Transcript
Sponsor/Advertiser Voice (0:01)
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Narrator/Host (John Hopkins) (0:25)
is there it is 5:30pm on 15 September 1950 in flying fish Channel, the twisting sea lane which enters the city of Incheon. It's the closest port to the South Korean capital, Seoul, itself currently occupied by the North Korean army who invaded six weeks ago. A U.S. marine Reserve called to active service only weeks ago crouches in a small, flat bottomed assault boat with 30 other Marines as it moves at speed towards land. As the sun sets, a deafening barrage of gunfire and rockets screams overhead from the warships covering them from behind. They have only two hours to complete their operation before the tide changes. After that, they risk being beached on the mudflats, sitting ducks for enemy fire. These US Ground troops are fighting the invaders alongside their South Korean allies all across the peninsula, but they're making little ground. The hope is that this covert amphibious maneuver could change the course of the war, allowing them to regain the capital and split the North Korean army from their supply chain. But they need to get to land first. The soldier's ears ring as he peers from beneath the rim of his heavy helmet. The seawall that protects Incheon is ahead, barely visible through a barrier of black smoke punctuated by plumes of blue and orange flame. Fighter planes swoop low, their gunfire strafing the concrete barrier. The soldiers duck as bright orange tracer bullets slice across the air above their heads. They've been spotted by North Korean troops who, despite the air barrage, are still defending the port. Now the Marine jerks back as the assault boat suddenly speeds ahead. The vessel strikes a pile of rubble where the sea wall has been crumbled by mortis. He tugs the chinstrap of his helmet tight and checks his pack is secure, his weapon at his side, then follows the other Marines, throwing himself over the steel gunnel into a few centimeters of water. The men scramble on their elbows, snaking on their bellies through the muddy shallows. Bullets wind past, spattering the water. The Marine clambers over concrete debris to huddle in a cave created by a gouge in a seawall. It was thought that the navigation of the channel might be the most precarious aspect of this assault. But he now sees his comrades around him, faces set firm, jaws twitching, knuckles white on their weapons. There's no forgetting the propaganda they've been fed in their training about the brutality of the North Korean army. They might be on solid ground, but they're also in enemy territory. The Incheon landings become a pivotal victory for the US and South Korea in the battle to regain the country from the invading North Korean army. The South Korean capital, Seoul, just 27km inland as the crow flies, was liberated 10 days after the maneuver in braving the treacherous waters of Incheon, the tide of the war was reversed, with the North Korean army forced to retreat up the peninsula. But this was far from the end of the Korean War, because in fact, the Korean War has never officially ended. Beginning only five years after the end of World War II, the Korean War was an exceptionally vicious conflict. It led to the death of at least 2.5 million people, possibly double that, and left tens of thousands of casualties. During only three years of active warfare, the USA dropped more ordnance on North Korea than it used in the entire Pacific theater during World War II. It would become the most lethal conflict of the Cold War era. A battle of capitalism versus communism, a civil war that reached international proportions, almost triggering World War Three. But it could never have reached this scale without the involvement of foreign superpowers. So how was this war abetted by American, Soviet, European and Chinese ambitions? Was anything really achieved by the years of fighting? And what was the true aftermath of the Korean War, both locally and for the world at large? I'm John Hopkins from Noise. This is a short history of the Korean War. The Korean Peninsula is now one of the most famously divided places in the world, with relations between north and south notoriously strained. But for most of its existence, Korea was One Nation. Dr. Owen Miller is a lecturer in Korean Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.
