This blog post was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

25th July 2013 Washington DC, USA

The Anniversary of the Korean War Armistice

Saturday marks the 60th anniversary of the Armistice that concluded the Korean War.  The Korean Peninsula was divided by American administrators along the 38th parallel following the Japanese surrender in September 1945.   On 25th June 1950, North Korea invaded the South.  The United States of America provided 88 per cent of the 341,000 international soldiers who aided the Republic of Korea in repelling the aggressors.   Twenty other countries offered support including Britain, which committed over 14,000 troops into the field.  The fighting was brutal and unrelenting, the more so because of the difficult terrain and harsh climate.  In the first month alone, before the Coalition could re-enforce them, South Korean forces lost 77 per cent of their strength; by then numbering less than 22,000 men, they withdrew to the Pusan perimeter and clung on grimly.

The UN subsequently counter-attacked, forcing North Korea north, almost to the Yalu River.  On the 25th October, 200,000 Chinese troops crossed into North Korea and entered the fray with Soviet air support.  The first confrontation between the Chinese and US military occurred on 1 November, deep inside North Korea.

For three terrible, bloody years the fighting raged across the peninsula.  The ‘butcher’s bill’ was ghastly.  The United States suffered more than 36,000 fatalities with over 8,000 missing in action – almost 1 in 5 men were lost.  South Korea reported 373,599 civilian and 137,899 military deaths.  Estimates of Chinese killed and wounded were close to a million; the Korean People’s Army’s half that.  4,286 British servicemen were killed, wounded, missing or captured by the end of all the fighting.

Combat was a grinding combined arms struggle – characterised by pitched battles like that at the Chosin Reservoir, fought over 17 days at the end of 1950 at -37 degrees Centigrade.  At one desperate point in the fight, a task force was formed with 921 troops from 41 Commando Royal Marines, G Company of 1st Marines USMC and B Company of the 31st US Infantry.  Task Force Drysdale, under constant attack, fought its way through to re-enforce isolated troops at Hagaru-ri, down ‘Hell Fire Valley’, losing a third of its combat power in the process.

Between the 22nd and 25th of April 1951 Chinese and UN forces clashed at the Imjin River.   The blind ferocity of this particular engagement caught the attention of the world.  The 29th Infantry Brigade, which included three British battalions, bore the brunt of the Chinese assault.  The Gloucestershire Regiment, who were isolated on Hill 235 by the enemy’s advance, fought an unblinking defensive battle; by the end of it, only 217 men were left – 620 were listed as killed, wounded or missing.  Four Victoria Crosses – Britain and the Commonwealth’s highest award for gallantry and the equivalent of the Medal of Honor – were awarded during the Korean War; two of them at this action on the Imjin River.

Korea is sometimes called ‘the Forgotten War’, for some reason overshadowed by those that came before and after.  But by any metric it was a Titanic struggle characterising the very worst and best behaviours of mankind; by extraordinary sacrifice, determination, commitment and transcendent courage by ordinary British and American men fighting with their allies, thousands of miles from home  for the South Korean people and in the cause of freedom.    The gallant surviving veterans of Korea must be remembered now, on this historic date.  Remembered fiercely with pride and gratitude by each one of us.  George Orwell once remarked that, ’ Gentle folk sleep safely in their beds only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.’    We who sleep safely, humbly salute those who stood guard in Korea together with the young men and women who serve in harms way on our account today.

About Major General Buster Howes

Major General Buster Howes OBE is currently serving as the Defence Attaché at the British Embassy in Washington. Buster was educated at Christ’s Hospital and York and London Universities and…

Major General Buster Howes OBE is currently serving as the Defence Attaché at the British Embassy in Washington. Buster was educated at Christ’s Hospital and York and London Universities and was commissioned into the Royal Marines in 1982.

Initially Buster served as a troop commander in 42 Commando RM, deploying for the first time on operations, in Northern Ireland. After training a recruit troop, he qualified as a Mountain Leader and was then posted to Recce Troop, 45 Commando RM. After a stint as AdC to Major General Training, Reserve and Special Forces RM, he was appointed to the 2nd Division, USMC, as a Regimental Operations Officer (for the First Gulf War). He subsequently commanded Charlie Company, 40 Commando RM; Commando Training Wing at CTCRM; 42 Commando RM (for the Second Gulf War); and 3 Commando Brigade. Buster has worked in personnel policy, in the Fleet HQ; as a planner in the Rapid Reaction Force Operations Staff of UNPROFOR, in Bosnia; and as a strategist in the Naval Staff Directorate, in MOD. He has attended the Naval Staff College, the Higher Command and Staff Course, the Royal College of Defence Studies and the Pinnacle Course. He has served as a Divisional Director for ICSC(L) at the JSCSC, and as COS to Commander Amphibious Forces (CAF). He was Chief Joint Co-ordination and Effects, in HQ ISAD X in Kabul and then Director Naval Staff, in 2007.

In addition, he also served as Head of Overseas Operations in MOD before being appointed Commandant General Royal Marines/CAF in February 2010. Buster commanded Operation ATLANTA, the EU Counter Piracy Mission in the Indian Ocean for 15 months up to 1 August. He is also a member of the Navy Board, Captain of Deal Castle, President of the Royal Marines Mountaineering Club, and Vice President of the RNRM Children’s Charity.