, 24th, 37th, 46th Divs.,
63rd Bde.) remained in reserve behind the line. The
KPA was short of manpower, and war-weary; butit
continued to patrol, mount local probing attacks,
and infiltrate guerrillas. The July 1953 Order of
Battle was:
ast Army:
8th Div. . . . 81, 82, 83 Inf.Regts.
a7th Div... . 113, 123, 124 InfRegts.
and Army:
and Div... . 4,6, 17 InfRegts.
1gth Div. . . . 19, 21, 2g, InfRegts.
a7th Div... 172, 173, 174 Inf.Regts.
agth Bde
‘grd Army:
. 3. 14, InfRegts.
45, 48, 50 InfRegts.
70, 71, 76 Inf Regts.
8, 90, 91 InfRegis.
ath Army.
gth Div... . 5, 18, 29 InfRegts.
5th Div... . 10, 11, 12 InfRegts.
roth Div... . 25, 27, 33 InfRegts.
th Army.
6th Div... . 1, 13, 15 InfRegts
2th Di 30, 31, 32 InfRegts.
46th Div. . . . 158, 159, 160 Inf-Regts.
goth, 22nd and 25th Bdes.
qth Army:
grd Div... . 7, 8, 9 InfReg
7th Div... . 51, 53, 54 InfRegts.
gth Div. . . . 85, 86, 87 InfRegts.
Also 17th Div. (8, 28 and an unidentified
InRegt.), 21st, 23rd, 26th Bdes., 16th AA Div. (19,
20, 23, 33: 34, 36, 37 AA Regts.), four AA regis. (21,
24, 32, 38), seven tanks regts. (104, 105, 106, 107,
109, 206 and 208), two artillery regts. (29, 30) and
18 and 21 mortar regiments.
The North Korean soldier in captivity showed
the same tenacity as in the field. Most PoWs, more
than 100,000, were held at Koje-do (Koje Island)
near Pusan, and in June 1952 they staged riots
which were eventually suppressed only by the
of US. infantry and paratroops.
intervention
Infantry of the ROK gth Division, well equipped by the USA
(mostly with Mq3 fatigues, in this case), assemble for an
assault in 1953. The improvement in appearance since 1950 is
noticeable. (US Army)
Activity at the front, however, remained low-key,
although KPA units did support the June 1953,
offensive by making marginal gains against ROK
forces before the July Armistice.
With the Armistice, Kim Il-Sung’s dreams of a
united Communist Korea evaporated. North
Korea was in ruins, its southern border areas
shrunk, one million civilians dead, and the mighty
KPA crippled by the loss of 320,000 men. But Kim
has survived to this day. His army is now the fifth,
an impossible burden for such
a relatively small country, comprising 520,000
soldiers, 23,000 marines, 32,600
airmen, 40,000 Border Constabulary and almost
three million Workers’ Militia. These aggressive
troops still line the southern border, raid South
Korean offshore islands, infiltrate gue
labyrinthine tunnels under the Armistice Line, and
assault UN officials at Panmunjom.
largest in the world
25,000 sailors,
South Korea
During the Japanese occupation Korean nation-
alism was brutally suppressed, and Koreans were
conscripted into the Japanese forces. Politicans such
as Dr Syngman Rhee operated governments-in-
exile in Nationalist China and the United States,
and returned to South Korea after 8 September
1945, when US troops accepted the Japanese
9‘A variety of fatigue clothing (cf, Plates B and C) can be made
‘out in this group photo of Col. Walter B. Richardson, CO of
Camp 1 on Roje-Do, posing with ROK officers, They are (lef to
Fight) two Hiearenant-colonels, a colonel, licutenant-colonel
and a major. Note ROK collar rank insignia; and (left and
centre) US-atyle green ‘combat leader’ loops worn on the
shoulder straps by the battalion commander and regimental
commander. Goll Richardsgn wars, the imgnin ot he
Previous posting-the znd Division's "Indian Hendon
Fight shoulder. The picture was taken in August 1953. (US
‘Army via Lee Russell)
surrender and established a temporary military
government. The Korean Constabulary was form-
ed from ex-Japanese Army veterans, and on 15
January 1946 the first battalion-size regiment was
ready. On 15 August 1948 Rhee became president
of an independent Republic of Korea and the
15,000-strong Constabulary became the ROK
Army (Tae-Han Min-Guk Yuk-Kun). In May/June
1948 the six Constabulary Brigades (1st-3rd and
5th-7th: after 1948 the locally unlucky number ‘
was avoided by the South, but not the North
Koreans) became divisions, and the 8th and
Capital Security Command were added. By 1949
the army had expanded to 60,000 men, by dint of
massive United States aid, and was kept. busy
preventing North Korcan border raids and internal
subversion.
In June 1950 the 98,000-strong ROK Army
under Maj. Gen. Chae Pyongdok had seven weak
infantry divisions and the Capital Secur
mand (after 5 July the ‘Capitol Division’). Each
division should have had three three-battalion
regiments (each of 2,938 men); a_ battalion
comprised a heavy weapons company (with one
mortar and two heavy machine gun platoons) and
three rifle companies, each rifle company having
three rifle platoons and a weapons platoon with a
10
mortar and a light machine gun squad, In reality,
most divisions had only two two-battalion. re
ments. There should have been divisional services,
tank company and an artillery battalion (15,
x 105 mm light howitzers in three batteries); but
there were only three artillery battalions in the
entire army supporting the 7th and 8th Divs. and
the élite 17th Independent Regiment. The Capital
Security Command was a parade unit, with the
dismounted Cavalry Regt. acting as Honour
Guard, but in wartime it performed well. There
were no tanks, heavy mortars, mines, medium
artillery or recoilless rifles; little ammunition; and
only 27 M8 armoured cars in the 1st Cavalry
Regiment. Only ist, 6th, 7th and Capitol Divs.
were at full strength (10,948 men), and they,
together with the 8th Div, were the best units. There
was also the élite Marine Corps (KMC) founded
April 1949, comprising the 1st Regt. (1st-grd Bn:
and the independent 5th Bn., modelled on the US
Marine Corps. The ROK Coastguard and Air
Force were insignificant; but the National Police
provided Internal Sccurity Battalions to fight
guerrillas. ROK soldiers were tough and cour-
ageous, and were often likened to the Gurkhas; but
they were inexperienced, and the senior officers
were too young and rarely qualified to command
above battalion level.
ROK troops fought tenaciously against the
initial North Korean invasion, but were no match
anani
for superior weapons, and were soon in full retreat.
The 17th Regt, isolated on the Ongjin Peninsula,
was evacuated by sea, abandoning its precious
supporting artillery. The ist, and, grd, 5th, 7th and
Capitol Divs. withdrew south after the fall of Seoul,
and the 6th and 8th retreated in the east. Some
44,000 men, almost half the army, were trapped
north of the Han River when its bridges were
prematurely demolished, and their units disinte-
grated. On 14 July, in desperation President Rhee
placed all ROK troops (now under Lt.Gen. Chung
Tl Kwon) under the American Gen. Walker. After
an unsuccessful stand at Taejon with the US 24th
Diy. the shattered remnants of the ROK Army
reached the northern Pusan Perimeter. There, on
24 July, the end, 5th and 7th Divs. were disbanded;
8th and Capitol formed 1 Corps; 1st and 6th, IT
Corps; and 3rd guarded Army Headquarters.
‘These five remaining divisions clung desperatelyto the northern perimeter throughout August 1950.
I Corps was under intense pressure along the coast,
and had to withdraw, evacuating the marooned 3rd
Div. by sea; but the line held. In the west, Il Corps
fought alongside the US 1st Cav.Div. to hold Taegu
insome of the worst fighting of the war. Meanwhile,
7th Div. was reactivated, and ROK conscripts were
temporarily integrated into United States and
British units as auxiliaries.
‘The four KMC battalions fought at Inchon and
Seoul, and earned a fearsome reputation as
streetfighters. I Corps (grd and Capitol Divs.,
KMAG) sped from Pusan up the east coast; 11
Corps (6th, 7th, 8th) pushed through the central
mountains; and 1st Div. joined US I Corps at Seoul
By 10 October I Corps had reached Wonsan en route
for Hingnam. U1 Corps (formed & October)
remained in South Korea on security duties with
ith Division (also formed in October) and 5th
Division. In that same month the st Anti-Guerrilla
Group (1st-grd, 5th-7th Bns.) was formed. On 19
October 1st Div. took P'yongyang, and joined TT
Corps further north. On 24 October 7th Regt. (6th
Div.) reached the Yalu River; but the next day this
division was smashed by an overwhelming Chinese
attack, and only the arrival of 7th Div. prevented
the total collapse of II Corps and stabilised the line.
By 24 November Capitol Div. had reached
Chongjin, 60 miles from the Soviet border; but on
the next day the Chinese, taking advantage of the
low firepower of ROK divisions and the primitive
fear the Chinese inspired among Koreans, attacked
11 Corps again. The corps cracked, necessitating a
general 8th Army retreat to the 38th Parallel
Meanwhile the exposed Capitol and 3rd Divs. fell
back to Songjin and Hiingnam respectively, and
were evacuated to South Korea.
By mid-December 1950 1st Div. (US T Corps)
was manning the line in the west; in the centre, IIT
Corps (2nd Div. reformed 7th November, 5th and
11th Divs.); then the weakened II Corps (6th, 7th,
8th Divs.); and on the coast I Corps (9th Div.,
formed 25 October; 3rd, Capitol Divs.). When the
1951 New Year offensive struck, 6th Div. was
promptly attached to US IX Corps, and I Corps
was disbanded. On 2 January and, 5th and 8th
Diys. joined US X Corps, which took over most of
the vulnerable central sector from TIT Corps (now
with 7th and 11th Divs.). In the UN retreat and and
‘The commander of the US 1st Marine Division, Maj.Gen.
Oliver P. Smith (left, in the Marines’ characteristic HBT
sutilities’ and camouflaged helmet cover), talks to US X Corps
commander Maj.Gen. Edward M. Almond (right, in M43
fatigues). Photographed at Seoul in September 1950, Smith
would within two months be leading the famous fighting
retreat of his division from Chosin Reservoir. Just visible at
far right is tat Marine Air Wing commander Maj.Gen, Field
Harris, whose Corsair squadrons provided valuable support.
(usmc)
gth Divs, virtually distintegrated, and Communist
troops poured through gaps in ROK lines. In the
January UN counter-offensive III Corps had
difficulty keeping up; and, on 11 February north of
Hocngsan, the 3rd (with 1st KMG Regt. attached),
5th and 8th Divs, took the brunt ofa heavy Chinese
attack, which destroyed the 8th Div. (it later
reformed). However, by mid-April 1951 I and IIT
Corps were safely in position on ‘Line Utah’ just
inside North Korea.
In the 1951 First Spring Offensive the Chinese
concentrated their attack on the st and 6th Divs. in
the west, and both formations fell back; but a
determined stand by 5th KMC Bn, on the Kimpo
Peninsula prevented an attack on Seoul. Gen, Van
Fleet moved 2nd Div. to join the 6th in US IX
Corps, leaving US X Corps with 5th and 7th Divs
In the Second Spring Offensive these last two
divisions and III Corps all collapsed, and even I
Corps retreated; but by 20 May the line had
stabilised. Now III Corps was disbanded, leaving
only I Corps (rd, 11th, Capitol Divs.) in the line. T
Corps subsequently attacked, together with 5th,
7th, 8th and gth Divs., now all in US X Corps.
11Despite catastrophic setbacks the ROK Army, now
under Maj.Gen, Yi Chongchan, still fielded ten
visions; and in August. 195
Koreans, the largest UNG co
arms.
‘The ROK Army took advantage of the stalemate
period to build up its forces. Four 1
105 mm Artillery Battalions, authorised in Septem-
her 1951, ensured that by mid-1952 ROK divisions
at last had their own organic artillery. There were
also ten Field Artillery Groups (1st-3rd, 5th—1 1th),
gent, were under
mm and six
cach with two 105 mm_ battalions; and 11
Independent Field Artillery Bns. (88th-ogrd.
agth goth. Other units included cight’ Tank
Companies (51st-5grd, 55th-ggth); 13 Security
Bns. (1st-grd, 5th—1gth, 15th) on anti-guerrilla
duties; five Security Guard Bns. (31st-33rd, 35th,
36th) guarding PoW camps; and Korean Service
Corps Regis. (each with four battalions) on
labouring duties with UN units. On 1 May 1952 the
order of battle at the front was: US I Corps (1st
Diy.); US 1X Corps (2nd, gth); a re-formed II
Corps (3rd, 6th, Capitol); US X Corps (7th, 8th)
and I Corps (5th, 11th)
‘The revitalised army, now under Lt.Gen. Paik
Sun Yup, performed very effectively in the 1952
‘Outpost’ battles, and could now be trusted with
three-quarters of the line. More units were raised
rath and 15th Divs., 53rd and 55th-5gth Inde-
pendent Regts. (November 1952); 20th and 21st
Divs. (February 1953); 22nd and 25th Divs. (April
and 26th and 27th Divs. (June 1953). In the
attacks of June 1953 II Corps fell back
had to be rescued.
ss Cas
12
assault in July: 1st Div. (US I Corps); 2nd, gth,
Capitol (US TX Corps); 3rd, 5th, 6th, 8th, 11th (II
Corps); 7th, rath, 20th (US X Corps); 15th and
aust (I Corps). The concentrated pressure on II
Corps smashed the redoubtable Capitol Div., and
the Corps fell back: but subsequently counter
attacked, and reached a viable defence line before
the Armistice.
In its comparatively short life the ROK Army
had withstood the most punishing ordeal imagin-
able; had lost about 47,000 killed; and had emerged
as the determined guarantor of the independence of
the South Korean people.
The ROK Army order of battle, September
July 1953, was:
I
ist Div... . rith, 12th, 15th Regts.
and Div. ... 17th, gist, gand Regts.
3rd Div... . 2and, agrd, 26th, (later 18th, 22nd,
agrd Regts.)
sth Div. .. . 27th, 35th, 36th Regts.
6th Div. ... and, 7th, igth, Regts.
7th Div, 3rd, 5th, 8th Regts.
8th Div. ... roth, 16th, 21st Regts.
gth Div. ... 28th, 29th, goth Regts.
Capitol Div... 1st, 17th, 18th, (later rst Cav., 26th
Regis.)
1ith Div. . . . oth, 13th, 2oth Regts.
rath Div. . . . 37th, 51st, 52nd Regts
15th Div. ... 38th, 39th, 5oth Regts,
zoth Div. . . . Goth, Grst, Gand Regts.
2ist Div... . 63rd, 65th, 66th Regts.
gend Div. . . . 67th, 68th, 69th Regts.
a5th Div. ... goth, 71st, 72nd Regts.
26th Div... . 73rd, 75th, 76th Regts.
27th Div. ... 77th, 78th, 79th Regts.
United States of America
After 1945 the United States decided to rely on the
United States Air Force to deter any future
aggressor with its nuclear capability. There thus
seemed to be no necessity for a large standing army,
and the bulk of the US Army was hastily
demobilised. By mid-1950 it had shrunk to 591,487
men, seven per cent of its peak wartime strength,
with what some have judged to be a disastrous effecton unit efficiency and morale. ‘There were only ten
ist, 2nd, 3rd, 7th, 24th and 25th
Infaniry, 1st Cavalry (Dismounted), and Ar-
moured, 11th and 82nd Airborne—plus the 1st and
and US Marine Corps Divisions, Occupation duty
in Germany and Japan proved the biggest drain on
resources, and only one division, the 1st Infantry in
Germany, was main « full strength,
power was
the main defence against potential North Korean
aggression, and after June 1949 the only US forces
were the 500-strong Korean Military Advisory
Group (KMAG) training the fledgling ROK
Army. Meanwhile, the United States Government
ignored rumours of an imminent North Korean
invasion with a complacency that ultimately
proved disastrous.
At any one time seven United States divisions
Infantry, Cavalry and Marine Corps
Korea, all in the infantry réle. This commitment
while modest by World War II standards, was a
major burden on the diminished US Army. Each
division contained three infantry regiments (cach
with three battalions); and an artillery regiment
with three 105 mm battalions and one heavy 155
mm battalion, each with three batteries. (The
strength of the US artillery was to prove decisive.)
There were also a combat engineer battalion,
reconnaissance troops, and services; and later a
combat divisions
ained
In South Korea, too, U:
served in
tank, a tank-destroyer and an anti-aircraft bat-
talion were added. Apart from the three rifle
battalions (each with one heavy weapons and three
rifle companies) a US infantry regiment also ficlded
a tank company with 22 tanks. A rifle company
comprised one weapons and three rifle platoons; a
rifle platoon, one weapons squad and three rifle
squads, each with nine men.
All divisions (except the Marines) were 30 per
cent under strength. All regiments (except. the
Negro 24th Infantry) had only two battalions:
artillery battalions had only two batteries, and most
infantry’ battalions were a rifle company short,
although from August 1950 all regiments in Korea
received a third battalion. Many tanks were
obsolescent, or too light to meet the T-34/85 on
equal terms. Nevertheless, these di
sions did boast
‘For an account of the USMC's condition at this time see Elite 2, The
US Marine Conps since 1945
the US Army's 51st Signals Bn. Personnel
Section, ina soldier's typical snapshot. The sergeant at far left
wears on his HBT fatigues the new chevrons officially
introduced the following month; the miniature “combat
‘chevrons’ are worn by the young sergeant in the pile winter
‘cap, right centre. (Shelby Stanton)
an awesome firepower, especially in artillery, which
outclassed comparable enemy units!
For special missions a regiment could become a
‘regimental combat team (equivalent to a British
“brigade group’) by attaching a divisional 105 mm
artillery battalion, a signals detachment, and
engineer and medical companies. At least 12
infantry regiments (7th, 15th, 19th, 21st, 23rd,
24th, 31st, 32nd, 34th, 35th, 65th, r6oth) operated
at some time as RCTS, as well as the independent
sth and 29th, and the famous 187th Airborne
(detached from 11th Airborne Division), Other
élite units were the 1st~5th and 8th Ranger Infantry
Companies (Airborne), each with five officers and
107 men, including the all-black 2nd Co., in Korea
from October 1950 to August 1951; and the mixed
American-British-Korean ‘United Nations Par-
tisan Infantry Korea’ (UNPIK). These units all
operated clandestinely behind enemy lines and on
the offshore islands.
The scattered KMAG advisers retreated help-
lessly with the ROK divisions before the North
Korean advance, an advance which immediate
USAF air strikes were unable to halt. United States
Army intervention was necessary, and four of the
five divisions of Lt.Gen. Walton H. Walker's 8th
Army (7th, 24th, 25th Infantry, 1st Cavalry), then
For a derailed account of UN tank operations in Korea, see Vanguard
7, Armour of te Buran War
15US Army rifle squad leader inautumn 1950: Cpl. The extra bandoliers are typical enough—but one suspects
of the g5th RCT, based on the 35th Infantry that the grenades, rather precariously attached by slipping
from 25th Division. No unit or rank insignia are worn in the their spoons into pockets, were the photographer's idea -
field. He carries the Mr riffe, and a triple-pocket grenade combat they would be rather more securely attached to the
pouch (left) and first aid pouch are attached to his +i equipment. (US Army via Shelby Stanton)
4on occupation duty in Japan, were put on alert. On
1 July 1950 ‘Task Force Smith’—two rifle
companies from 21st InfRegt. (24th Div.
forced by 105, mm howitzer, mortar, bazooka and
recoilless rifle teams—raced to the front, and
managed to delay the enemy advance on Osan
before retreating to meet the rest of the division.
The 24th made a heroic stand at Taejon
abandoned the town on 20 July, having lost their
commander, Maj.Gen. Dean. They had bought
time for the safe arrival of the 25th Infantry and 1st
Cavalry Divs., and the 29th RCT from Okinawa.
On 13 July Gen. Walker established ‘EUSAK’
(Eighth United States Army in Korea) within the
Pusan perimeter, where he also commanded five
ROK divisions. All forces in Korea came under
Gen. MacArthur, since 7 July the Supreme
Commander of United Nations Command (UNC
By the end of July the perimeter line had
stabilised along the Naktong River, to be defended
atall costs. In August reinforcements arrived in the
form of divisional tank battalions, the 5th RCT
from Hawaii, the and Inf.Div. and 1st ional
Marine Bde, (built around 5th Marine Regt.) from
the USA, and the 27th British Brigade. South
Korean conscripts, designated “Katusas’ (Koreans
attached to the US Army), were integrated into the
US Army and unofficially into USMC units, with
too per company, a total of between 1,000 and
3,000 per division. Wearing US uniforms (but
rarely attaining NCO rank) these enthusiastic,
fearless, but virtually untrained Koreans provided a
vital stopgap in manpower. Walker's nine divisions
and two brigades were insufficient for a continuous
defensive line; but he deployed them so skilfully in
anticipation of enemy attacks that he was able to
win the fierce six-week ‘Perimeter Battle
) rein-
but
‘ov
and by
mid-September he was ready to counter-attack
On 15 September, United States X Corps
(activated in Japan on 26 August) stormed ashore
at Inchon with 1st Marine Div, (the expanded
Provisional Bde.), 7th Inf.Div. (including ROK
17th Regt. and 8,000 Katusas), 5th ROT and, later,
187 ARCT. On 28 September Scoul was re-
captured after fierce fighting, Meanwhile, on 16
September, EUSAK forces broke out of the Pusan
perimeter. ROK forces thrust northwards, US 1X
Corps (activated on 23 September with and and
25th Divs.) attacked westwards, and US I Corps
(activated 13 September with 1st Cav., 24th Inf
and 1st ROK Divs. and 27th Bde.) pushed north-
westwards, linking up with X Corps on 26
September. On 1 tober Walker began the
advance into North Korea. I Corps (later joined by
IX Corps) attacked along the west coast, taking
P’yongyang on the 19th, while the ROKs advanced
in the east, joined by X Corps (now with 3rd
Inf.Div. from the USA), which landed at Wonsan
on 26 October. However, this triumphant progress
ground toa halt in November with the intervention
of the Chinese
The furthest UN penetration northwards was by
the 17th Regt., which reached the Chinese-North
Korean border at Hyesanjin. On 24 November
MacArthur ordered the final push to the Yalu
River frontier; but after 24 hours’ steady advance a
powerful Chinese counter-attack ruptured the line
sector, forcing I and IX Corps to
in the cent
retreat southwards to avoid encirclement. By 15
December they and three ROK Corps, now out of
reach of the Chinese advance, had established a
defensive line on the 38th Parallel. Meanwhile, on
27 November, X Corps, marooned in north-eastern
Korea, began an epic fighting retreat to Hiingnam,
December 1951—n US Marine squad retura from patrol, They
wear their helmets stuffed down over pile cape and-in the
Save of the foreground man, carrying the olded” Ma 95 i.
rocket Iauncher-over the hood of the parka. (The hood was
Supposed to accommedate the helmet, but was seldem worn
hat way.) The parka is kdentiGed ss the light tan-coloured
World War If model by the ekirt pockets: the Migr model,
issued towards the end of the war, had only the slanting
pockets on the ibs. (USMC)where
ships, under a massive air umbrella,
successfully evacuated them. By Christmas Day
105,000 troops had embarked for Pusan in the
biggest sea evacuation in American history. Then,
on 23 December, Gen, Walker was killed in a traflie
accident, to be replaced as EUSAK Commander on
the 26th by Lt.Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway
Ridgway had 365,000 troops—from west to cast,
US I Corps (25th, 3rd Inf, 1st ROK Divs.); IX
Corps (1st Cav., rst Ma ine, 24th Inf, 6th ROK
Divs.); three ROK Corps; and X Corps (and, 7th
Inf., and, 5th, 8th ROK) in reserve. ‘The Chinese
New Year offensive brought X Corps into the
central sector, and forced I and IX Corps to
abandon Seoul on 4,January 1951, However, by 15
January the offensive had run out of steam, and on
the 25th EUSAK, now just south of Osan, counter-
attacked strongly northwards against determined
Chinese opposition, Meanwhile the 1st Marine Div.
fought the North Korean oth Div., cut off deep in
South Korea, before joining the IX Corps advance
February. On 14 March I Corps recaptured
Seoul, and by mid-April Ridgway’s forces had
reached ‘Line Utah’, just inside North Korea. On
11 April, after a dramatic disagreement over the
issue of widening the scope of operations against
China, President Truman replaced the legendary
Gen. MacArthur with Gen. Ridgway, who in turn
passed EUSAK command to Lt.Gen. James Van
Fleet.
In the First Spring Offensive I and IX Corps—
defending the approaches to Scoul—were attacked,
but held firm. By 29 April the offensive was spent,
and Van Fleet pushed forward gingerly with
armoured patrols. Order of battle was now I Corps
(ast Cay., grd and 25th Inf-Divs.), IX Corps (7th
and 24th Inf, and and 6th ROK Divs., 187th
ARCT), and X Corps (1st Marine, end Inf., 5th
and 7th ROK Divs.). The Second Spring Offensive
on 16 May smashed ROK divisions in X Corps, but
other units plugged the gap as the Corps fell back,
and attacks on I and IX Corps were similarly
contained. Now Van Fleet counter-attacked
strongly; and on 21 May advanced against light
resistance to ‘Line Wyoming’ back in North Korea,
which he fortified with trenches, wire, mines and
artillery. The truce talks reduced activity to local
level, but X Corps fought successfully to improve its
position. Meanwhile, on 6 April the 65th (Puerto
16
Gol, Frederick B. Alexander, CO of the 21st Infantry, 2
Division, early 1953. Note combat boots fitted with «appa
and regimental crest worn on ‘combat leader's’ igre
shoulder strap loop, above the divisional shoulder sles
insignia. (US Army)
Rico) Inf.Regt. replaced the goth in 3rd Div, an
on 1 August (the day Van Fleet was promoted fu
general) the 14th Inf, joined 25th Div, replacin
the black 24th Regt., which was disbanded.
Now stalemate set in, as Ridgway ordere
EUSAK tostop advancing but actively to defend i
forward positions in North Korea. In Decembe
1951 the ist Cav.Div. was replaced in T Corps b
45th (Oklahoma) Div., one of four National Guan
divisions called into Federal service in August 1950
In late January 1952 a sister division, the 4otl
(California), replaced the veteran 24th Div. it
IX Corps. Throughout January massive air ang
artillery strikes rained down on Chinese positions
but thereafter activity was light, despite a major but
unsuccessful enemy offensive in May against |
Corps. On 12 May the veteran World War II
commander Gen, Mark Clark replaced Ridgway at
UNC Commander. In June the 187th ARCT was
used to crush the revolt on Koje Island off Pusan.
July 1952 saw the ‘Battle of the Outposts’. In
October and Div. (I Corps) repelled a strong
Chinese attack, while IX Corps advanced grad-‘Iron Tr inflic
ually into. the ngle ing huge
casualties. By January 1953 Van Fleet had 768,000
troops disposed (from west to east) in I Corps (2nd,
7th, later 25th, Inf.; rst Marine; ist, and, 15th
ROK Divs.); IX Corps (grd Inf.; gth ROK, ROK
Capitol); ROK II Corps; X Corps (goth, 45th Inf:
7th rath, 20th ROK); and ROK I Corps. On 11
February 1953 Van Fleet retired after nearly two
years as EUSAK Commander, and was replaced by
Lt.Gen, (from 23 June, Gen.) Maxwell D,
In March and May I Corps withstood heavy enemy
attacks, and were reinforced in June by 187th
ARCT and gqth RCT (24th Diy.) from Japan. On
10 June a powerful Chinese offensive against ROK
II Corps forced the neighbouring X Corps back
three miles. Then, on 13 July, IX Corps contained
with difficulty the last major Chinese penetration
before the Armistice of 27 July.
‘The United States emerged from the Korean
War as undeniably the principal Western power in
succession to Great Britain and France, accepting
world-wide obligations, especially in the contain-
ment of Communism, The 1945 concept of total
war, waged by aircraft carrying atomic weapons,
gave way to the concept of limited war, requiring a
standing army which must never again decline to
aylor
the dangerously low levels of the late 1940s.
‘Tactically, the infantry reasserted its traditional
position as the key arm, which it had apparently lost
Field Marshal Lord Alexander of Tunis, the British Defence
Minister, inspects an Honor Guard from the US 3rd Infantry
‘wearing fatigues much dressed up for the
1a with the division's blue and white insignia, matcl
scarves, polished and badgedl helmet liners, and other typical
parade features. (Imperial War Museum)
to armour. The importance of artillery firepower
was re-emphasised; Ranger and Airhorne units had
been so successfull that their training methods were
extended to all infantry officers; and the growth of
Army (especially helicopter) aviation presaged the
birth of the ‘airmobile’ concept.
‘The United States divisional order of battle in
Korea was:
and Inf.Div. .
15th, 37th, 38th Arty.Bns.;
Eng.Bn.; 82nd AA Bn.
grd InftDiv. . . 7th, 15th
Puerto Rico) Inf.Regts.
Arty.Bns.; 64th Tk.Bn.;
Bn.
7th Inf.Div. ... 17th, 31st, g2nd InfRegts.; 31st*,
48th, ggth, 57th Arty.Bns.; 73rd 'Tk.Bn.; 13th
oth, agrd, 38th InfRegts.: 12th*
jend Tk.Bn.; 2nd
3oth (replaced by 65th
gth*, roth, 3th, 58th
roth Eng.Bn.; 3rd AA
Eng.Bn.; 15th AA Bn.
24th Inf.Div.... 19th, 21st, 34th InfRegts.; 11th*,
1gth, 52nd, 6rd Arty.Bns.:
Eng.Bn.; 26th AA Bn.
a5th Inf.Div..... 24th (replaced by 14th), 27th, 35th
InfRegts.; 8th, 64th, 69th, goth* Arty.Bns.; 8gth
Bn.; 65th Eng.Bn.; 21st AA Bn.
goth InfDiv roth, 23rd, 224th Inf-Regts.;
rd, 625th, g8oth, g81st* Arty.Bns.; 1goth
578th Eng.Bn.; r4oth AA Bn.
45th Inf.Div. . . . 179th, 180th, 279th InfRegts.;
158th, 160th, 171sSt, 189th* Arty.Bns.; 245th
; 10th Eng-Bn.; 145th AA Bn.
5th, 7th, 8th Cav.Regts.; 61st, 77th
ond*, goth, Arty.Bns.; 6th Tk.Bn.; 8th Eng.Bn.;
2gth AA Bn.
1st Mar.Div. ... 1st, 5th, 7th Mar.Regts.; 1st, 2nd,
grd, 4th Bns.; 11th Arty.Regt.; ist Tk.Bn.; rst
Eng.Bn.; 1st Amph.Bn.
(#denotes 155 mm artillery battalion
goth Tk.Bn.; 3rd
British Commonwealth
After 1945 the British Army began to demobilise;
but the British government recognised the neces
of a credible peacetime army, and so conscription
(in 1948 renamed ‘National Service’) was retained
for men aged 18-20, Britain had traditional
Imperial commitments to which were now added
new international obligations—occupation forces
7Bugle-Major Martin, Durham Light Infantry, ‘warms up’ his
bbuglers for a fanfare. They wear the regimental eap badge on
the midnight blue beret which was (and remains) the general
issue for British troops, though now replaced in the LI by dark
green. The field jacket and trousers are the type later
designated Mg8 combat dress; note Commonwealth Di
shield and regimental title om right shoulders. The bug
major’s four chevrons are worn on the upper, rather than the
lower sleeve as was regulation. (The Light Infantry)
in Germany and Japan, and NATO requirements
for troops to defend Western Europe. Similarly, in
Canada, Australia and New Zealand membership
of Western military alliances was accepted as
essential to the security of national independence.
The North Korean invasion, so soon after the
Communist victory in China, was seen as a further
step towards Communist world domi Im-
mediately 17 ships and 7,000 men of the Royal,
Royal Australian and Royal New Zealand Navies
were sent to Korea. They were followed on 29 June
by 77 (Fighter) Sqn. RAAF, flying Mustangs, and
subsequently by 0 (Transport) Unit RAAF, 426
(Transport) Sqn. RCAF, and, in November, the
Mustangs of 2 Sqn. SAAF, the ‘Flying Cheetahs’
In August 27th Infantry Brigade, the United
Kingdom Strategic Reserve then stationed with
4oth Div. in Hong Kong, was earmarked for Korea.
A British or Commonwealth infantry brigade
(equivalent to a US. regiment)
headquarters, services, and three rifle battalions
cach 909 men strong. A rifle battalion had an HQ
company (with signals and administration plat-
cons); a support company (mortar, machine gun,
anti-tank and assault pioneer platoons); and four
ion.
consisted of
18
ifle companies (A-D) cach with three rifle platoot
(1st-9th within the company). A platoon had thr
rifle sections, each with a corporal and eight me
In peacetime most battalions had only three rif
companies, and so for Korea a fourth was raise
from neighbouring battalions. During this peric
there was a high incidence of ‘cross posting’ to brit
units up to strength for tours in Korea. The troo}
were a mixture of long-service regulars, wartim
reservists recalled to the colours, and nation:
service conscripts, Some of the latter were given th
option of volunteering, but this was not general.
On 28 August 1950 27th Bde. (really a ‘brigad
group’, as it operated with organic supportin
arms) disembarked at Pusan with only tw
battalions—1st Argyll and Sutherland Highlande
and 1st Middlesex Regt—and immediately mar
ned the western perimeter, supported by two U
artillery batter and some US tanks. On 1
September they broke out, and advanced north
westwards with US 24th Div., meeting fierce enem
opposition (against which Maj. Muir of the Argyll
earned a posthumous Victoria Cross). On
October the brigade was renamed 27th Com
monwealth Inf:Bde., being brought up to strengt
by the arrival of grd Bn., Royal Australian Regt.
formidable all-regular unit. During the rapi
advance up the west coast the Australians killed 27
North Koreans in a bayonet charge north ¢
P’yongyang. On 30 October the brigade ha
reached Chongju, 40 miles from the Manchuriai
border, when the Chinese intervention forced
withdrawal to Sinanju; here the brigade beat off
determined Chinese attack. Meanwhile, the 250
strong 41st (Independent) Commando, Roya
Marines, formed in Japan in September 1950 fo
Korean service, mounted two raids against the eas
coast in early October, and in November joined US
1st Marine Div. (X Corps) isolated in NE Korea
Following the Chinese attack of 25 Novembe
27th Bde., now in US IX Corps reserve, supporte
the general retreat south, meeting the British 291
Independent Brigade Group, which had disem
barked at Pusan on 3 November and was nov
advancing north. On 14 December 27th Bde., now
on the 38th Parallel defence line, was joined by 6otl
(Parachute) Indian Field Ambulance, India’s only
but distinguished contribution to the war-effort
The 29th Brigade—which as well as three infantry—
battalions fielded tank!, artillery and engineer
units]
coul before moving up to P’yongyang, only to
retreat again to the 38th Parallel in mid-December.
Meanwhile, 41 Commando performed a
magnificent fighting withdrawal with US 1st
Marine Div. from the Chosin Reservoir to
Himgnam for evacuation to South Korea.
In December 1950 all ground, sea and air forces
became the British Commonwealth Forces in
Korea (BCFK), HQ Japan, under Lt.Gen. Sir
Horace Robertson, the first of three Australians to
hold the command. The 27th Bde. (US IX Corps:
retreated in good order before the 1951 New Year
offensive; 2gth Bde. (US I Corps), covering Seoul,
fought fiercely at Chungghung Dong, and crossed
the Han River after suffering heavy casualties. By
mid-January the two brigades were entrenched well
south of Seoul. Then the slow UN winter counter-
offensive northwards began, 27th Brigade at last
received its own organic artillery battalion—16th
Field Regt., Royal New Zealand Artillery; and on
18 February and Bn., Princess Patricia’s Canadian
Light Infantry became its fourth infantry battalion.
By 19 April both brigades had halted well north of
Seoul, 2th Bde. on the Imjin River.
The First Spring Offensive struck 2gth Bde. with
massive force and they fell back, leaving rst
Gloucesters cut off on Point 235 (‘Gloucester Hill’)
toconduct a heroic last stand which bought time for
other units, and ultimately blunted the offensive.
Afier two and a half days just 39 Gloucesters
reached UN lines; LtCol. Garne, the battalion
commander, and Lt. Curtis were both awarded the
Victoria Cross, The battle of the Imjin River was
the Commonwealth’s finest hour in Korea. 27th
Bde. fought its way southwards, and on 26 April
1951 became 28th Commonwealth Bde. (the only
brigade to be ‘relieved’). In early May, 25th
Canadian Infantry Brigade Group arrived with
three infantry battalions (including 2nd PPCLI
transferred from 28th Bde.), an artillery regiment, a
field ambulance (both battalion equivalents), and
tank and engineer squadrons. In the May UN
counter-offensive 25th Bde. (US I Corps), 28th and
agth Bdes. (US IX Corps) all advanced to a new
ad been fighting North Korean guerrillas
near $
For detailed accounts of British tank operations, see Vanguards
The Centurion Tank in Battle, and 25, Armour of the Korean Wer,
‘Two British soldiers of the DLI pose with a ‘Katcom’ before
going out on patrol, 1952.59. They wear eap comforters Healt
EXper rolled from a tube of wook US Msgr (left) and Mags
SIM jackets’; and. carry Stene and grenades. (The Light
Tnfaniry)
defensive line inside North Korea. There, on 28 July
1951, the rst Commonwealth Division was formed
from the existing three infantry brigades, a tank
regiment and squadron, three artillery regiments
and two batteries, an engineer regiment and two
squadrons, and three field ambulances. The
division defended Seoul under US I Corps; and
in October advanced northwards in Operation
‘Commando’, during which 1st KOSB (28th Bde.)
suffered heavily in Chinese counter-attacks. It was
during this battle that Pte. Speakman won his ve
The stalemate period allowed the division's
British, padian, Australian, New Zealand and
Indian units to reach a level of efficient co-
operation, spiced with friendly rivalry, which still
stands as a model for multi-national military
formations. The intense winter cold of 1951-2
brought welfare problems not encountered since the
Crimean War, but military activity was restricted
to patrols and raids. In late May 1952. two
companies served on Koje-co PoW Camp as prison
guards. Meanwhile 41 Gdo. RM, after coastal
19raiding throughout 1951, left Ko
disbanded at Plymouth in February 1952
Static warfare continued throughout the winter
of 1952-3, but improved Chinese defensive fire
made local raiding increasingly unattractive. The
front was quiet, although in late October divisional
artillery did support the neighbouring rst US
Marine Div. when they came under attack. 1,000
ROK conscripts were integrated as ‘Katcoms’
(Koreans Attached Commonwealth Division’),
with two Katcoms per infantry section. They wore
the relevant unit uniform; could be promoted to
NCO rank; and were liked and respected. During
November 1952 1st Black Watch repelled a
determined Chinese attack against the hill known
as “The Hook’. The division spent two months in
reserve from February 1953; and in late May the rst
Duke of Wellington’s Regt., supported by artillery
of ist RTR, again defended
a, and was
and the Centurio
A Scottish soldier serving in Korea being fitted with the second
type of winter warfare clothing issued in response to the
sufferings of British troops during the appallingly cold winter
of 1950. (Imperial War Museum)
20
The Hook in the last sizeable Commonwealt
engagement of the war—although infantry an
artillery did help the US Marines in the la
desperate fighting before the Armistice.
Commonwealth losses, at 1,263 dead of whor
686 were British, were considered moderate; an
the division stayed in South Korea until 1956, whe
it was replaced by a 2,000-strong Contingen
which was steadily reduced over the years whic
followed. ‘The unique experiment of the mult
national division, although successful, is unlikel
ever to be repeated in the entirely different strategi
conditions which now face the separate nations «
the Old Commonwealth,
The order of battle of Commonwealth groun
forces (excluding 41 Cdo. Royal Marines) follow
below. Diagonal strokes represent successive de
ployments: e.g. the initial infantry units of 29th Bd
were 1st Bn., Royal Northumberland Fusiliers; 1
Bn., The Gloucestershire Regt.; and 1st Bn., Royz
Ulster Rifles. (In the lists below, titles have be
greatly abbreviated.) Canadian and British unit
ted (very approximately) every
India and New Zealand rotated personnel oc
casionally; Australia did both
12 months
27th|28th Commonwealth Infantry Brigade
ist Middx./ist KSLI/ist DLI/1st Warwicks
st Argylls/1st KOSB/1st R. Fusiliers/tst Essex
grd_R. Australians/ist R. Australiansj/2nd R
Australians
and PPCLI
16th Fd.Regt. RNZA
6oth Indian (Para)
Amb.
2gth British Infantry Brigade Group
nds/ 1st
Leicesters/ist. Blac!
Watch/ist R. Scots
1st Gloucesters/1st Welch/1st Dk of Wellington's
rst Ulsters/ rst Norfolks/1st Liverpool
‘C’ Sqn. 7th Royal ‘Tank Regt
8th Trish Hussars/5th Inniskillings
RTR
45th/14th/2oth Fd.Regt. RA
17oth/120th Lt. Battery RA (Mortars)/61st Lt
Regt. RA
th/gznd Lt. AA Bn. RA
sath & rand Fd.SqnRE, 64th Fd.Pk.Sqn.RE
2bth Fd.Eng.Regt.RE
26th Fd.Amb.
Jist RTR/stl_—
25th Canadian Infantry Brigade Group
and/ist/3rd R. Canadians
and/1st/3rd R.22° Regt.
and/1st/3rd PPCLI
‘C/'BY'A’ Sqn. Lord Strathcona’s Horse
andJist R.Can, Horse Arty./B1st Fd.Regt. RCA
agrd Fd.Sqn. RCE/28th Fd.Eng.Regt. RE
57th Indep.Fd.Sqn. RCE
a5th/37th/38th Gan.Fd.Amb.
a5th Can.Fd. Dressing Stat,
ist Comm. Div. Sigs. Regt
igogrd Indep.AOP Flight
Other United Nations
Contingents
Three days after the North Korean invasion the
United Nations called on all member states to help
South Korea.
monwealth, sent armed units, and four sent medical
Ten countries, besides the Com-
teams. The soldiers, all volunteers, were idealists,
adventurers, or regulars hoping for accelerated
promotion through recent combat experience. In
all cases (except the Philippines) special units were
raised and they, or their personnel, were regularly
rotated
First came the Philippines. The army, re-
organised in early 1950 into ten US-style “battalion
combat teams’ to fight the Huk Communists, sent
the experienced roth BC and a
Medium Tank Company. With 1,367 men in three
rifle companies, light tank and_ reconnaissance
(jeep) companies, a self-propelled artillery battery
and supporting services, the unit could operate
(Motorised
independently. Troops wore uniforms identical to
the US Army with the Philippine cap badge, and
US rank insignia including pre-1948 chevrons.
‘They disembarked at Pusan on 20 September 1954
and operated with US 25th Div. on anti-guerrilla
duties—their speciality. From January 1951 the
unit served with US 3rd Div., and in April its tanks
tried unsuccessfully to relieve the Gloucesters at the
Imjin River. The 20th BCT took over in September
1951, serving from April 1952 with US 45th Div.; in
June 1952 it was relieved by roth BCT (‘Blood-
An MP of the Canadian Provost Corps, 25th Bde. rst
Commonwealth Division. Note sleeve insignia worn on two
brassards: on his left arm the divisional sign, on his right the
red ‘Canada’ shield with a gold-yellow maple leaf and wreath,
hoth under regimental titles. (Public Archives Canada)
hounds’); in April 1953 by 14th BCT (‘Avenger
and finally, in April 1954, by 2nd BCT
After World War II Turkey was driven by fear
of its Soviet neighbour into the Western camp.
Although at peace since 1923, Turkish troops were
generally considered the best of the smaller UN
contingents; they fought well, especially in close
combat; were steadfast
PoWs; and were well
Brigade
an artillery battalion, signals platoon, and engi
n defence, and resolute as
led. ‘The 1st Turkish
with 24ist Inf.Regt. (three battalions),
cer,
transport, medical and ordnance companies
disembarked at Pusan 5,455 strong, on 18-20
October 1950, and advanced with 25th US Div.
into North Korea, They met the Chinese in-
tervention head on, fighting desperately but being
beaten back at
innimini with heavy losses. They
fought doggedly near Osan in February 1951, and
on 15 May foiled another direct Chinese assault, On
1 September 1951 2nd Bde. took over; on 30 July
1952, grd Bde.; and on 4 September 1953, 4th Bde.;
which left Korea in May 1954
21ing the black
beret and badge illustrated in Plate F1—note large eyelets in
hheret. French and American decorations are worn on US
fatigues, including the battalion's lanyard for four collective
citations, in the colours—yellow flecked with grcen—of the
Médaille Miliaire ribbon. Three gold bars pinned to the chest
indicate his rank. (E.C-P. Armées)
Thailand sent the ‘Royal Thai Forces in
Koréa’—air and naval forces and the ist
Inf.Regt., formed 22 September 1950 with HQ and
1st Bn. only, It reached Korea on 22 October, and
advanced with the US 187th ARCT to
P’yongyang. In January 1951 the unit retreated
with the British agth Bde. under Chinese pressure:
and, with ist US Cav.Div., fought guerrillas and
faced the Spring Offensives. In December 1951 they
patrolled with US gth Inf, (and Div.), fighting
gallantly at Pork Chop Hill. The regiment returned
home on 31 March 19,
5, leaving a company-sized
contingent which remained until 1972, by which
time 19,000 Thais had served tours in Korea;
wartime service cost them 125 dead. The 21st Regt.
is now HM Queen Sirikit’s dU
In spite of the heavy burden of her war in
Indochina France sent the UN
French Forces
22
e
under Lt.Gen, (temporary Lt.Coll) Monel
commanding an HQ and the French Battalio
(Bataillon Frangais), with HQ company (includin,
an élite assault pioneer platoon), support compan
and three rifle companies (1st-3rd), each with on
support and thrce rifle platoons. Thi
at Pusan on 29 November 1950, and joined the 2r
RCT (2nd US Division). The battalion distin
guished itself in a bayonet charge at Wonju on 1
January 1951, and in an epic defence of Chip’ yong
ni village from 13 to 17 February, which turned th
Chinese offensive. At Putchaetul (17 May) th
pioncers fought to the death, Heartbreak Ridge wa
captured in October 1951, and Arrow Head Hi
held in October 1952, but again at the cost of th
pioneers. On 22 October 1953 the French set sail fo
the Indochina War, leaving 261 dead in Korea.
Netherlands naval forces reached Korea in Jul
1950; but the Dutch Army, seriously depleted afte
their recent war in Indonesia, could offer only a
understrength infantry battalion from the recent!
formed Regiment Van Heutsz. ‘The 636-stron
unit—with headquarters, HQ company, on
support and two rifle companies and some nurses
all under Major den Quden—reached Pusan on 2
November 1950, and joined US 38th Inf, (US anc
.) in a particularly successful partnership. On 1
February 1951 the headquarters and HQ Co. wer
overrun by Chinese disguised as ROK troops, an
den Ouden was killed. In May a third rifl
company arrived, and in April to July 1952 i
helped quell the PoW revolt on Koje-do.
September 1954 the battalion left Korea, havin;
lost 120 dead
Exhausted after a long civil Greee
nevertheless sent a reinforced battalion formed fron
volunteers from the Greck Army’s 1st, 8th and ott
Divs.; there was also the 13th Transport Flight 0
the RHAF, which helped evacuate US X Corp
from Hiingnam. The 849-strong battalion, wit
headquarters, HQ company, and three rifl
companies each with one MG mortar and three rifl
platoons, reached Pusan on g December 1950, ar
joined US 7th Cav.Regt. (US 1st Cav.Div.). On 2
January 1951 the battalion captured Hill 4o2, an
disembarke
war
"The World War II nom de guere of L.Col. Magrin-Vernerey, who le
the Foreign Legion's 15° Demi-Br « Narvik and in Bast Afric
Like many of De Gaulle iers from the years of exile
jen, Leclerecotch Hill)
losing 28 dead. In January 1952 they patrolled with
igth Inf. (US grd Div
guard Koje-do camp. Finally, in June 1953, they
held ‘Harry Hill’ against determined Chinese
assaults, On 13 January 1954 the arrival of 1,667
reinforcements enabled expansion to the two-
battalion Hellenic Regiment. By the end of 1955
almost all had left Korea, having lost 182 dead.
On 31 January 1951 the Belgium Luxemburg,
contribution—the ist’ Belgian Bn. (Bataillon
Belge) —arrived at Pusan, comprising a headquar-
ters, HQ company, and heavy weapons company
all mixed Walloon/Flemish); A and B (rifle
on 5 October occupied Hill 31
; and in May they helped
pose cheerfully with Communist propaganda placards. All
Wear the Canadian summer-weight field caps; the (wo
foreground veterans both display Canadian parachute wings;
the corporal (left front) has chevrons stencilled in miniature
beside his cap badge, imitating US practice; the man at right
rear has a Canadian-issued US-made olive brown sweater. The
Corporal’s battledress blow tish 1946 issue, worn with
winter overtrousers; the man at right front wears Canadian
‘nd US combat boots. His .303 Lee Enfield was the
‘throughout Commonwealth contingents. (Pub-
lic Archives Canada)
Companies (Walloon), and G Co, (Flemish). The
Luxemburg Detachment of 48 men formed the 1st
Pin. of A Co. and wore the Grand-Ducal
monogram on the collar patches of their Belgian
uniforms. The battalion fought magnificently at the
Imjin River, supporting British 2gth Bai
5 it was
23relieved on 21 August by the end Bn., which was
then assigned to US 7th InfRegt. (grd Div.). In
October this unit defended a forward position at
Haktang-ni for three days against a heavy Chinese
attack, From 26 March 1952 to 20 January 1953 the
and Luxemburg Ptn. served with the battalion. In
April 1953 the unit fought off Chinese attacks
at Chatkol. In June 1955 the last Belgians left
Korea, having lost 103 dead (including two
Luxemburgers).
mperor Haile Selassie, eager to involve
Ethiopia in the internationalised conflict, sent the
1st Kagnew (‘Conquerors’) Bn., formed in August
1950 with three rifle companies (1st, and and 4th
Gos.) drawn from te Imperial Guard. They
arrived at Pusan on 7 May 1951, and joined US
gend InfRegt. (7th Div.) on ‘Line Kai rom
16 to 22 September they were engaged in furious
hand-to-hand fighting at Sam-Hyon. On 2g March
1952 2nd Kagnew Bn. took over, to be relieved in its
turn on 16 April 1953 by 3rd Kagnew Bn., which
drove off at bayonet-point a Chinese attack at
Tokan-ni on 20 May. This unit was fighting at Pork
Chop Hill at the time of the Armistice. The last
Ethiopian soldier left Korea on 3 January 1965,
In 1950 Colombia sent the frigate Almirante
Men of the grd Turkish Bde. arrive in the Panbudong sector to
take over from the 3,7th US Marines in May 1953. By this date
the Turks were entirely clothed and equipped with US items,
incl the US Army's nylon aluminium ‘Armor, Vest,
Miz’. (US Army courtesy Simon Dunstan)
Padilla, followed on 15 June 1951 by the 19
Colombia Bn. (Batallén Colombia), the only Latir
American ground unit ever to fight in Asia
Colombians were fined five dollars for not shaving
daily or writing home weekly, and a nine-picce
Latin band accompanied them; but this was nq
‘operetta. army’, for they earned a fighting
reputation surpassed only by the Turks. The 1,060.
strong reinforced battalion joined US 24th Div. and
first saw combat on 7 August, later mounting an
epic defence of Kumsong from 13 to 23 October. In
early 1952 they transferred to the US 31st Inf. (US
jth Diy.); and fought on ‘Old Baldy” before being
relieved by the end Bn. on 4 July. After the fight for
“T-Bone Hill in late 1952 the grd Bn. took over, alse
fighting at ‘Old Baldy’ before relief by 4th Bn. on 2:
June 1953. By the time this battalion left Korea in
October 1954, 131 Colombians had died in action.
‘The first foreign medical team to arrive in Korea
was from the Swedish Red Cross, operating a field
hospital at Pusan from 23 September 1950 until r¢
April 1957. On 7 March 1951 the Danish Red
Cross ship Jutlandia anchored in Pusan harbour.
and operated there and at Inchon with 100 medical
personnel until 16 August 1957. From May 1951
until 1954 the Norwegian Red Cross (after 1
November 1951, the Norwegian Army) operated
‘Normash’, a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital
(‘Mash’), the 106 personnel wearing at firs
Norwegian and later US Army uniforms. Finally.
24aaa oN
1; Sergeant, summer field dress, 1950
2: Private, winter field dress, 1950
3: Colonel, service dress, 1952United States Army:
1: Major, summer ‘khakis’, 1950
2: Private, summer field dress, 1950
‘3: Corporal, summer field dress, 1952ca TELE SE wo \
st Bn,, The Gloucestershire Regt. (UK), 1951
8: Sgt., Royal 22° Régiment (Canada), 1951/— es >)
2: Kp. I°KL, Regt, Van Heutsz (Netherlands), 1951
3: Capt., Bataillon Belge, 1950i Ll ~
2: Lt,, Ist Kagnew Bn. (Ethiopia), 1951
3: L/Cpl., 21st Inf. Regt. (Thailand), 1951e. cos .
1: Infantryman, winter field dress, 1950
2: Infantryman, summer field dress, 1951
3: Officer, service dress, 1952from 16 November 1951 until 2 January 1955, the
Italian Red Cross built and ran a hospital at
Yongdungpo.
Peoples Republic of China
In 1950 the Chinese People’s Liberation Army
Chung-Kuo Jen-Min Chich-Fang Chiin—hereatter
PLA), comprising the Army, Navy, Air Force and
Militia of the year-old People’s Republic, was
commanded by the Minister of Defence, Chu-Teh,
Army commander since June 1930. There were
between two and three million troops in four Field
Armies (numbered 1st-gth) and GHQ units
(sometimes called 5th Field Army); and one to two
million in the second-line Garrison Armies. A Field
Army (130,000-160,000 strong, equivalent to a
weak US or British ‘army’) contained about three
Group Armies (1st-2grd). A Group Army
(30,000-80,000 strong, equivalent to a Western
‘corps’) usually contained two to six Armies
(1st-about 77th). The Army (21,000-30,000
strong, or half again the size of a US or British
Division) was the principal self-sufficient tactical
formation. Each comprised three, sometimes four,
Divisions (numbered 1st-about 2goth); artillery,
special duty, training and lorry transport regi-
ments; and engineer, sance, com
munications and anti-aircraft battalions. A division
(7,000-10,000 strong, equivalent to a US ‘light
division’) had three infantry regiments (1st-about
jooth), an artillery regiment, and engineer,
transport, and signals companies. A
regiment theory 3,242 men, but usually
understrength) had three infantry battalions (cach
with three three-platoon companies), an artillery
battery, and guard, mortar, transport, signals,
medical and stretcher companies. There were also
some artillery divisions (with artillery and rocket-
projector regiments), and Inner Mongolian moun-
ted cavalry divisions, but apparently no armoured
divisions at this time, although the PLA did operate
some ex-Nationalist tanks. Army organisation was
ted
to divisions in numerical sequence, as were divisions
reconnai
medical
(in
strictly triangular, and all regiments were allo’
to armics.
Although 3,000 recently arrived Soviet military
Ouden, the first CO of the Netherlands Bn,
decorates men of his command with the US Bronze Star.
Note the Ussstyle green ‘combat leader loops worn om
Shoulder ‘straps: Den Ouden wae killed In action near
Hungvong on 12 February 195%. (Millis. Sec, Royal Dutch
Army)
advisers. were training the PLA in modern
mechanised warfare, it was still at this stage a mass
experience of
guerrilla warfare. The Army was multi-racial, with
a cadre of dedicated Communists controlling ex
nationalist deserters and PoWs, and troops from the
compromised Chinese, Manchukuo and Mongol
collaborationist armies. To prevent élitism “pos-
tional titles’ (or appointments’) were substituted
for the usual military ranks (see table). Equipment
was poor, and logistical services rudimentary, but
the calibre of the ordinary soldier made the PLA a
formidable fighting machine
The North Korean invasion of the South had
come as a surprise to Peking, but the Chinese were
unwilling to see the destruction of a fellow
Communist state when the tide of war began to turn
against it. By 14 October 1950 the first regular PLA
troops—designated “Chinese People’s Volunteers’,
to disguise official Chinese entry into the war, and
commanded by ‘General’ P’eng Teh-huai—had
crossed the Yalu River secretly into North Korea.
By early November these comprised 200,000 men in
the 13th Group Army (38th, 39th, oth Armies);
gand, 5oth and 66th Armies; 8th Artillery and 1st
33
infantry force unsurpassed in iand 2nd Motorised Artillery Divisions; a cavalry
regiment, and the 42nd Motor Transport Regi-
ment
They promptly smashed ROK forces at the
Chosin Reservoir, but 38th and 4oth
sustained heavy losses at Ch'ongch'on ag
IX Corps before attacking the weaker ROK II
Corps. On 27 November gth Group Army (20th,
26th, 27th Armies) was so badly mauled in its
unsuccessful attempt to prevent US X Corps
fighting retreat to Hiingnam that it was withdrawn
to Manchuria for re-organisation. Meanwhile the
main Chinese force (8th, 39th, goth, 42nd, 5oth,
66th Armies) chased the remaining US/ROK
forces out of North Korea, pausing in December at
the 38th Parallel. Then, on 1 January 1951, they
surged southwards, and occupied Seoul before
halting for resupply. The crude logistical ‘tail? was
Belgian and Greek troops attached to US grd Infantry Di
2951, with Gls wearing that division's insignia on thei
helmets. The Greeks have a national flag insignia on thei
helmets; the beret-wearing Belgians are armed with the Mg
FN automatic rifle. (Royal Belgian Embassy)
Appointments in the Chinese PLA
Title Literal Translation British Equivalent
Yen-chan-chiin Ssu-ling-yian Field Army Commanding Officer General
Ping-t’uan Ssu-ling yiian Group Army Commanding Officer Lieut. General
Chiin Ssu-ling-yiian Army Commanding Officer Major General
Divisional Commanding Officer Brigadier
Deputy Divisional Commanding Officer Brigadier
‘Tuan-chang Regimental Commander Colonel
Fu T'uan-chang Deputy Regimental Commander Licut. Colonel
Ying. Battalion Commander
Lien-chang Company Commander Captain
Fu Lien-chang Deputy Company Commander Lieutenant
P'ai-chang Platoon Commander and Lieutenant
Fu P’ai-chang Deputy Platoon Commander Sergeant
Pan-chang Section Commander Corporal
Fu Pan-chang Deputy Section Commander Lance-Corporal
Chan-shih Fighter Private
On 16 September 1955 (with effect 1 January 1956) this system was replaced by Sovict-style ranks.
Under the Cultural Revolution it was reinstated, with the addition of ‘Chieh-fang Chiin Tsung-ssu-
ling’—Commander-in-Chiefof the PLA—equivalent to Field Marshal. On 1 August 1983 a return to
Soviet-style ranks was announced.
34quite unable to supply even the modest 40 tons of
supplies needed by a Chinese division (a US
Division needed 600!) after so rapid an advance. On
u1 February goth, 66th and KPA 5th Armies
pressed on towards Wonju, using massed ‘human
wave’ tactics for the first time; but these caused
appalling casualties in the face of the deadly UN
firepower, and the Chinese were forced to retreat
back over the 38th Parallel, having lost Seoul.
Now seven more armies (12th, 15th, 47th, Goth,
63rd, 64th, 65th) arrived for the First Spring
Offensive, which was to be the PLA’s greatest (if
ultimately unsuccessful) effort of the war. In the
west, the grd and rth Group Armies would take
Scoul; the 13th and reconstituted 1gth Group
Armies would attack in the central sector, backed
up by independent
Mongolian cavalry—a total of go divisions (250,000
men) with about 4o divisions in reserve. ‘The
offensive began on 22 April, but had already been
halted by the goth, with 70,000 casualties, Seoul still
out of reach, and the
blunted after 4o miles by the stand of 29th British
Bde. at the Imjin. On 17 May pressure switched to
the cast in the Second Spring Offensive, with 21
Chinese divisions and two North Korean armies,
led by grd and gth Group Armies; but after four
days and 90,000 casualties the advance petered out.
The Chinese were shattered, and realised that even
their virtually unlimited human resources could not
overcome the murderous UN firepower. They
retreated as the UN counter-attacked, to a secure
line just inside North Korea, saved from humiliat-
ing defeat by UN reluctance to invade North Korea
again, and by the hope of an armistice as peace talks
opened.
The 1951
ese troops manning static forti
an enemy who no longer feared them as invincible,
but who did not wish to waste lives by attacking.
Now the Chinese constructed a 14-mile-deep
system of trenches, earthworks, deep tunnels and
Armies and
n some
ivance in the central sector
November stalemate found the
cations against
underground bases as shelter against artillery
barrages, air strikes, and even nuclear attack.
Using their unrivalled skills in concealment and
camouflage, they moved only unde:
darkness, and attacked in battalion or company
strength, supported by increased artillery, mortars
and tanks. The Chinese now manned exclusively
cover of
Dr E. Sandaa, commander of NouMAsH, carries out an
operation. Note US rank insignia, and national shoulder
patch—‘Norcr’ over the Norwegian flag. (Royal Norwegian
Embassy)
the western and central sectors, facing UN/ROK
forces, leaving the relatively peaceful eastern sector
to their weaker North Korean allies. Their probing
attacks, usually against vulnerable ROK units,
were localised but stil
lost 4,000 men in a single frenzied battle. In May
1952 they escalated attacks against ist ROK Di
backed by artille
5
vicious: in January 1952 they
and mortar barrage, but were
once again unsuccessful.
In July 1952 the CPV, now with 14 armies (12th,
15th, zoth, 26th, 27th, 38th, 39th, goth, 42nd, 47th
Goth, 6grd-G5th), began the ‘Outpost Battles’, but
were usually repulsed, often with significant losses.
In October they launched a major
US IX Corps, but lost 2,000 men from 38th Army
in two days. Activity declined over the winter
months, and more armies arrived as reinforcements
(16th, 24th, 54th, 67th and 68th). Now there were
seven Chinese and two North Korean armiesin the
line, 270,000 men, and 11 armies with a further
31,000 in reserve. In March 1953 the Chinese
attacked hard in the west towards Scoul; and in
or
mid-June a major assault in the central seChinese troops cross the Yalu River in October 1950 to drive
back the vietorious United Nations troops.
pushed ROK II Corps back three miles. On 13 July
the Chinese attacked in the centre again, but lost
a staggering 72,000 men—equivalent to. two
armies—before the Armistice brought fighting to a
close.
P'eng Teh-huai’s Chinese People’s Volunteers
returned home in triumph; in October 1954 Peng
was promoted Minister of Defence, and in
ptember 1955 he became one of ten newly-
created ‘Marshals of the People’s Republic of
China’. (In September 1959 he was dismi
a quarrel with Mac
loss
em|
ved after
The PLA, in spite of 900,000
Was now Asia’s most powerful army, and it
irked on a massive modernisation programme
to match the firepower of the now pathologically
hated Americans,
The order of battle of the CPV was as follows
“indicates formations present in July 1953; u/i
means unidentified)
ist Army* (1, 2, 7 Divs.) from 13th Gr. Army
Fd. Army
1ath Army* (34 [later 31 ], 35, 36 Divs.) from grd
Gr, Army; end Fd. Army
15th Army* (29, 44, 45 Divs.) from 3rd Gr. Army;
and Fd. Army
16th Army* (46, 47, 48 [later 46, 47, wf, 9
from gth Gr. Army
zoth Army (58, 59. 60, 89 Divs.) from oth Gr.
Fd. Army
1 Army* (67, 69, 73 Divs.) from gth Gr. Army
24th Army* (70, 72, 77 [later 74] Divs.) from gth
Gr, Army
36
end
| Divs.)
26th Army (76, 77, 78, 88 Divs.) from gth
Army; 3rd Fd. Army
27th Army (79, 80, 81, 90 Divs.) from gth
Army; grd Fd. Army
38th Army* (112, 113
Army; 4th Fd. Army
ggth Army* (115, 116, 117 Divs.) from 13th
Army; 4th Fd. Army
goth Army* (118, 119, 120 Divs.) from 13th Gr
Army; qth Fd. Army
41st Army (121, 122, 123 Divs.)
gend Army (124, 125, 126 Divs
Army; 4th Fd. Army
46th Army* (133, 136, 137, Divs.) from 13th Gr.
Amy
47th Army* (139, 140, 141 Di
Army; 4th Fd. Army
soth Army* (148, 149, 150 Divs.)
Army; 4th Fd. Army
sath Army* (160, 161, 162 [later 130, 132, 13]
Divs.) from goth Gr. Army
Goth Army* (178 [later 33, 181], 179, 180 Divs.)
from 3rd Gr. Army; and Fd. Army
63rd Army* (187, 188, 189 Divs.) from rgth Gr,
Army; ist Fd, Army
64th Army* (190, 191, 192 Divs.) from rgth Gr.
Army; rst Fd, Army
65th Army" (193, 194, 195 Divs.) from rgth Gr.
Army; ist Fd. Army
66th Army (196, 197, 198 Divs.) from 1st Fd. Army
114 Divs.) from 13th G
from 14th Gr
from 1th Gr,
rom 13th Gr
A Chinese defensive position—note elderly Maxim-type
machine gun, and botte-shaped stick grenade.67th Army* (19
my
68th Army* (202, 203, 204 Di
Army
joth Army (208, 209, 210 Divs.)
, 200, 201 Divs.) from 2oth Gr.
) from goth Gr.
Also present in July 1953: four motorised artillery
diys,, 1st (25, 26, 27 Regis.), and (28, 29, 30 Regts.),
jth (11, 20, 21 Regts.), 8th (31, 44, 45. 47, 48
Regts.); 21st Rocket Launcher Div. (201, 202, 203
Regts.); six anti-tank regts. (401-406); five hor
drawn artillery regts. (9, 10, 40, 41, u/i); four AA
regts. (1, 2, 3, 9) and four tank regts. (1, 6 and two
nfi)
Lhe Plates
A: North Korean KPA
Ar: Sergeant, summer field dress, 1950
The Russian-style shirt/blouse was often worn
inside the trousers, with the collar unfastened and
the opening filled by a separate triangular ‘gas flap”
troduced later
of blue cloth. A simplified version
in the war had plain cuffs, and only one flapless
pocket on the lefi breast. The baggy trousers were
fastened with tapes at the ankle and worn with
rubbe
khaki shade faded rapidly to a light yellowish hue.
‘The detachable shoulder boards were made of a
superior material which retained its dark olive
green colour better and contrasted markedly with
: some, at least, could be
reversed to act as red or green full dress insignia,
led canvas ankle boots. The original olive
the rest of the unifor
The uniform had reinforcing patches on the elbows,
t and knees, and frequently single or
double rows of horizontal ‘zigzag’ stitching around
nd upper
h were used to hold leaf camouflage.
trouser se
the cap and across the shoulders, chest a
sleeves, wh
‘The Soviet-style steel helmet had the national
badge painted on the front, but seems to have been
little worn in the field.
Tank crews appear to have worn Russian-style
one-piece overalls in black or khaki, with high boots
and padded canvas helmets.
Aa: Private, winter dress, 1950
This quilted cotton uniform was padded wi
Japanese employees of the US Army model the Chinese
People's Volunteers’ cotton summer combat uniform—cf.
Plate H. The fabric tube slung around the body is for carrying
rations; the mixed leather and fabric pouch rig is that also
shown in the posed photo on page 3. (US Army via Lee Russell)
cotton wool or kapok. The style followed that of the
summer uniform, except that the s Ja
low standing collar. The field cap, which was made
pirt/blouse h:
from the same material, had larger side flaps which
could be fastened under the chin but were otherwise
tied over the crown, The uniform was worn with
padded mittens which had separate thumbs and
trigger fingers, and rubber-soled ankle boots with
quilted cotton tops. Some officers wore high boots of
white felt which had a strip of dark leather all the
way up the front. There was also a double-breasted
parka with slanting side pockets; and officers had
with
blouse was
conventional double-breasted _ greatcoats
pviet-style collar tabs. Later the
replaced by a five-button double-breasted jacket
; some, indeed,
may have been of Chinese origin, for the North
similar to that of the Chinese PLA
37Korean supply position must have been severely
affected by the UN’s 1950 advance. Equipment
resembled the Soviet World War II pattern, with
leather waist belis and ammunition pouches, and a
plain canvas rucksack and haversack.
ment was id
consisted of
he arma-
ntical to the current Soviet issue, and
KS carbines or PPSh41 SMGs.
A3: Colonel, service dress, 1952
This smart, Russian-style uniform seems to date
from 1948 at least. The tunic was very similar to the
1943 Soviet fittel except in having pointed cuffs.
‘The piping was red for the Army and green for the
Border Constabulary. The tunic was almost always
worn with Russian-style breeches and high black
boots, though long trousers seem to have been
authorised for undress. The North Koreans appear
to have followed the Soviet practice whereby both
wore dark blue for parade and walking-out dress
and khaki for field service. Generals had broad
double arm-of-service colour stripes, and other
officers narrow piping. All ranks wore the
distinctive North Korean cap, but only officers had
the piping around the crown and the two diagonal
lines on either side of the badge. The badge itself
clearly reflected Soviet influence, as did the
shoulder boards. The officers’ field uniform was
imilar except that it was made of cotton drill and
lacked the piping. There was also a white summer
tunic in the same style, which was worn with the
peaked cap and blue or khaki trousers. The dress
tunic was worn without a belt, the field version with
im Browne’ with a plain frame buckle.
B: Army of the Republic of Korea
Br: Major, service dress, 1950
The Republic of Korea’s Army was organised
under American auspices, and received surplus US
arms, equipment and uniforms from 1947 onwards.
ROK officers wore the US Army’s olive drab tunic
and trousers; its summer service dress of light khaki
sin this case, the battledress-
shirt and trousers; or,
NORTH KOREAN ARMY INSIGNLA:
(3) Cap badge—red & gold. (2)
Wonsu, field marshal—Kim
M-Sung only. (3) Ch'a-su,
deputy field marshal—rank
not held at this date. (4)
‘Sang-jang, lieutenant-general.
NB, the four-star rank of
Taevjang, general, is not
shown here. (5) Chung-j
major-general. (6) So-jang,
seheles() Tees estos
olonel—here, Armour. (9)
‘Chang, liewtenant-
colonel—Artillery. (10) So
wa, raajor—Engincers. (11)
Taccni, senior captain—
Medical. (12) Sag-wi,
captain—Signals. (13) Chung-
wi, Keutenant—Judge
Advocates Dept. (14) So-
second lieutenant, (15)
‘mu Sang-sa, warrant officer,
sergeant-major. (16) Samg-sa,
stall sergeant. (x7) Chung-sa,
sergeant, (18) Ha-sa,
corporal. (19) Sang-aling,
lance-corporal. (20) China,
private.
Officers’ shoulder boards
were in broad gold (combat
arms) or narrow silver lace
(services), with contrasting
stars; the piping was red in
the Army and green in the
Border Constabulary.
NCOs’ straps were olive
green with gold bars and
Fed or green piping.
(P. Abou)
Le
UY
38Set. 1st Class Frank R. Oakes, Lt.Col. Francis Deisher and Lt.
Roc Byong Heon supervising repatriation of Communist
PoWs at Panmunjom in August 1953—thus the supervisor's
arm brassards. Note minor differences in the fatigue patterns
(see commentaries to Plates C, D); and methods of wearing
rank and branch insignia, USA and ROK. (US Army via Lee
Russell)
style ‘Eisenhower jacket’ which had become the
standard US temperate climate service dress
garment during the immediate post-war period. US
officers could combine it with light-coloured slacks
on the same basis as the pre-war ‘pinks and greens’,
and this officer has obviously followed their
example. A closed-collar version, worn with olive
drab trousers and peaked cap, was authorised for
enlisted men. The cap badge featured the
traditional yang and yin symbol. While generals
wore US-style stars, field and company grade
officers wore their devices mounted on gilt backing
bars in a fashion reminiscent of World War IL
Japanese practice, and the service dress tunic
sometimes bore Japanese-style cuff braiding. US-
style arm-of-service devices existed by the end of the
war, and were supposed to be worn on the left hand
side of the shirt collar after the US fashion, but few
photographs actually show them in use. These
branch devices were only worn by officers
Be: Lieutenant, field dress, 1950
‘The North Korean invasion disrupted the ROK
Army’s supply system, and in the period before US
material started to flood in, South Korean soldiers
presented a very motley appearance. Old Japanese
Arisaka rifles and even some steel helmets were
brought out ofstore, and many troops had to make
do with canvas ‘tennis shoes’ instead of combat
boots. The surplus US Army material supplied was
not necessarily of the most up-to-date pattern. This
officer, for instance, wears the US Mqr field jacket,
which had long been superseded in the US Army by
the much improved M43 combat clothing. With it,
he wears US-style olive drab woollen trousers,
combat boots, and the peaked field cap of the
summer fatigue uniform. Many ROK soldiers seem
to have been issued with US Army greatcoats at the
beginning of winter 1950-51, even though these
were really obsolete as a field garment. By mid-
1951, however, the South Koreans had been fully
equipped with US-pattern field clothing. US
influence extended to the development of a system
of divisional patches, which were often painted on
the helmet sides, and to parade embellishments
such as chromed helmet liners, decorative cravats,
and white ladder-lacing in the combat boots.
Bg: Private, trained, winter field dress, 1950
Although the South Koreans wore what were
essentially US uniforms, there were certain
differences. The US M42 HBT summer fatigues
sometimes had the same ‘zigzag’ stitching across the
upper part of the blouse as appeared on North
Korean uniforms and which were apparently
designed to hold foliage camouflage. This NCO is
wearing an indigenous winter outfit made of the
same quilted cotton material as the North Korean
and Chinese models (which seems sometimes to
have led to cases of mistaken identity, with ROK
stragglers being taken for Communists by their UN
allies); it differed in that the material was olive
green in colour, generally with a criss-cross quilting
pattern, and in having two large breast pockets like
the M42 HBT fatigue jacket. It was often worn with
a US-pattern pile cap instead of the steel helmet.
Like the belt, web pouches and combat boots, this
was of the standard US World War II pattern.
Rank chevrons were supposed to be worn on the
upper arms, but this seems to have been rare on the
ficld clothing; they more commonly appeared on
the helmet front, sometimes with miniature versions
on the left hand breast pocket flap.
39C: United States Army
Major, summer khakis, 1950
The term ‘khaki? can cause confusion because
Americans use it to mean a light tan, whereas to the
British and others it means a darker shade more
to the American olive drab. During the 1930s
the practice of wearing khaki shirts and privately
purchased trousers developed; and these became
issue garments for enlisted men in 1938-40, along
with the ‘overseas cap’, until then not authorised for
wear in the United States. This practical and
comfortable hot-weather uniform was also widely
ROK ARMY INSIGNIAG
(1) Infantry. (2) Artillery. (3) Medic
foregoing, gold. (5) Engincers—silver, gold star. (6) Cap
badge—red blue centre with silver petals, gold wreath, (7) 1
Corps—dark blue and white, (8) Capitol Division—ereen
shield, white rim, yellow tiger's head. (9) rst Division—dark
blue rims, yellow shield, red numeral. (10) 3rd Division—dark
bblue and white. (11) Chung-jang, ieutenant-general. (12) So-jang,
major-general. (13) Chumjang, brigadier—all the foregoing,
silver. (14). Tue-y0ng, colonel. (15) Chung-rvong, Weutenant.
colonel (16) Se-rydng, major—all foregoing, gold bars, ight and
dark silver roundels; one US source gives red and blue
roundels, possibly full dress. (17) Tae-wi, eaptain, (x8) Chungewi,
(4) Armour—all the
worn by officers; it continued to be the main
summer service dress after 1945, and was worn in
rear areas, such as Japan, throughout the Korean
War. Officers and warrant officers were also
authorised to purchase a khaki tunic as an optional
item for wear on more formal occasions. The style
was similar to that of the olive drab tunic, except
that the lower pocket flaps were pointed, and it
lacked a cloth belt. After World War II some
officers began to wear a khaki version of the ‘Ike
jacket’ instead of the tunic, though this garment
seems to have been less common than its olive drab
fieutenant, (19) Sow, second lieutenant—all foregoing, silver
‘bars on gold. (20) Tiing-mu Sang-sa, warrant officer, sergeant:
major. (21) L-diing Sang-sa, sergeant. (22) Iltiing Chung-sa, lance-
sergeant. (23) /-diing corporal. (24) Ha-sa, lance-
corporal. (25) Il-ting Pyong, trained private. All chevrons, white
on green. Not shown are the ranks of Tae-jang, four-star
general, mot held at that period; Chui, senior warrant
ofticer, who worea plain gold bar on che shoulder straps I ing
‘Sang-sa, 2 senior NCO rank junior to (20) and lacking the star;
and I-diing Ryong (Recruit), no insignia.
From 15 May 1954 field’ and company officers’ insignia
changed from the illustrated April 1946 models to sequences of
silver blossoms and diamonds. (P. Abbott)
40nia were the same on all uniforms:
Corps, Japan
equivalent. Tnsi
here, Quartermaster
Command
Logistical
Soldier, summer field dress, 1950
Among the most important of the US
Army’s
innovations during World War II was the use of
fatigue clothing as hot-weather combat dress. ‘The
first fatigues used in this way were the My1 HBT
Herring Bone Twill) work suits, which could be
recognised by thei
hip-length jackets and shi
type cuffs. These were occasionally to be seen in
Korea; but were largely superseded by the two-
piece Mq2 fatigues, which differed in having a
longer coat with tab closures at the cufls, a gas flap
across the neck opening (almost always removed in
practice), and unusually large ‘bellows’ pockets on
the chest and high on the hips of the trousers. With
these fatigues went a peaked field cap, whose short
visor was lengthened after 1945. The HBT material
was tough and hardwearing, but it was also heavy
and slow to dry when wet. It pi
‘striped’ appearance, though this was only v
close up. The original colour was a dark green
(Army Shade 7) which quickly faded to a pale
US troops advance on Taegu during the offensive following the
inchon landings in autumn 1950; apart from the hessian
helmet covers—and the ‘brewed’ T-34/85 tank of the KPA’s
105th Armd.Bde—there is nothing (o distinguish this scene
from many taken in the latter stages of the Pacific War against
Japan.
greenish grey. These garments became the basis for
the Army’s post-war summer combat dress, and
were widely worn in Korea by the US Army, ROK
and other UN troops.
C3: Conporal, summer field dress, 1952
During the second year of the war the M42 HBT
fatigues began to be replaced by a newer pattern.
These appear to have been designed in 1947 but not
manufactured until the early 1950s. ‘The coat
resembled that of the M42 set and had the same gas
flap (again, almost invariably removed), but the
cuffs were plain, and the pockets were of the normal
patch type with squared-off flaps and ‘docked’
bottoms. The trousers had normal side and back
pockets, and the buttons were of plain plastic
instead of being the earlier ‘1g star’ black metal
pattern. The first batches of these new fatigues were
made of the old HBT cloth, but later ones were of
dark olive green (OG 107) cotton twill. Like all
41‘Chow’ in the snow: members of HQ Co., and Bn., Sth Cavalry
display various types of fatigues, mainly M43 pattern, and pile
caps worn on top of fatigue caps. (US Army)
Korean War fatigues, they were baggy and
shapeless. Those worn in the field seldom bore
formation patches or even rank chevrons, though
smartened-up ve
erchiefs, highly polished or chromed helmet liners
and white ladder-laced combat boots began to
appear behind the lines. Like many line NCOs, this
corporal has retained the older World War I-style
chevrons instead of the unpopular 1948-pattern
ns worn with decorative neck-
miniatures (blue on gold for combatant arms, gold
on blue for services) which were discontinued early
in 1951.
D1: Sergeant, US Army, field dress, 1951
The US Army retained its su M43 field
uniform after World War II. The material was
windproof cotton sateen in a distinctly greenish
shade of olive drab. In summer the jacket could be
worn over the HBT fatigues. In winter the jacket
and trousers were worn over a woollen shirt,
sweater and ‘liner’ (a woollen cardigan-style
garment) in a browner shade of olive drab. The
M43 peaked field cap had ear flaps, but the pile cap
more commonly accompanied this uniform during
the Korean winter. The World War IT ‘double-
buckle’ combat boots were progressively replaced
by plain lace-up ones, all in russet leather. This M43
uniform equipped the majority of US troops in
Korea, as well as the re-equipped ROK troops and
many of the UN contingents. However, it began to
give way toan improved version known as the M51.
The jacket differed only in having snap pocket
closures instead of buttons; but the trousers had the
42
side ‘cargo’ pockets previously used only by
paratroops, and the shirt and sweater were dark
green. The practice of adding a rigid liner to the
M5r field cap produced the fashionable, képiclike
‘Walker’ or ‘Ridgway’ cap typical of the later 1950s
and °6os. This NGO wears the 1948-pattern
miniature chevrons, just visible on the right.
De: US Marine, winter dress, 1953
‘The US Marines wore their own HBT ‘utilit
peaked field cap and camouflaged helmet cover,
and retained the early World War [1-pattern ankle
boots and canvas leggings, which led the North
Koreans to nickname them ‘yellowlegs’. ‘Their
winter uniforms approximated more to the Army
pattern, however, and included M4g_ jackets,
trousers and pile caps, together with World War I]
parkas, and the unsatisfactory canvas and rubber
‘shoepaks’. The M51 winter outfit was issued to
both arms, although not until relatively late in the
war. Itwas based on the same ‘layering’ principleas
the Mqg. The field jacket and trousers were worn
over frieze liners, which were white and dark green
respectively; a green flannel shirt; and a loose-fitting
white undershirt and drawers. For really cold
weather a parka and overtrousers could be added.
The parka resembled the World War II pattern
except that it lacked a belt, had only the slanting
upper pockets, and was olive green instead of the
earlier light tan. The boots were of double-thickne:
rubber with a layer of felt between: perspiration was
prevented from evaporating, but the insulation
supposedly keptit from freezing. There were leather
gloves with woollen inserts, or Arctic mittens which
had pile backs for rubbing frostbitten noses and
faces.
Dg: Teniente Coronel, Colombian contingent, 1953
This is a good example of the ‘smartened-up*
fatigues worn by most senior officers during the
Korean War. Non-Commonwealth UN
tingents normally wore standard US field clothing
with the addition of their own national and rank
insignia (this did not apply to the Filipino troops,
who were still using US-style rank insignia at this
period), usually with the patch of the US Division to
which they were attached on their left shoulders.
This lieutenant-colonel wears the M47-pattern
fatigue blouse with M4z-pattern trousers, a mixture
con-of styles which was entirely characteristic of the
period. For some reason he has the Colombian
national badge under the title ‘co.ommus’ in gold on
red in place of a divisional patch. The same badge
has been sewn to his neckerchief (a post-war US
Army fashion) whose light blue could stand both for
the United Nations or infantry in the US service.
Colombian company officers wore one to three gilt
stars, and field officers similar stars with a gilt bar:
since the fatigue jackets lacked shoulder straps this,
officer has presumably pinmed his insignia (two
stars divided by a bar) to the collar in the US,
fashion, adding the conventional crossed rifles of his,
arm-of-service device on the left.
Er: Australia: Corporal, 3rd Bn., Royal Australian
Regiment, 1950
‘The Australian contingent was initially equipped
with the familiar loosely fitting tunic, trousers and
‘Digger’ hat worn in two world wars, and a summer
uniform of khaki drill shirt and trousers. Black boots
had replaced brown in 1948. The canvas gaiters
resembled the American pattern but were fastened,
with straps, while other web equipment followed
British models. White-on-red ‘Roya. aUsTRALIAN
nncimenr’ shoulder titles replaced the discontinued
battalion patches, but the RAR’s regimental badge
did not supplant the well-known ‘Rising Sun’ until
1954. The Australians were the first Com-
monwealth troops to receive US winter clothing.
This included pile caps, on which they were ordered
to wear ‘Rising Sun’ collar badges. In_ practice,
many retained their distinctive wide-brimmed
headgear—as one said, ‘They can take away my
strides, but not my hat. Steel helmets were
conspicuous by their absence. Subsequently,
British-pattern proofed combat dress and steel
helmets and US flak jackets were adopted for field
wear. The original service dress uniform was
replaced by 1948-pattern Australian battledress,
which differed little from the British model except
that the lapels were rather wider. The distinctive
hat and gaiters were retained, and 2nd RAR
initiated the Australian practice of blackening the
latter in 1952
E2: Great Britain: Private, 1st Bn., The Gloucestershire
Regiment, 1951
The British arrived wearing 1950-pattern jungle
Pfc. David W. Jackson of Co.L, 5th RCT, wearing the early
‘Vest, Armored, M-1951” in late September 1952. By this date
the US Army had received some 20,000 examples of this USMC-
procured vest; the first shipment of the Army’s own ‘Armor,
Vest, M-1952° did not arrive until that December. Early reports
indicated that the use of body armour reduced the casualties
by about 3o per cent. For full details see MAA 157, Flak Jackets.
(US Army courtesy Simon Dunsi
green bush shirts, trousers and floppy bush hats. At
the onset of winter they donned standard khaki
serge battledress and cap comforters, later ‘acquir-
ing’ US M43 combat clothing. Meanwhile, supplies
of British World War I-pattern cold weather
clothing were rushed out. This included string vests,
long underwear, ribbed sweaters, oiled socks, felt-
lined boots, visored field caps with neck and ear
flaps, gloves, gauntlets and the 1942 windproof
outer suit consisting of a hooded smock and
overtrousers in a green, brown and khaki “brushed”
camouflage pattern. For the second winter they
were issued with a newly designed field uniform of
greenish grey gaberdine, consisting of combat
jacket, trousers, peaked field cap, inner and outer
parkas and rubber-soled boots. The cap (dubbed
“Hat, Horrible’) was not a success, but the jacket
and trousers went on to become the M58 combat
4310
THE =.
=<
our
Chef de bataitlon (Major) Barthelemy, adjutant of the French
battalion, newly awarded the US Legion of Merit, Like many ‘initially worn by 27th Bde.
veterans of Free French service with the British, he retains the ‘Commonwealth Division, (5)
British right-hand beret ‘pull’. He wears American shirt and
trousers, a French 1946 brown leather belt, cloth French
shoulder strap ranking, and a mixture of French, US and ROK
decorations and insignia. Note the NATIONS UNIES
shield badge worn on the collar. (E. C. P. Armées)
dress. This private wears the Gloucesters’ famous
“back badge’ on his bush hat, The ribbed sweater
was often worn as an outer garment, with the
regimental title, d al patch and rank chevrons
on a drab brassard, and officers’ pips sewn to the
shoulders (and note this unit’s US Citation clasp).
The 1944 pattern Mk. 4 steel helmet became
mandatory as enemy artillery strength increased,
and US-supplied body armour made its ap-
pearance.
F3: Canada: Sergeant, Royal 22° Regiment, 1951
In 1950 the Canadian Army wore its own version of
battledress, differing slightly from the British and
made of a better-quality, rather greener material.
Most units wore khaki berets, but the paratroop-
trained 1st Battalions had and the
armoured squadrons black, Summer wear consisted
of a khaki flannel shirt or olive green bush jacket
together with plain olive green ‘bush pants’
Equipment followed the British pattern except that
the web anklets were replaced by short puttees.
Initially, the Canadians received US M43 jackets,
overtrousers and US combat boots. Subsequently
they introduced their own olive green nylon parka
(in fact a hooded Myg-style field jacket) and
maroon,
44
agth Canadian Bde. (6) Colombian Ba. () Ethiopian Kagnew
Br, () French Ba.—heret. (a) Greek Bn. (0) Luxemburg Bin
pocket patch. (11) Netherlands Ba. (2) 10th Philippines BOT,
(1) Thai contingent. (14) Turkish Bae
overtrousers, together with a distinctively Can-
ian peaked field cap, which was manufactured in
both wool and cotton. The earlier British Mk. 3 steel
helmet was superseded by the later Mk. 4, with
some US Mr helmets appearing towards the end.
The Canadians wore their red brigade patch on
both sleeves hey part of the
Commonwealth Division, after which they wore the
latter's light blue shield on their left sleeve or
brassard and their own patch on the right. Each
regiment and corps had its own distinctively
embroidered shoulder title. Rank insignia followed
the standard British pattern at this period.
until became
Fr: France: Lieutenant, 1951
The Bataillon de Corée was raised in September
1950 from volunteers of all branches of the French
ny—Metropolitan, — Color and Foreign
Legion—and was commanded by Lt.Col. Olivier
e Mire, a former paratroop officer of the "RCP,
The mixed nature of the unit prompted him to
organise the companies on ‘tribal’ lines: 1st Co. was
largely composed of Colonials, 2nd of Metros’, and
3rd of paratroopers from all three categories. The
problem of distinctive headgear and insignia was
solved by issuing the black beret of the para-
ies_
Bataillon de Choc. The
enamelled beret and lapel (as opposed to pocke
fob) unit badges was a break with French tradition;
the latter consisted of a tricolour shield with the
inscription ‘Nations usuus’. The beret badge
astrated elsewhere in detail —was usually, though
not invariably, worn on the right; some berets also
had two very prominent brass ventilation eyelets on
the right side. Ranks were indicated on shoulder
strap slides or chest tabs in the usual French
manner,
Onarrival in Korea the troops received US arms,
equipment, combat clothing and steel helmets. The
US 2nd Division’s ‘Indian Head’ patch was worn;
but they retained their French berets, and the lapel
device occasionally appeared on fatigue dress
collars. Ex-paras of the 3rd and HQ companies
sometimes pinned their wings, or the French para
beret badge, to the front flap of their pile caps; and
some old North Africa hands sported the character-
istic ‘chetch’ or desert scarf, Some paras kept their
camouflaged smocks, often of ex-British stock, of the
1942 windproof winter suit, which was very popular
for its lightness among French parasin Indochina at
this period, and was nicknamed ‘sausage skin’. The
same smock was also issued to Commonwealth
troops in Korea.
Afier returning to Indochina in October 1953,
the unit formed the cadre for the two-battalion
Régiment de Corée. (In June-July 1954 this was
virtually wiped out in the Central Highlands of
Vietnam, around An Khe and Pleiku, while serving
commando use of
with the famous Groupe Mobile 100.)
Fe: Netherlands: Korporaal 1'Klasse, 1951
The volunteers were issued with the Dutch army’s
British-style battledress. Most wore standard khaki
berets, but ex-paratroopers, Marines and cavalry-
men retained their red, blue or black ones, bearing
the brass badge of Regiment Van Heutsz (an eight-
point star on a stylised ‘W’), worn in the Dutch
fashion on a distinctive ribbon backing, in this case
black with orange edges. In Korea the volunteers
received US fatigues for field wear and ‘Ike’ jackets
and trousers for walking out; but the beret was
commonly worn in preference to US headgear such
as peaked fatigue caps or pile hats. The national
patch was worn on the right shoulder, with a
miniature enamelled version on the left collar point;
Mr F. J. Kranenburg, State Secretary for Defence, visits the
Netherlands Bn. in Korea, August 1953: at left, the battalion
commander, Lt.Col. C. Knulst. (MilHfist.Sec., Royal Dutch
‘Areay)
the US 2nd Infantry Division’s large ‘Indian Head”
patch was worn on the left shoulder, with a similar
miniature on the right collar point; and the US 38th
Infantry Regiment’s enamelled badge was worn on
the left breast (occasionally on the beret or fatigue
cap, too). These devices frequently appeared on the
fatigue dress, either separately or in combination.
Officers wore their own Dutch stars and bars of rank
on collar or shoulder strap loops, but NCOs
adopted US rank chevrons. Since this NGO's rank
had no US equivalent, the Dutch improvised by
cutting the upper chevron off the US sergeant’s
insignia,
F53: Belgium: Capitaine, 1950
‘The volunteers initially received standard Belgian
battledress, which resembled the British model
except that it was greener and had longer collar
points. They also received British Denison Smocks
(some officers wore these privately bought versions
similar in style but with a more distinct, ‘wavy
edged’ camouflage pattern). Web equipment and
boots followed the British pattern. They adopted a
distinctive brown beret; and a gilt badge in-
corporating the Belgian lion on a shield with a
helmet above, backed by the Walloon battleaxe
and Flemish ‘goedendag’ or ball-and-chain mace, the
The collar
whole over a scroll lettered ‘seni’.
45patches were brown edged with yellow. Normal
Belgian rank insignia were worn; when in
shirtsleeve order officers wore miniature ve
the collar patch on the straps. In Korea the Belgians
were issued with US steel helmets, winter clothing
such as Mqg jackets, parkas and pile caps, and US
fatigues for use as summer field dress. However,
they continued to wear their distinctive berets and
camouflage jackets, together with ‘British’ items
such as knitted ‘cap comforters’ and olive khaki
shirts with pleated breast pockets. The national
shield patch was worn on the left shoulder, that of
the US grd Infantry Division on the right, with
gold-on-brown ‘weLc1w’ shoulder titles above.
oy: Major, 1950
‘The Turks arrived in Korea wi
ing their recently
adopted battledress uniforms with US-pattern field
caps made of the same material, British Mk. 2 steel
helmets, leather waist belts and German-pattern
ammunition pouches. NCOs and men wore no
insignia other than a rough disc in arm-of-service
colour (green for infantry, blue for artillery) on the
side cap, but officers had collar patches in the s
colours (Staff wore red), There was only time to
issue them with US weapons and some US M1g43
combat clothing before they were thrown into
action in November 1950, and most were still
wearing their battledress, leather equipment and
heavy double-breasted greatcoats when they first
met the enemy. Subsequently their field clothing,
steel helmets and combat equipment became
entirely US in style, but they retained their own
insignia’. The brigade device (a red spearhead
decorated with white stars, worn on the right side of
the helmet), and the national badge (the white star
and crescent on a red circle worn at the top of the
right sleeve) seem to have been introduced during
1951. Generals wore their gilt-and-red rank devices
on both shoulder straps and helmet fronts, and had
gorget patches on their field uniforms as well.
me
Ge: Ethiopia: Lieutenant, 1951
The Ethiopians arrived wearing 1946-pattern
British battledress with US-style canvas gaiters;
Imperial Guard collar badges; and pith helmets, on
the right side of which was a rectangular patch
bearing a green, yellow and red cockade. They were
'See Plate C1, MAA 157 Flak Faces
46
soon issued with US field uniforms, wearing the US
7th Division’s ‘diabolo’ patch on their left shoulders
a curved ‘erioria’ shoulder title in red on buff
edged with red, yellow and green on the right; and,
for parade purposes, a large version of the cockade
on the right side of the US steel helmet. Towards the
end of the period a rather ornate patch bearing the
Lion of Judah was introduced: this was worn
beneath the ‘ertoria’ sleeve title, and on the left
side of the steel helmet with the US 7th Division's
insignia on the right. The Guard badge continued
to be worn on the collar. The Ethiopians retained
their own British-style rank insignia. Usually
officers wore their gilt Imperial crowns or six-
pointed stars on buff-coloured shoulder loops, but
appear to have pinned them to the right hand
collars of the strapless US summer fatigues, with the
Guard badge on the left. NCOs wore British-style
chevrons; WOs, wreathed lions or crowns in brass.
G3: Thailand: Lance-Corporal, 1951
This NCO is wearing a ‘variant’ version of the US
M42 HBT fatigues with single pleated breast and
hip pockets. These fatigues were made in relatively
small numbers, and worn interchangeably with the
normal type in both the US and allied armies. His
helmet (soon superseded by the US model) looks
very much like the French ‘Adrian’ pattern, which
the Thais had certainly worn up to and during
World War IT, but itis possible that it was in fact an
early Japanese model. It bore a national roundel
crest which also formed the basis of the cap badge.
Junior NCOs’ rank chevrons followed the British
system, but were embroidered in yellow or gold ona
dark blue-green backing, with the roundel sur-
mounted by a pagoda-like Thai crown above, and
worn on the left sleeve only. Senior NCOs wore a
gilt bar below one to three upward-pointing
chevrons on their shoulder straps; company officers,
one to three gold stars; field officers the same, but
with the upper star surmounted by a Thai crown
Gilt arm-of-service devices were worn on the right
collar, with the unit indicated by combinations of
Thai lettering and ordinary numerals on the left
The infantry device was crossed rifles with a four-
cartridge clip superimposed.
H: Chinese People’s Liberation Army
Hi: Soldier, winter dress, 1950The PLA’s quilted cotton winter uniform was both
light and warm, though the material was difficult to
dry when it became wet. The summer uniform was
normally worn underneath for additional in-
sulation. Officers seem sometimes to have worn
single-breasted version. The colour was generally
an olive khaki, with a white lining which could be
reversed to act as snow camouflage. The cap was
made from the same material and faced with fur or
pile; it had ear flaps which tied under the chin with
tapes. Padded mittens with separate trigger fingers
were supposed to form part of this uniform, but
many soldiers had either lost or never been issued
with these, and tucked their hands inside their
sleeves instead. The winter boots were made of
stout, fur-lined leather and worn with felt leggings,
though many troops seem to have continued to
wear the canvas summer shoes. This style of
uniform, with its external quilting, was replaced
from 1952 onwards by one which had the padding
on the inside and looked like a bulkier version of the
summer uniform. Equipment was usually restricted
toa waist belt with two or three stick grenades and
two cotton bandoliers, one containing ammunition,
the other rice.
Ho: Soldier, summer dress, 1951
The PLA’s ‘official’ summer uniform ftom about
1949 to 1952 seems to have been a Russian-style
blouse with a turn-down collar, three-button chest
opening, breast pockets and shirt-type cufls, worn
with long trousers and a peaked cap. However, this
only appears to have been issued to selected units;
and the summer uniform worn in Korea did not
differ very much from that worn by the Chinese
Nationalists, except that the older field cap had
developed into the shapeless ‘Mao cap’, and puttees
seem to have become obsolete. The footwear
consisted of canvas shoes with rope or rubber soles.
Although there were no official rank insignia,
‘leaders’ sometimes wore red or red-and-blue
armbands, and some were reported to have had red
piping diagonally across their cufs and on their
collars, tunic fronts and trouser seams. After 1952
these uniforms were superseded by a plain single-
breasted tunic, trousers and Mao cap in ‘Yenan
green’. The PLA had inherited large stocks of
Japanese steel helmets, but few if any seem to have
been issued in Korea. Most of the original Chinese
Li.Col. Vivaro, CO of the Belgian Bn. February 1952 February
1959 (and in 1968 Belgian Armed Forces Commander), mects
the commanding general of the US 45th Infantry Division, the
‘Thunderbirds’ (Belgian National Befence Ministry),
volunteers carried old Chinese or Japanese bolt
action rifles or, like this ‘tommy gunner’, captured
US weapons of World War IT vintage.
Hy: Officer, service dress, 1952
The Chinese People’s Liberation Army prided itself
on its egalitarianism, and officers and men were all
supposed to wear the same simple and austere
uniform. In practice differences of style, cut and
material continued to exist. In particular, the
officers’ tunics commonly had four instead of two
pockets, and were made of wool or even silk
material as opposed to the men’s cotton. The colour
continued to vary, but tended towards the harsh,
yellowish ‘Yenan green’ derived from the dyes
available in the PLA’s home province. In the early
days the Chinese Communists had worn cloth red
star cap badges: after their victory in the civil war
they adopted an enamelled version with gold
edging, bearing the Chinese characters for ‘8-1"
(commemorating the PLA’s date of formation) in
the centre. This does not seem to have been worn in
Korea, presumably in order to support the fiction
that the Chinese were volunteers rather than a
national force. The absence of rank insignia was
acceptable in a guerrilla force, but re-equipment
with Soviet material led to a steady increase in the
professionalism of the officer corps; in 1955 new
Soviet-style uniforms and insignia were introduced,
only to be abolished again during Mao’s ‘Cultural
Revolution’ ten years later.
47‘Notes sur les planches en couleur
a a acarvin ere
polite ppmebnnieaya meagre gamete
See tere eat oe
poke ee na ena eer oe ens
i a a re er as ee
eee ee
Seer renee ee eee
Bee ae GW RU oie pass aioe wc ac ras
rc oa pepe Dgectely ret ertgrg erie
eae eee Se
Bente eta lasts name ee
Cte aaah ee ce eo,
ee ete ae eee ee meena are
See ee ae eee
a
eee ata slang aes eee
Poe essere saa ae
Seen orien omen arate eee
ene ce oe ter eee
Sparano
Se eee
SEIS er ee
Soi Siecitnodt te eaeitaks Mines, ea ativan Witoaaoe is
Sa en ee oe eee at ee
eg org gece pram rere
Sie aoa Gs tee tack einai ivearac tee aan ee
Hi Cet iorme était reversible—vert dun eet bane de Fautre. H fat
Templacé vers 1952 par une fenue matlance A Vnicricur qui yewemblaic une
‘veto pls volminease de is tenue dla Apart ace Maa plapart
Acs chino portaient des tenves de campagne qa ressemblaiene um pewa fancien
snore nationaat eins cara lesdebted a guerre. Ele ut uteseurement
emplacee par un unifrme de vert Yenan’. Des armes chins, japonaien,
‘oases et des armes prey sur le amicaie aint ses. Hg Les oliiee
tlequabidsupeicar er posskdaent des petites dierencede deal, quatre poches
par exemple
Farbtafeln
see ee eee eae
Seer te pee Me eee eee
Soe ats ae oes eee oe ee
Seema eee te tes On ae
fata amen Se eho em Sl yo
fae aren os reece Gees ee
Srilgen uate ue case eles eae
potion a ar Stn rae
nee
Ae eee wis bi medi times An '6. A
were rte he at aes
re ee ae paca eo ae
Pr EE ed en
Pe crema eet Te ee
ae eerste era rt
Dee Mis nsec ey ae Ap te de nies dacs
Sean Sons a ee nae vce
eee ete Dare aren ee ent
sa er et
SES Near 2 cit we
epee sect ate ees care
oe a eee re ee
Sentinal SO al
Gx Zunichst trogen. die Turken cine bumte Mischung aus brischen,
amerikanicien und deutchen Bekleidungs- und Ausristungavegeostanden,
Spiter “wurden mehr US Artikel ausgegeben. Ea Eine Machung aus
Amerikanischer und byitischer Bebleidung und Ausrastung mit athiopischen
Abueichen, wurde spaterdarch US Kamplunilormen algelont, die Abreichen det
US ih Distsiontugen. Gg Fine thailandische Variante des ranzosischen Ade"
alin: wurde ster dre den 8 Helm ene ie Cniorm waren ale
us.
‘Hx Die Uniform konnte umgekehrt werden, mit griner Innen- und seeiser
‘Atmensite Ca. 1952 wurde de durch eine Ausfuhrung mit gesteppter fnnensete
fratst, die wie eine Mlobigere Ausfubrong der Sommmerunilorm suseah Ha
Abgeschen von der Mao-Mutz” tragen die meisten Chinesen Feldusitorme
‘die der alten natcnalchinesichen Ausuhrung der Anfangueeit nicht undhnlich
‘var, Diese Ausfuhrung wurde ster durch ine Uniform i Yenan grin’ ert
Chinesische,japanische, rusdsehe und erbewtete amerikanisehe Wallen wurden
Dbenutat Hy Oziresollen nur mininale miitarische Abzeichen tragen, dale
‘waren die Cniformen von hoherer Qualitat und halen Kleine Unterschiee im
Detail, 2B, ver Taschen