The Baltimore Sun (http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/broadband/photoedge/blog/)
has recently used the length of the Korean War as part of a trivia question.
What are the dates of the Korean War, it asks, then reports the answer as 57 years. It then goes on to say that the “real war” was from 1950 to 1953. Well, they are right of course, if you are not concerned with what was going on.
Even the US Army acknowledges that the war continued well into the new year, and thus see the end, for official purposes, as 1954. But even that is not a good picture, as anyone who was there between 1953 and 1954 will know. The war may have been over as far as the politicians were concerned, but not the GI in the field.
Senior Fellow, Paul M. Edwards
Monday, November 12, 2007
The Real War
Posted by
Gregg Edwards
at
2:27 PM
Labels: Baltimore Sun, Korean War
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Gregg Edwards
1 comments:
I have a very high regard for the troops who were caught up in the "real war," 1950-1953. I was in infantry basic training at Fort Ord during the last 4 months of the action. We were so thankful when the truce was signed about a week before we finished our 16 weeks--but so sorry for the thousands who were killed, wounded, and affected for life.
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