KOREA: The Never-Ending War
Korea: The Never-Ending War
Episode 1 | 1h 54m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
Shedding new light on a geopolitical hot spot, narrated by actor John Cho.
Shedding new light on a geopolitical hot spot, the film — written and produced by John Maggio and narrated by Korean-American actor John Cho — confronts the myth of the “Forgotten War,” documenting the post-1953 conflict and global consequences.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
KOREA: The Never-Ending War
Korea: The Never-Ending War
Episode 1 | 1h 54m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
Shedding new light on a geopolitical hot spot, the film — written and produced by John Maggio and narrated by Korean-American actor John Cho — confronts the myth of the “Forgotten War,” documenting the post-1953 conflict and global consequences.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch KOREA: The Never-Ending War
KOREA: The Never-Ending War is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Buy Now
NEWSCASTER: NORTH KOREA HAS ACHIEVED ITS GOAL OF BECOMING A ROCKET POWER... NEWSCASTER: NORTH KOREA SAYS IT NOW CAN STRIKE ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.
INCLUDING WASHINGTON D.C. CUMINGS: NORTH KOREA TODAY IS ARMED WITH NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILES AND ANYBODY WHO UNDERESTIMATES THEM DOES SO AS THEIR OWN PERIL.
PRESIDENT TRUMP: ROCKET MAN SHOULD HAVE BEEN HANDLED A LONG TIME AGO... TERRY: NORTH KOREANS TRULY FEEL THAT NUCLEAR WEAPONS IS THE ONLY WAY TO GUARANTEE THEIR SURVIVAL.
JAGER: FOR NORTH KOREA, IT'S STILL ABOUT AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST STRUGGLE AGAINST THE UNITED STATES.
WHICH THE NORTH KOREANS TAKE BACK TO THE KOREAN WAR.
NARRATOR: THE KOREAN WAR WAS ONE OF THE BLOODIEST CHAPTERS IN KOREAN HISTORY.
IT WAS A CIVIL WAR THAT NEARLY IGNITED WORLD WAR THREE.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: WE ARE UNITED IN DETESTING COMMUNIST SLAVERY.
NARRATOR: A WAR THAT TOOK THE LIVES OF TENS OF THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN GIS AND MILLIONS OF KOREANS.
HANLEY: WHAT WE DID IN NORTH KOREA HAS NEVER REALLY BEEN ACKNOWLEDGED.
THE KOREAN WAR SET THE TEMPLATE FOR VIETNAM.
CUMINGS: THE KOREAN WAR WAS ONE OF THE MOST VICIOUS, VIOLENT, NAUSEATING WARS OF THE 20TH CENTURY.
NARRATOR: IT WAS A WAR MANY AMERICANS DON'T REMEMBER AND KOREANS CAN NEVER FORGET.
CHA: THE UNITED STATES DROPPED MORE ORDINANCE ON NORTH KOREA IN THAT THREE YEAR WAR THAN WE DROPPED DURING THE ENTIRE SECOND WORLD WAR.
FOR NORTH KOREANS AND FOR THE STATE IDEOLOGY OF NORTH KOREA, THE KOREAN WAR IS NOT A MEMORY.
IT'S STILL VERY MUCH ALIVE.
TERRY: THERE'S NO WAY TO UNDERSTAND WHAT'S GOING ON TODAY, WITHOUT UNDERSTANDING OF THE KOREAN WAR.
HOW CAN YOU UNDERSTAND THIS KOREAN CONFLICT THAT WE ARE HAVING, WITHOUT UNDERSTANDING OF THE ORIGIN OF THAT CONFLICT.
NEWSCASTER: GOOD EVENING FROM THE WHITE HOUSE IN WASHINGTON.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: THE WORLD WILL NOTE THAT THE FIRST ATOMIC BOMB WAS DROPPED ON HIROSHIMA, A MILITARY BASE... NEWSCASTER: NAGASAKI.
TARGET FOR THE SECOND ATOMIC BOMB.
JUST THREE DAYS AFTER HIROSHIMA.
NEWSCASTER: LONDON NEWSPAPERS THIS MORNING ARE SPECULATING THAT A NEW SURRENDER ULTIMATUM TO JAPAN MAY BE LIKELY SOON.
♪ ♪ NARRATOR: WITH THE SWIFT CONCLUSION OF WORLD WAR TWO AFTER PRESIDENT TRUMAN DROPPED TWO ATOMIC BOMBS ON THE JAPANESE CITIES OF HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI, AMERICAN PLANNERS TURNED THEIR ATTENTION TO KOREA, WHERE THE US MILITARY WOULD OVERSEE THE ORDERLY SURRENDER OF JAPANESE FORCES.
WITH SOVIET TROOPS ALREADY DEPLOYED IN NORTHERN KOREA AND MARCHING SOUTHWARD THE US MILITARY NEEDED TO ACT QUICKLY.
STUECK: THE UNITED STATES WAS MUCH FURTHER AWAY, ITS TROOPS WERE MUCH FURTHER AWAY THAN WERE SOVIET TROOPS.
WHAT THAT MEANT WAS SUDDENLY THE AMERICANS HAD TO TRY AND ESTABLISH SOME AGREEMENTS WITH STALIN, THE LEADER IN THE SOVIET UNION ON KOREA.
THE AMERICANS PROPOSED THAT THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION ESTABLISH ZONES.
NARRATOR: ON THE SWELTERING NIGHT OF AUGUST 10TH, 1945 TWO YOUNG ARMY OFFICERS, ON LOAN TO THE STATE DEPARTMENT, WERE TASKED WITH QUICKLY FINDING A DIVIDING LINE, BEFORE THE SOVIETS MANAGED TO OCCUPY THE ENTIRE COUNTRY.
ARMED ONLY WITH A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAP OF ASIA COLONELS RUSK AND BONESTEEL, NEITHER ONE EXPERTS ON KOREA, ZEROED IN ON THE PENINSULA.
TERRY: THEY HAD 30 MINUTES TO REALLY DIVIDE UP THE COUNTRY, AND THEY LOOKED AT THE WALL, AND THERE WAS A MAP OF THE KOREAN PENINSULA, AND THEY SAID, "WELL, WHY DON'T WE JUST KIND OF DIVIDE IT HERE, ON THIS 38TH PARALLEL?"
STUECK: THE 38TH PARALLEL IS JUST NORTH OF SEOUL AND THEY WANTED THE NATIONAL CAPITAL TO BE IN THE AMERICAN ZONE, AND WITH VERY LITTLE DISCUSSION, THAT DECISION GOES UP TO TRUMAN AND IS MADE IN A PROPOSAL TO STALIN.
NARRATOR: THE 38TH PARALLEL WAS SIMPLY A LINE ON A MAP.
IT FOLLOWED NO PHYSICAL FEATURES.
IT DIVIDED FARMS AND WHOLE VILLAGES.
SEVERED 300 ROADS, AND CUT ACROSS SIX RAILWAYS.
BUT THE SOVIETS ACCEPTED IT.
KOREA HAD BEEN CUT IN TWO WITHOUT A WORD OF INPUT FROM A SINGLE KOREAN.
TWO KOREAS CREATED SOLELY TO OPPOSE EACH OTHER.
TERRY: KOREANS WERE ONE PEOPLE FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS, AND THE KOREANS DIDN'T HAVE A LOT OF CHOICE.
YOU KNOW, IT'S NOT EVEN A BIG COUNTRY.
IT WAS JUST DIVIDED, AND THAT TOOK ALL OF 30 MINUTES, IT WAS A 30-MINUTE DECISION.
BRANDS: AND SO, THE 38TH PARALLEL BECOMES THIS TEMPORARY DIVIDING LINE BETWEEN NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN KOREA.
BUT THE TEMPORARY DIVIDING LINE CONGEALS INTO, EFFECTIVELY, A PERMANENT DIVIDING LINE WHEN THE SOVIET UNION AND THE UNITED STATES FALL OUT.
THE COLD WAR INTERVENED AND AMERICAN TROOPS DIDN'T GO HOME.
NARRATOR: WITH THE END OF WORLD WAR II, THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION EMERGED AS SUPERPOWERS.
BY 1946, THE TWIN GODHEADS OF DEMOCRACY AND COMMUNISM COLLIDED TO REDRAW THE MAP OF THE WORLD ALONG IDEOLOGICAL LINES.
IN THE SOVIET UNION, JOSEPH STALIN TIGHTENED HIS HOLD ON POWER AND WITHOUT PAUSE CONTINUED TO EXTEND COMMUNIST INFLUENCE THROUGHOUT EUROPE.
US PRESIDENT TRUMAN, SWORN IN AFTER THE DEATH OF FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT WAS BOTH UNPOPULAR AND UNTESTED YET DETERMINED TO ADVANCE AMERICA'S POST WAR INTERESTS, CHIEF AMONG THEM THE CONTAINMENT OF COMMUNISM.
BRANDS: THE POLICY OF THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION WAS THAT THE UNITED STATES NEEDED TO FOCUS ON CONTAINING THE SOVIET UNION, KEEPING SOVIET POWER AND SOVIET IDEOLOGY, COMMUNISM, FROM SPREADING.
IT WASN'T SIMPLY THE TANKS AND TROOPS OF THE SOVIET UNION, IT WAS THIS IDEOLOGY.
IT WAS THE BELIEF SYSTEM OF COMMUNISM.
NARRATOR: FOR STALIN AND TRUMAN THE FIRST ROUNDS OF THE COLD WAR WOULD BE FOUGHT IN EUROPE.
AND NEITHER MAN WAS PARTICULARLY INTERESTED IN EVENTS ON THE FARAWAY KOREAN PENINSULA.
CHA: FOR US STRATEGIC PLANNERS KOREA REALLY DIDN'T FIGURE MUCH IN THE PICTURE AT ALL.
TO THE EXTENT THAT WE CARED ABOUT ASIA, US STRATEGIC PLANNERS BELIEVED THAT THE ONLY POWER IN ASIA WOULD CONTINUE TO BE JAPAN.
NARRATOR: THE JAPANESE DEFEAT IN WWII ENDED THEIR OCCUPATION OF KOREA, A HISTORY MARRED BY THE BRUTAL SUBJUGATION OF THE KOREAN PEOPLE.
CUMINGS: JAPAN SUCCEEDED IN COLONIZING KOREA IN 1910, THAT LED TO TERRIBLE HARDSHIPS FOR MILLIONS OF KOREANS, AND THEN THE JAPANESE USED KOREANS AS MOBILE CAPITAL AND LABOR THROUGHOUT THE EMPIRE.
YOU HAVE THE MOBILIZATION OF 200,000 KOREAN SOLDIERS INTO THE JAPANESE ARMY, MOST OF THEM DRAFTED, AS MANY AS 100 TO 200,000 WOMEN WERE DRAGOONED INTO SERVING DOZENS OF JAPANESE SOLDIERS EVERY DAY AS SEX SLAVES.
HANLEY: SO WHEN THEY WERE LIBERATED IN '45, THE KOREANS THOUGHT THIS WAS THE BEGINNING OF A BRIGHT, BRIGHT FUTURE FOR THEM, AND THAT THIS DIVISION WOULD END VERY QUICKLY.
NARRATOR: PARK KYUNG SOON WAS JUST NINE YEARS OLD WHEN SHE HEARD OVER THE RADIO THAT THE JAPANESE HAD SURRENDERED.
STUECK: THERE WAS CELEBRATION, RELIEF THAT THIS PERIOD OF JAPANESE RULE WAS OVER.
BUT THERE WAS A POWER VACUUM THAT OPENED UP.
DEPENDENT ON THE EVOLVING RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE SOVIETS AND THE AMERICANS, AND AS IT TURNED OUT THE SOVIETS AND THE AMERICANS COULDN'T REACH AN AGREEMENT ON HOW TO UNIFY THE KOREAN PENINSULA.
NARRATOR: TO FILL THIS POWER VACUUM THE SOVIETS AND AMERICANS BACKED THEIR OWN LEADERSHIP.
TO PRESIDE OVER SOUTH KOREA THE AMERICANS CHOSE SYNGMAN RHEE, AN ENGLISH-SPEAKING, PRINCETON-EDUCATED CHRISTIAN WHO HAD BEEN LOBBYING THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT FOR THE JOB THROUGHOUT THE WAR.
CUMINGS: SYNGMAN RHEE HAUNTED THE HALLS OF THE STATE DEPARTMENT IN WASHINGTON, HOPING TO BE TAKEN AS THE ODDS-ON TITULAR LEADER OF POSTWAR KOREA.
HE HAD NO FACTION IN KOREA.
HE HAD NO BASE IN KOREA, BECAUSE HE HAD BEEN OUT OF THE COUNTRY FOR 40 OR 50 YEARS, BUT HE HAD A CERTAIN CHARISMA.
HE HAD A GREAT SMILE.
AMERICANS TENDED TO THINK HE WAS A KINDLY, OLD GENTLEMAN, UNCLE SYNGMAN.
NARRATOR: BUT RHEE'S KINDLY MANNER BELIED AN UNYIELDING THIRST FOR POWER AND DESIRE TO UNIFY THE TWO KOREAS AT ANY COST.
BY 1948, RHEE WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT.
TO CONSOLIDATE HIS AUTHORITY OVER THE SOUTH, RHEE CARRIED OUT A SUSTAINED NATIONALIST CAMPAIGN TO SNUFF OUT POLITICAL DISSENT, KILLING COMMUNIST GUERRILLA GROUPS BY THE TENS OF THOUSANDS.
MILLETT: RHEE WAS AS AN AUTHORITARIAN, SEMI-THUG WITH GREAT CONTACTS.
HE WASN'T A NICE MAN, BUT AMERICANS, CERTAINLY OF THIS PERIOD, TENDED TO BELIEVE IF SOMEBODY COULD SPEAK ENGLISH AND HAD BEEN EDUCATED IN THE UNITED STATES, OH WELL THAT MEANS THEY'VE ABSORBED ALL KINDS OF DEMOCRATIC VALUES.
WELL, THAT DOESN'T HAPPEN TO BE THE CASE.
BRANDS: SYNGMAN RHEE JUST HAPPENED TO BE, AS FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT WOULD'VE SAID, OUR S.O.B.
RATHER THAN THEIRS.
NARRATOR: IN NORTH KOREA, THE SOVIETS HAND-PICKED KIM IL-SUNG, A LITTLE KNOWN KOREAN EX-PATRIOT WHO HAD BEEN RADICALIZED BY THE JAPANESE OCCUPATION.
CHA: KIM IL-SUNG WAS REALLY UNKNOWN.
BUT THEN WHEN THE JAPANESE TOOK CONTROL OF THE KOREAN PENINSULA DURING THE OCCUPATION IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE 20TH CENTURY, KIM IL-SUNG TRANSFORMED.
HE BECAME KNOWN AS A GORILLA FIGHTER, FIGHTING AGAINST THE JAPANESE, AND CHINA AND FROM THAT POINT ON HAD BASICALLY A PRICE ON HIS HEAD AS A ANTI-JAPAN CONSPIRATOR BY THE COLONIAL GOVERNMENT.
HE EVENTUALLY MOVED TO THE SOVIET UNION WHERE HE LEARNED RUSSIAN AND BECAME CLOSE TO A NUMBER OF KEY RUSSIAN GENERALS.
NARRATOR: BY 1948, KIM HAD TRANSFORMED HIMSELF INTO A FIERY, COMMITTED KOREAN NATIONALIST.
NARRATOR: KIM QUICKLY SOLIDIFIED HIS POWER AND AMASSED A FORMIDABLE ARMY.
BY 1949, KIM HAD BURNISHED HIS IMAGE AS SUPREME LEADER BY EMBELLISHING HIS HISTORY AS A FEARSOME GUERILLA FIGHTER WHO SINGLE-HANDEDLY DEFEATED THE JAPANESE.
LANKOV: IDEA WAS: "OUR COUNTRY HAS SUFFERED FOR GENERATIONS BECAUSE WE HAD NO GREAT LEADER, AND THEN GREAT LEADER EMERGED.
HE LIBERATED US FROM THE JAPANESE OCCUPATION."
IT WAS PATENTLY UNTRUE, BECAUSE KIM IL-SUNG, DURING THE WAR WITH JAPAN, THE DECISIVE STAGE, WAS FAR AWAY FROM THE FRONT LINE IN A SMALL SOVIET MILITARY BASE.
CUMINGS: KIM IL-SUNG WAS ONE OF THE SHREWDEST POLITICIANS OF HIS ERA, BUT A PARTICULARLY BRUTAL AND RUTHLESS PERSON WHO KNEW HOW TO GAIN POWER AND HOLD ONTO IT.
MILLETT: THERE ARE STRIKING SIMILARITIES BETWEEN RHEE AND KIM IL-SUNG.
BOTH ARE THE SAME TYPES OF EXPAT NATIONALIST LEADERS, WHO HAVE BIG PLANS WITH THEMSELVES AT THE CENTER.
BOTH OF THEM HAD A STRONG VISION OF A UNIFIED KOREA, AND BOTH OF THEM BELIEVED THAT THEIR FUNDAMENTAL POWER CAME FROM THEIR ABILITY TO MANIPULATE OUTSIDE SPONSORS, IN RHEE'S CASE, THE UNITED STATES, AND IN KIM IL-SUNG'S CASE, THE SOVIET UNION.
NARRATOR: IN 1949, AFTER MAO ZEDONG'S COMMUNIST VICTORY OVER THE AMERICAN-BACKED NATIONALISTS IN CHINA, KIM IL-SUNG WAS EMBOLDENED.
THE TIME WAS RIGHT TO EXECUTE HIS PLAN TO UNIFY KOREA IN HIS MOLD.
THAT MARCH, KIM HAD TRAVELED TO MOSCOW TO LOBBY STALIN TO BACK AN INVASION OF THE SOUTH, ONLY TO BE REBUFFED BY THE SOVIET LEADER, WHO BELIEVED THE AMERICAN PRESENCE THERE MADE A WAR TOO RISKY.
BUT THEN, ONLY MONTHS LATER, IN JANUARY 1950, STALIN SUDDENLY HAD A CHANGE OF HEART.
STUECK: NOW, WHAT HAPPENED IN BETWEEN SAY SEPTEMBER OF 1949 AND THE END OF JANUARY 1950?
DEAN ACHESON, WHO WAS THE AMERICAN SECRETARY OF STATE, IN JANUARY OF 1950, JANUARY 12, MADE A MAJOR SPEECH TO THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB IN WASHINGTON D.C., AND IN THE SPEECH, HE LEFT SOUTH KOREA OUT OF THE AMERICAN DEFENSE PERIMETER IN THE PACIFIC, AND STALIN, OBVIOUSLY NOTICED THAT.
JAGER: STALIN NOW BELIEVES THAT THE AMERICANS WILL NOT GET INVOLVED IN KOREA.
HE'S ABSOLUTELY CONVINCED.
SO HE SAYS "OKAY, I'LL GIVE YOU MY BLESSING BUT YOU HAVE TO ASK MAO FOR THE FINAL DECISION."
HE SAYS SOMETHING LIKE "IF YOU SHALL GET KICKED IN THE TEETH I SHALL NOT LIFT A FINGER.
MAO WILL HAVE TO DO ALL THE HELP."
LANKOV: STALIN'S POSITION WAS SOMETHING LIKE, "WELL, COMRADES, YOU SAY THAT YOU WILL WIN SOON, IT'S YOUR IDEA, AND WE WILL PROVIDE YOU WITH AMMUNITION AND MONEY AND EVERYTHING, BUT IT WILL BE YOUR RESPONSIBILITY.
IF SOMETHING GETS REALLY BAD, DON'T COUNT ON OUR SUPPORT."
NARRATOR: IN MAY OF 1950, KIM TRAVELED TO CHINA TO MEET WITH MAO.
CUMMINGS: MAO IS ONE OF THE MOST EXPERIENCED LEADERS IN THE WORD, WITH HIS OWN GIGANTIC ARMY THAT HAD JUST PROCEEDED TO CLEAR THE MAINLAND OF NATIONALIST FORCES AND WHO HAD MANY ALLIES WHO HAD FOUGHT WITH KIM IL-SUNG AND OTHER GUERILLAS THROUGHOUT THE 1930S.
I THINK KIM IL-SUNG HAD GOOD REASON TO BELIEVE THAT HE WOULD HAVE PLENTY OF COMRADES IN CHINA THAT WOULD HELP HIM.
KIM WAS MASTERFUL AT MANEUVERING BETWEEN STALIN AND MAO AND THEN ENDED UP GETTING SUPPORT FROM BOTH OF THEM.
NARRATOR: BY THE SUMMER OF 1950, KIM IL-SUNG WAS PREPARED FOR AN INVASION OF THE SOUTH, ASSURING MAO THAT HE WOULD BE GREETED AS A LIBERATOR, AND THAT HE WOULD TAKE THE PENINSULA IN A MATTER OF DAYS.
NEWSCASTER: NEWS THAT COMMUNIST TROOPS HAVE INVADED SOUTHERN KOREA... NEWSCASTER: INVADING THEIR FELLOW COUNTRYMEN TO THE SOUTH, TO BRING ANOTHER INTERNATIONAL CRISIS TO THE ALREADY LONG-SUFFERING WORLD.
NARRATOR: AT 4 AM ON THE MORNING OF JUNE 25TH, 1950, THE BORDER SEPARATING NORTH AND SOUTH KOREA ERUPTED WITH THE REPEATED CRASH OF ARTILLERY.
WITH HUNDREDS OF SOVIET-MADE T-34 TANKS, NORTH KOREAN TROOPS, PART OF THE KOREAN PEOPLE'S ARMY, RACED ACROSS THE 38TH PARALLEL.
KIM'S INVASION OF THE SOUTH HAD BEGUN.
CUMINGS: BASICALLY THE SOUTH KOREAN ARMY EITHER COULDN'T FIGHT OR DIDN'T FIGHT OR RAN AWAY.
THE NORTH KOREANS WERE IN SEOUL IN THREE DAYS.
NARRATOR: SOME SOUTH KOREAN MEN WHO DID NOT ESCAPE WERE FORCED INTO HIDING, RATHER THAN FACE CONSCRIPTION INTO THE COMMUNIST ARMY, OTHERS WERE PUT ON TRIAL IN TOWN SQUARES, IN WHAT WERE KNOWN AS PEOPLE'S COURTS, WHERE MEN WERE PUBLICLY SHAMED FOR NOT PLEDGING ALLEGIANCE TO THE PARTY.
BEATINGS, KIDNAPPING AND EXECUTIONS WERE ROUTINE.
HANLEY: THE SOUTH KOREANS JUST COULDN'T STOP THEM, AND THEY JUST FELL APART.
THE REACTION IN WASHINGTON WAS ONE OF SHOCK.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: GENTLEMEN, WE FACE A SERIOUS SITUATION.
WE HOPE WE FACE IT IN THE CAUSE OF PEACE.
NARRATOR: BY NOW, NEWS OF THE INVASION HAD REACHED THE SUPREME COMMANDER FOR THE ALLIED POWERS, STATIONED IN JAPAN.
DOUGLAS MACARTHUR WAS A GENUINE AMERICAN WAR HERO, ONE OF THE NATION'S MOST FAMOUS LIVING GENERALS, WHOSE FACE HAD GRACED THE COVER OF TIME MAGAZINE NO FEWER THAN SIX TIMES.
BRANDS: DOUGLAS MACARTHUR WAS THE SCION OF A MILITARY FAMILY.
HIS FATHER HAD FOUGHT IN THE CIVIL WAR AND WON THE MEDAL OF HONOR.
DOUGLAS MACARTHUR WAS A BRILLIANT STUDENT AT WEST POINT, HE WAS A GALLANT SOLDIER IN WORLD WAR I, HE WON ALL OF THE MEDALS ANY ONE OF HIS GENERATION COULD WIN.
HE WAS THE SUPREME COMMANDER OF ALLIED FORCES IN THE SOUTHWESTERN PACIFIC DURING WORLD WAR II.
HE WAS CLEARLY BRAVE.
HE WAS BRILLIANT.
HE WAS ALSO QUITE EGOTISTICAL, AND HE TENDED TO BELIEVE THAT THE WORLD REVOLVED AROUND HIM.
AND MACARTHUR CONVINCED HIMSELF THAT HE UNDERSTOOD WHAT HE CALLED, THE ORIENTAL MIND, THAT HE UNDERSTOOD HOW ASIANS THOUGHT ABOUT THE WORLD.
CUMMINGS: MACARTHUR WAS A VERY PROUD, SELF-CONFIDENT, VAINGLORIOUS INDIVIDUAL WHO HAD A COMPLETE BELIEF IN HIS OWN TRUTHS, WHETHER THEY WERE BASED ON FACT OR NOT.
HE CONSIDERED HIMSELF A MAN OF DESTINY, AND HE HAD AN EGO THE SIZE OF CHINA, BUT HE WAS A MASTER ON THE BATTLEFIELD.
NARRATOR: FROM HIS PERCH IN TOKYO, MACARTHUR FAMOUSLY ASSURED WASHINGTON THAT HE COULD HANDLE THE NORTH KOREANS WITH ONE ARM TIED BEHIND HIS BACK.
BUT AFTER WORLD WAR TWO THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION WAS INTENT ON SHRINKING THE DEFENSE BUDGET AND ONLY A SMALL ADVISORY TEAM WAS LEFT BEHIND IN KOREA.
BY JUNE OF 1950 MOST BRANCHES OF THE MILITARY WERE UNDERMANNED AND ILL-EQUIPPED.
BRANDS: AFTER WORLD WAR II, AMERICA BUILT DOWN ITS MILITARY NOT EXPECTING THAT IT WOULD HAVE TO BE USED AGAIN, AT LEAST NOTHING ON THAT SCALE.
SO AT THE TIME OF THE OUTBREAK OF THE KOREAN WAR THE AMERICAN MILITARY WAS A SHADOW OF WHAT IT HAD BEEN IN WORLD WAR II.
STEUK: AS LONG AS WE HAD A MONOPOLY OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS, WE COULD RELAX A LITTLE BIT IN TERMS OF THE MANPOWER WE HAD IN THE ARMY, AND THAT'S WHAT HAPPENED REALLY FROM 1945 TO 1949, THERE WAS A CONTINUED REDUCTION IN THE SIZE OF THE US ARMY.
CAREY: WE HAD TO VERY QUICKLY PUT TOGETHER TWO REGIMENTS.
THEY TOOK HALF OF MY PLATOON AND FILLED ME UP WITH RESERVES.
MANY OF WHOM HAD NEVER EVEN BEEN TO BOOT CAMP.
GARZA: I HAD JUST TURNED 17.
AND I WAS SENT TO CAMP DRAKE, IN JAPAN THERE, OUTSIDE OF TOKYO AND ALL WE'D DONE WAS PROCESSED AND TRAINED TO MAKE AN AMPHIBIOUS LANDING AND HEAD FOR KOREA.
NEWSCASTER: ON THEM, WORLD PEACE DEPENDS...
THEY WILL NOT FAIL.
THEY NEVER HAVE.
STUECK: THE AMERICANS WERE PRETTY CONFIDENT.
YOU COULD EVEN ARGUE THEY MAYBE WERE A LITTLE BIT COCKY.
THEIR FIRST ENCOUNTER WAS WITH NORTH KOREAN TROOPS THAT HAD SOVIET T34 TANKS, AND THE AMERICAN FORCES HAD NO WEAPONS.
THE BAZOOKAS THEY HAD WOULD NOT PENETRATE THE ARMOR OF A T34 TANK.
HANLEY: AND SO WHEN THEY ENTERED INTO BATTLE, AT FIRST, THEY RAN.
THEY SAW THEIR COMRADES BEING KILLED AROUND THEM.
AND IT GRADUALLY GOT A NAME.
IT WAS CALLED "BUGGING OUT."
THEY WOULD "BUG OUT."
GARZA: WHEN WE WERE STILL IN CAMP DRAKE IN JAPAN, WE WERE TOLD AT THAT TIME THAT IT WAS GOING TO BE AN EASY WAR TO FINISH, YOU KNOW.
WE WERE TOLD THAT THE NORTH KOREANS, "SLANT EYES" THEY COULDN'T SEE TO THE RIGHT OR THE LEFT FLANK.
THEY COULD ONLY SEE TO THE FRONT.
THAT YOU COULD ACTUALLY SNEAK IN BEHIND THE NORTH KOREANS AND GET THEM, YOU KNOW, BUT WE FOUND OUT THAT, THAT WASN'T TRUE, YOU KNOW.
THEM SUCKERS HAD EYES IN THE BACK AND ALSO IN THE FRONT.
ALL WE COULD DO WAS JUST RUN BACK AS FAST AS WE COULD AND THEY WERE RIGHT AFTER US, YOU KNOW.
MCCARTHY: I'M GETTING VERY, VERY WEARY OF SITTING HERE AND ACTING AS THOUGH WE'RE PLAYING SOME LITTLE GAME.
WE'VE GOT TO CLEAN UP, THOSE WHO WERE RESPONSIBLE, MR. CHAIRMAN, COVERING UP COMMUNISTS AND TRAITORS, NOT DEAD ONES BUT LIVE ONES... NARRATOR: HALF A WORLD AWAY FROM THE FRONTLINES OF KOREA, THE UNITED STATES WAS IN THE THROES OF A PANIC ABOUT THE SPREAD OF COMMUNISM WITHIN AMERICAN SOCIETY.
MCCARTHY: EVEN IF THERE WERE ONLY ONE COMMUNIST IN THE STATE DEPARTMENT, THAT WOULD STILL BE ONE COMMUNIST TOO MANY.
NARRATOR: PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S POLICY OF CONTAINING COMMUNISM WAS BEING PUSHED TO ITS LIMITS AROUND THE WORLD.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: WORLD CONQUEST BY SOVIET RUSSIA ENDANGERS OUR LIBERTY, AND ENDANGERS THE KIND OF WORLD IN WHICH THE FREE SPIRIT OF MEN CAN SURVIVE.
NARRATOR: BY NOW THE SOVIET UNION HAD AN ATOMIC BOMB, WAS TIGHTENING ITS GRIP ON EASTERN EUROPE, AND IN ASIA HAD FORGED A POWERFUL ALLIANCE WITH MAO'S CHINA.
AT HOME, TRUMAN STOOD ACCUSED BY REPUBLICANS OF LOSING CHINA TO AN UNCHRISTIAN IDEOLOGY.
BRANDS: IT WASN'T A GOOD THING THAT CHINA WENT COMMUNIST.
THIS WAS A DIRE THREAT TO THE UNITED STATES.
AND SO, WHEN COMMUNIST FORCES OF NORTH KOREA INVADED SOUTH KOREA TRUMAN FIGURED, I NEED TO DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS.
IF POLITICALLY, THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION, LOSES SOUTH KOREA IT'S GOING TO APPEAR, FIRST OF ALL, "TO MY DOMESTIC CRITICS THAT I AM A TERRIBLE PRESIDENT," AND THERE'S THE WHOLE QUESTION OF AMERICAN CREDIBILITY.
STUECK: OUR POTENTIAL ALLIES LIKE IN EUROPE, WHICH WAS OUR TOP PRIORITY, WOULD SAY, WELL, IN THE END, THE AMERICANS CAN'T BE DEPENDED UPON.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: KOREA IS A SMALL COUNTRY THOUSANDS OF MILES AWAY, BUT WHAT IS HAPPENING THERE IS IMPORTANT TO EVERY AMERICAN.
STUECK: IT WAS REALLY INEVITABLE THAT THE AMERICANS WERE GOING TO DO WHATEVER THEY COULD TO STOP THE NORTH KOREANS.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: WE ARE UNITED IN DETESTING COMMUNIST SLAVERY.
WE KNOW THAT THE COST OF FREEDOM IS HIGH, BUT WE ARE DETERMINED TO PRESERVE OUR FREEDOM NO MATTER WHAT THE COST.
BRANDS: THE KOREAN WAR CAME TO AMERICA WITHIN THE DECADE OF WORLD WAR II.
AND WHAT AMERICANS MOST WANTED AFTER WORLD WAR II WAS TO COME HOME AND TO HAVE FAMILIES AND TO GET ABOUT THE BUSINESS OF PEACETIME AFFAIRS.
AND THEN JUST FIVE YEARS LATER THE WORLD NEEDS RE-SAVING AGAIN.
HARRY TRUMAN RECOGNIZED THAT IF A LOT OF AMERICANS STARTED GETTING KILLED IN KOREA THE WAR COULD TURN UNPOPULAR VERY QUICKLY.
TO SHARE THE BURDEN WOULD MAKE THE WAR IN KOREA POLITICALLY MORE ACCEPTABLE.
NARRATOR: IN A SHOW OF PRESIDENTIAL RESOLVE, TRUMAN BYPASSED CONGRESS WHILE ALSO APPEALING DIRECTLY TO THE NEWLY-FORMED UNITED NATIONS.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: THE ARMED INVASION OF THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA CONTINUES.
THIS IS, IN FACT, AN ATTACK ON THE UNITED NATIONS ITSELF.
NARRATOR: AND ON JUNE 27, THE SECURITY COUNCIL PASSED A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING MILITARY INTERVENTION.
BY JUNE 30, TRUMAN HAD APPROVED THE USE OF AMERICAN TROOPS, THE FIRST TIME AN AMERICAN PRESIDENT HAD UNILATERALLY COMMITTED THE COUNTRY TO WAR.
FOR A GENERATION OF YOUNG MEN WHO NEVER THOUGHT THEY'D SEE ANOTHER WAR, THE NEWS CAME AS SHOCK.
ODELL: I DIDN'T KNOW WHERE KOREA WAS UNTIL I HEARD THAT WE WAS HAVING A WAR WITH NORTH KOREA.
PETREY: I LIED.
I WAS 16 WHEN I WENT IN, BUT THE SECOND WORLD WAR HAD JUST FINISHED AND I HAD NO IDEA THAT I WOULD EVER BE INVOLVED IN A WAR.
KINARD: WHEN THE WAR STARTED IN JUNE OF 1950, EARLY ONE MORNING I RECEIVED A TELEPHONE CALL SAYING, "LIEUTENANT KINARD, YOU'RE NOW IN THE ARMY."
I SAID, "WHAT'S THIS?"
BECAUSE I DIDN'T REALLY KNOW WHERE KOREA WAS UNTIL I LOOKED AT THE MAP AND FIGURED OUT THE, IT WAS FAR FROM MY HOME AT THAT TIME, I WONDERED IF I WOULD EVER REALLY GO THERE.
BRANDS: THE TERM OF ART AT THE TIME WAS A "POLICE ACTION."
THERE IS SOMEONE WHO HAS DISTURBED THE PEACE, YOU CALL OUT THE POLICE, AND THE POLICE GO TO IT.
AND SO THIS TERM "POLICE ACTION" SEEMED TO BE A NICE DODGE AROUND WHY TRUMAN WASN'T ASKING CONGRESS FOR A DECLARATION OF WAR.
IT'S NOT REALLY A WAR.
IT'S JUST THIS "POLICE ACTION."
ODELL: YOU KNOW, WE WAS HARRY'S POLICE FORCE.
THOUGHT IT WAS KIND OF FUNNY.
HERE WE ARE FIGHTING A WAR AND HE'S CALLING IT A "POLICE ACTION."
NARRATOR: BY JULY 1950, SOME 50,000 US TROOPS, FOLLOWED BY THOUSANDS MORE FROM GREAT BRITAIN, AUSTRALIA, THAILAND AND 12 OTHER NATIONS, HEADED TOWARD KOREA.
AFTER ONLY A MONTH OF WAR, THE NORTH WAS STREAMING DOWN THE PENINSULA AT LIGHTNING SPEED, GAINING NEW GROUND BY THE DAY.
KIM IL-SUNG'S WAGER THAT HE WOULD TAKE THE SOUTH IN MATTER OF DAYS SEEMED TO BE COMING TRUE.
CUMINGS: ALL UP AND DOWN THE LINE, PEOPLE COULDN'T QUITE FIGURE OUT THE NORTH KOREANS.
JOHN FOSTER DULLES, WHO WAS TRUMAN'S ROVING AMBASSADOR FOR EAST ASIA POLICY, SAID HE CAN'T FIGURE OUT WHAT KEEPS THESE MASSES OF TROOPS COME SHRIEKING ON, OR MAYBE THEY'RE ON DRUGS, OR MAYBE THE SOVIETS HAVE FOUND SOME WAY TO PROGRAM THESE PEOPLE, AND IN FACT THEY WERE FIGHTING AND DYING FOR THEIR HOMELAND, FOR THE UNIFICATION OF THEIR HOMELAND.
JAGER: WHAT YOU HAVE REALLY IN THIS SITUATION IS THIS BRUTAL CIVIL WAR OVERLAID WITH AN INTERNATIONAL WAR BETWEEN TWO IDEOLOGICAL FOES OF THE COLD WAR, THE SOVIET UNION AND THE UNITED STATES.
NARRATOR: TO TRY TO SLOW THE NORTH KOREAN ONSLAUGHT, MACARTHUR SENT THE THE US ARMY'S 7TH CAVALRY TO INTERCEPT THEM NEAR THE CITY OF TAEJON BUT THE REGIMENT RAN INTO RESISTANCE.
GARZA: WE COULD SEE THE NORTH KOREANS, THEY WERE COMING IN WAVES.
SO BY THE TIME WE WOULD KILL THE FIRST TWO WAVES, WE WERE FIGHTING WITH BAYONETS BECAUSE WE WERE OUT OF AMMUNITION.
CUMINGS: THE NORTH KOREANS, BY MID-JULY, HAD A PINCER DOWN THE EAST COAST FROM THE NORTH AND THEN COMING AROUND FROM THE SOUTHWEST AND ALONG THE SOUTHERN COAST.
AND IF THE MARINES HAD NOT LANDED AROUND THAT TIME AND STIFFENED THE LINES, THE WAR WOULD'VE BEEN LOST.
STUECK: THEY FORMED WHAT WE CALL THE PUSAN PERIMETER.
WHICH IS CONSIDERED BASICALLY THE LAST GOOD SPOT ACROSS THE PENINSULA TO ESTABLISH A DEFENSIVE POSITION.
NARRATOR: CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE BETWEEN ADVANCING NORTH KOREAN TROOPS AND UN FORCES WERE HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF KOREAN REFUGEES WHO NOW FILLED THE ROADS BETWEEN SEOUL AND PUSAN.
CHA: MY FATHER AND MY GRANDPARENTS HAD TO WALK THE DISTANCE FROM SEOUL TO PUSAN.
THAT'S REALLY WALKING THE DISTANCE FROM WASHINGTON D.C. TO NEW YORK.
TERRY: WHEN THE WAR BROKE OUT, MY GRANDPARENTS TALKED ABOUT HOW THEY RAN TO PUSAN PERIMETER, THE FAMILY SPLIT UP.
MY GRANDMOTHER WENT WITH MY AUNTS, AND MY GRANDFATHER WENT WITH THE BOYS, MY UNCLE AND MY FATHER, AND HE LOST, ACTUALLY, ONE OF MY UNCLES DURING THE MOVE TO PUSAN.
NARRATOR: FOR UN TROOPS, ALREADY OUTMANNED AND OVERWHELMED BY THE SURGING NORTH KOREAN ARMY, THE REFUGEE CRISIS PRESENTED YET ANOTHER CHALLENGE.
NORTH KOREAN SOLDIERS HIDING AMONGST PEASANTS IN ORDER TO GET BEHIND ENEMY LINES.
CHA: THERE WERE ONLY A HANDFUL OF MAIN ROADS ALONG WHICH YOU COULD TRAVEL WITH TANKS OR WITH OTHER SORTS OF EQUIPMENT.
ON THOSE VERY SAME ROADS YOU HAD CIVILIANS THAT WERE TRYING TO EVACUATE.
AMERICAN TROOPS DID NOT KNOW WHO WAS THE ENEMY AND WHO WAS THE ALLY.
JAGER: THERE WAS ALWAYS THIS FEAR ABOUT REFUGEES.
THAT CREATED A GREAT DEAL OF MORAL DILEMMA AMONG AMERICAN SOLDIERS.
YOU SEE A BUNCH OF REFUGEES.
YOU THINK THAT NORTH KOREANS ARE HIDING AMONG THEM, DO YOU SHOOT AGAINST THEM OR NOT?
NARRATOR: IN SOME INSTANCES, U.S.
FORCES DID SHOOT AND REFUGEES WERE SACRIFICED IN THE PANIC.
NARRATOR: YANG HYE SUK WAS 13 IN JULY OF 1950 WHEN WAR CAME TO IMGYE-RI, A TINY FARM TOWN 100 MILES SOUTH OF SEOUL.
HANLEY: 1ST CAVALRY DIVISION TROOPS HAD FORCED THE PEOPLE OF THESE TWO VILLAGES CALLED JOO GOK RI AND IM GAE RI, TO EVACUATE AND GET ON THE MAIN ROAD SOUTH.
NARRATOR: CHUNG KOO-DO'S FAMILY WAS FROM THE SAME AREA AS YANG, AND HIS PARENTS AND SIBLINGS WERE AMONG THE HUNDREDS OF REFUGEES WHO WERE LED BY U.S.
TROOPS TO A PLACE CALLED NO GUN RI.
AS REFUGEES GATHERED ON NEARBY TRAIN TRACKS, EYEWITNESSES REMEMBER AMERICAN PLANES BEGINNING TO CIRCLE AND THEN OPENING FIRE.
NARRATOR: REFUGEES RAN FOR COVER UNDER A RAILROAD OVERPASS WHERE FOR THREE DAYS AND THREE NIGHTS THEY SAY THEY WERE FIRED UPON BY THE 7TH CAVALRY.
FEARFUL NORTH KOREAN SOLDIERS WERE AMONG THEM.
YANG HYE SUK, SURROUNDED BY CASUALTIES WAS HIDING UNDER HER MOTHER'S HEMP SKIRT WHEN SHE HEARD HER UNCLE CRY OUT IN PAIN.
HANLEY: EVERY WAR IS HORRIBLE.
BUT THE KOREAN WAR, AMONG AMERICAN WARS, WAS THE WAR THAT HAD THE GREATEST PROPORTION OF CIVILIAN CASUALTIES.
CUMINGS: IT WAS A VERY DIRTY WAR, AND THAT ALSO DEMORALIZED AMERICAN SOLDIERS.
THEY DIDN'T QUITE KNOW WHAT THEY WERE FIGHTING FOR, AND THEY WERE FORCED TO DO THINGS THAT THEY DIDN'T DO IN WORLD WAR II.
NARRATOR: FOR UN TROOPS IT WAS BECOMING INCREASINGLY CLEAR BY THE DAY THAT THEY WERE MIRED IN A BLOODY CONFLICT UNBOUND BY MODERN RULES OF ENGAGEMENT.
ATROCITIES COULD BE FOUND ON ALL SIDES OF THE FIGHT.
HANLEY: EARLY IN AUGUST THERE WAS A MASSACRE OF CAPTURED AMERICAN TROOPS BY THE NORTH KOREANS, AS THE NORTH KOREANS LEFT A HILLTOP, HILL 303.
THEY, THEY SIMPLY BOUND AND THEN SHOT IN THE BACK OF THE HEAD ABOUT 30 AMERICAN PRISONERS.
PHOTOS OF THIS WERE RUN IN THE STARS AND STRIPES NEWSPAPER, WHICH WAS GETTING TO THE TROOPS IN KOREA, AND SOME OF THEM CUT THE PHOTO OUT AND CARRIED IT IN THE INSIDE OF THEIR HELMETS.
SO ONCE SOMETHING LIKE THAT HAPPENS, THAT SORT OF FREES SOME MEN AT LEAST TO DO THE SAME THING TO THE ENEMY.
GARZA: WE WOULD CAPTURE 15, 20 ENEMY AND SUPPLY ONE OR TWO MEN TO ESCORT THIS POWS BACK TO THE REAR.
I SAYS, "IF THEY TRY TO GET AWAY FROM YOU, OPEN UP WITH YOUR MACHINE GUNS AND YOUR RIFLES.
DON'T LET THEM GET AWAY."
AND THEY WOULD BE GONE FOR 10 OR 15 MINUTES WHEN WE WOULD HEAR THE MACHINE GUN GOING OFF.
NARRATOR: WHILE CASUALTIES CONTINUED TO MOUNT THROUGH THE SUMMER OF 1950, THE NORTH KOREAN ARMY MAINTAINED THEIR ADVANTAGE.
NEWSCASTER: ALREADY AMERICA HAS SUFFERED 500 CASUALTIES.
FIVE SHORT YEARS AFTER A GLOBAL WAR, AMERICANS AGAIN PAY IN BLOOD... CUMINGS: ALL THE HIGH AMERICAN OFFICERS HAD BEEN HEROES OF WORLD WAR II, WHETHER IT'S GENERAL MACARTHUR OR CURTIS LEMAY OR MATTHEW RIDGWAY.
THESE WERE PEOPLE WHO WERE FAMOUS IN THE BATTLES THAT DEFEATED THE NAZIS AND THE JAPANESE... NEWSCASTER: THE TIDE OF BATTLE STILL FAVORS THE AGGRESSORS.
THE UNITED NATIONS' FORCES IN KOREA ARE FORCED TO IMPROVISE THEIR DEFENSE... CUMINGS: AND HERE IT IS 1950, ONLY FIVE YEARS LATER, AND THEY'RE GETTING THEIR BUTT WHIPPED BY ROUGH PEASANT ARMIES.
NARRATOR: UNITED NATIONS COMMANDER GENERAL MACARTHUR WAS USED TO FIGHTING WITH HIS BACK AGAINST THE ROPES.
FROM HIS HEADQUARTERS IN JAPAN, HE WAS QUIETLY PUTTING TOGETHER A PLAN FOR A BOLD COUNTER ATTACK THAT HE BELIEVED COULD BREAK THE NORTH KOREAN ARMY.
HE HOPED TO UTILIZE THE ELEMENT OF SURPRISE BY ATTACKING THE COMMUNIST FORCES FROM BEHIND, LANDING AT THE PORT OF INCHON AND CUTTING OFF SUPPLY LINES.
WITH EXTREME TIDES AND A SHALLOW SHORELINE, THE PORT OF INCHON WAS A HIGHLY RISKY SPOT FOR AN INVASION, PRECISELY THE REASON MACARTHUR THOUGHT IT WOULD WORK.
JAGER: NOBODY THOUGHT IT WAS PRACTICAL.
EVERYBODY WAS AGAINST IT, BECAUSE IT WAS SO IMPRACTICAL.
THE TIMEFRAME FOR LANDING THOSE AMPHIBIOUS VEHICLES WAS VERY LIMITED TO A FEW HOURS BUT MACARTHUR REALLY BELIEVED THAT, BECAUSE OF ITS IMPRACTICALITY THE NORTH KOREANS WOULDN'T DEFEND.
BRANDS: THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF THOUGHT THAT THIS WAS NOT A PARTICULARLY GOOD IDEA, BUT THEY WERE IN AN ODD POSITION.
MACARTHUR WAS ESSENTIALLY POLITICALLY UNTOUCHABLE, AND THERE WAS NOBODY IN THE MILITARY CHAIN OF COMMAND WHO WOULD TELL MACARTHUR "NO."
MILLETT: I THINK THAT SO MANY PEOPLE SAID YOU CAN'T DO THIS, THE MORE YOU DO THAT TO SOMEBODY LIKE MACARTHUR, IT'S GOING TO INCREASE THEIR RESISTANCE TO CHANGE.
THE MORE YOU TELL THEM NOT TO DO SOMETHING, THE MORE LIKELY IT IS YOU'RE GOING TO GET IT.
(INAUDIBLE RADIO CHATTER) EDWARDS: WHEN WE GOT ON THE SHIP, WE DIDN'T KNOW WHERE WE WERE GOING.
OUT IN THE OCEAN, WE WERE TOLD WE WERE GOING TO INCHON TO MAKE A LANDING.
I DON'T THINK I KNEW ENOUGH TO BE SCARED.
CAREY: IT HAD A 26-FOOT TIDE, AND YOU HAD TO GO IN AT HIGH TIDE, AND IT TAKES A LOT OF TIME TO GET A DIVISION ASHORE, TOTAL DIVISION.
SO I WAS PRETTY, I WAS NERVOUS, NATURALLY.
NARRATOR: ON SEPTEMBER 15TH, 70,000 US TROOPS STOOD AT ANCHOR OFF THE KOREAN COAST, AWAITING HIGH TIDE AND MACARTHUR'S ORDER TO ATTACK.
NOBODY KNEW WHAT WAS IN STORE FOR THEM ONCE THEY MADE IT TO SHORE.
MILLET: ONE ADMIRAL SAID IF YOU DREW UP ALL THE THINGS THAT MADE AMPHIBIOUS OPERATIONS DIFFICULT, INCHON HAD THEM ALL.
THE TIDES ARE BAD, THE HARBOR'S ALL MUD.
WHO KNEW HOW MANY GUNS WERE SITTING IN IT.
NARRATOR: LT. RICHARD CAREY WAS LEADING A PLATOON OF MARINES THAT DAY, WHEN AT 5PM MACARTHUR GAVE HIS UNIT THE ORDER TO ATTACK.
CAREY: WE ONLY HAD A COUPLE HOURS BEFORE IT WAS DARK.
THE ONLY PLACE WE COULD GO IN WAS INTO AN INLET.
AND WHEN WE GOT INTO THE INLET IT WAS SURROUNDED BY BARBED WIRE.
I STARTED CUTTING THE WIRE.
A SNIPER SHOT OFF MY RADIO, WAS STRAPPED ON MY SHOULDER.
AND THE GUY ON THE OTHER SIDE OF ME TOOK ONE RIGHT BETWEEN THE EYE.
EDWARDS: WE WERE GETTING SHOT AT WHEN WE HIT THE BEACH, BUT I DON'T THINK THEY EXPECTED US.
NARRATOR: DESPITE INITIAL RESISTANCE, AS AN UNRELENTING WAVES OF TROOPS LANDED ONSHORE, THE ADVANTAGE QUICKLY SHIFTED.
BY EVENING, UN FORCES HAD SECURED THE BEACH AND HEADED EAST TO CUT OFF NORTH KOREAN SUPPLY LINES.
REMARKABLY, MACARTHUR HAD CAUGHT THE NORTH KOREANS BY SURPRISE.
HIS GAMBLE HAD PAID OFF.
BRANDS: IT WAS SUCH A DARING STRIKE AND SUCH A RAPID STRIKE THAT IT CHANGED THE MOMENTUM IN THE WAR ENTIRELY.
THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOUTH KOREANS WERE LOSING BADLY UNTIL THEN.
ALL OF A SUDDEN THEY WERE WINNING!
JAGER: I MEAN, IT WAS SUCH A RISKY OPERATION, AND THE FACT THAT HE BROUGHT IT OFF WITHOUT ANY PROBLEM.
MACARTHUR WAS VIEWED AS A KIND OF GOD.
NARRATOR: IN A SINGLE STROKE, MACARTHUR HAD CEMENTED HIS REPUTATION FOR MILITARY GENIUS.
THE TIDE OF THE WAR HAD SHIFTED, AS NORTH KOREAN TROOPS SCRAMBLED BACK TOWARD THE 38TH PARALLEL.
IN JUST TWO WEEKS, SEOUL WAS BACK IN THE HANDS OF THE UNITED NATIONS AND PRESIDENT RHEE WAS RESTORED TO THE CAPITOL BUILDING.
MACARTHUR'S FORCES WERE NOW SITTING AT THE 38TH PARALLEL, WITH FRESH TROOPS, SUPERIOR AIRPOWER, AND MOMENTUM.
NEWSCASTER: THE UNITED NATIONS MAN OF THE HOUR, GENERAL MACARTHUR, WITH THE CAPTURE OF SEOUL WILL HAVE THE COMMUNIST AGGRESSORS BETWEEN A CRUSHING MILLSTONE.
NEWSCASTER: MACARTHUR HAD PLANNED ONE DARING MASTER STROKE AND TURNED THE WHOLE TIDE OF BATTLE.
STUECK: THERE'S A DRASTIC ALTERATION OF THE MILITARY SITUATION.
SUDDENLY, THE AMERICANS AND SOUTH KOREANS ARE ON THE VERGE OF GOING ACROSS THE 38TH PARALLEL AND INTO THE NORTH, AND OBVIOUSLY, MILITARY LEADERS WANT TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE IMMEDIATE SITUATION.
NARRATOR: WITH THE COURSE OF THE WAR CHANGING SO DRAMATICALLY, GENERAL MACARTHUR SAW AN OPENING TO WIDEN THE CONFLICT INTO NORTH KOREA.
IT WOULD ALLOW HIM TO UNITE THE PENINSULA IN THE NAME OF DEMOCRACY, AND TO ISSUE A DECISIVE BLOW AGAINST COMMUNISM IN ASIA.
THE GENERAL'S AGGRESSIVE WORLDVIEW WAS ALWAYS AT ODDS WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S IDEAS OF CONTAINMENT, AND OF A LIMITED WAR.
BUT WITH MACARTHUR'S SUCCESS AT INCHON, TRUMAN SUDDENLY SAW AN OPPORTUNITY.
BRANDS: MACARTHUR SAYS GIVE ME JUST A LITTLE BIT MORE TIME AND I CAN END THE WAR.
I CAN CAPTURE OR DESTROY ALL THE NORTH KOREAN FORCES.
TRUMAN, WHO JUST WEEKS BEFORE HAD WORRIED ABOUT THE FACT THAT HE WAS GOING TO BE CHARGED WITH LOSING MORE GROUND TO THE COMMUNISTS, THOUGHT "I CAN DO SOMETHING THAT NO PRESIDENT BEFORE ME HAS EVER DONE.
I CAN TAKE GROUND BACK FROM THE COMMUNISTS."
NARRATOR: ON OCTOBER 7TH 1950, MACARTHUR'S TROOPS STORMED ACROSS THE BORDER.
VICTORIES CAME QUICKLY AS UN FORCES PURSUED THE REMNANTS OF THE NORTH KOREAN ARMY AND CONTINUED TO POUND THEM FROM THE SKY.
CUMINGS: PEOPLE WERE LIGHTING CIGARS ALL OVER WASHINGTON AND SEOUL WHEN AMERICAN TROOPS WERE MARCHING UP THE PENINSULA IN OCTOBER 1950.
MACARTHUR ARRIVED IN PYONGYANG, THE CAPITAL OF NORTH KOREA, HE GETS OFF HIS PLANE, AND HE SAYS "WHERE'S KIM BUCK TOO?
ISN'T HE HERE TO GREET ME?"
REFERRING, OF COURSE, TO KIM IL-SUNG.
NARRATOR: ONLY TWO MONTHS AFTER UN TROOPS HAD FACED ANNIHILATION AT PUSAN, THEIR FLAG FLEW ABOVE KIM'S CAPITAL CITY, PYONGYANG.
EDWARDS: WE HAD ALREADY TAKEN PYONGYANG.
WE DIDN'T HAVE TOO MUCH RESISTANCE FROM THE KOREANS AT ALL.
NARRATOR: A DEVASTATING BLOW AGAINST COMMUNISM SEEMED WITHIN REACH.
MACARTHUR'S FORCES MOVED WITH LIGHTNING SPEED.
EACH DAY, THEY PRESSED CLOSER TO THE YALU RIVER, NORTH KOREA'S BORDER WITH CHINA.
STUECK: MACARTHUR ARGUES THAT REALLY HE NEEDS AMERICAN FORCES TO GO ALL THE WAY TO THE YALU IN ORDER TO CLEAN UP THE SITUATION AND DO IT QUICKLY, AND THE ADMINISTRATION BACK IN WASHINGTON, FACED WITH STRONG REPUBLICAN ATTACKS ON THE DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION BEING WEAK ON ASIA.
THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION DOES NOT SAY NO TO MACARTHUR.
NARRATOR: SAYING NO TO MACARTHUR WAS BECOMING INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT FOR TRUMAN AN UNPOPULAR PRESIDENT, WHO WAS SEEN AT HOME AS BADLY MISMANAGING THE WAR IN KOREA.
BUT NEEDING ASSURANCES FROM HIS GENERAL ON THE FUTURE COURSE OF THE WAR, TRUMAN REQUESTED A MEETING.
SINCE MACARTHUR WOULD NOT TRAVEL MORE THAN A HALF-DAY FROM TOKYO, TRUMAN FLEW TO WAKE ISLAND IN THE PACIFIC, WHERE HE WAS GREETED BY HIS GENERAL NOT WITH A TRADITIONAL SALUTE BUT WITH A CIVILIAN HANDSHAKE.
BRANDS: MACARTHUR HAD BEEN OVERSTATING HIS AUTHORITY FOR MANY MONTHS, HE WOULD HOLD NEWS CONFERENCES, AND HE WOULD SPEAK VERY OFTEN AS THE UNITED NATIONS COMMANDER AND NOT REPORT DIRECTLY TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
SO TRUMAN FLIES ALL THE WAY OUT TO WAKE ISLAND IN THE PACIFIC HOPING ON THE BASIS OF MACARTHUR'S REPEATED ASSURANCES, THE WAR IS NEARLY OVER AND KOREA WILL BE LIBERATED.
AND HE PUTS THE QUESTION TO MACARTHUR, IF AMERICAN TROOPS GET CLOSE TO THE BORDER WILL THE CHINESE ENTER THE WAR, AND MACARTHUR SAYS THEY WON'T DARE AND IF THEY DO I WILL ANNIHILATE THEM.
CAREY: WE WERE PUMPED UP.
MACARTHUR PUT IT OUT, HE SAID, "WE'RE GOING AS FAR AS THE YALU, PROBABLY YOU'RE GOING RIGHT INTO CHINA."
SO, WE WERE, WE WERE PRETTY ENTHUSIASTIC.
WE SAID, "THIS IS GOING TO BE THE END OF IT.
WE'LL WIN THE WAR RIGHT HERE."
BRANDS: MACARTHUR IS ASSURING THEM THAT THE WAR IS NEARLY OVER.
HE KEPT SAYING THAT AMERICAN TROOPS WILL BE HOME BY CHRISTMAS, THAT THE WAR IS WRAPPING UP.
WHEN AMERICAN TROOPS HAD THEIR THANKSGIVING DINNER AND THEY'RE THINKING, "CHRISTMAS, THAT'S ONLY A MONTH AWAY.
WE'RE ALL GOING TO GET TO GO HOME."
NARRATOR: A FINAL VICTORY, AND AN END TO THE WAR, WAS IN SIGHT.
IN LATE NOVEMBER, 1950, 30,000 UNITED NATIONS TROOPS PAUSED THEIR ADVANCE AND SAT DOWN IN THE FROZEN HILLS AND VALLEYS THAT SURROUNDED THE CHOSIN RESERVOIR.
THERE THEY ENJOYED A HOT THANKSGIVING DINNER COURTESY OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT.
ODELL: WE WAS DUG IN IN THE HILLS UP THERE.
HEADQUARTERS HAD SET UP COOKS AND WE HAD OUR THANKSGIVING DINNER.
THEY DIDN'T HAVE SERVING TRAYS AT THE TIME I GOT THROUGH THERE, AND I JUST WENT AHEAD AND TOOK MY HELMET LINER OUT OF THE HELMET AND USED MY HELMET, AND I HAD MY THANKSGIVING DINNER IN 1950 IN A HELMET.
AND THEN WHEN WE MOVED OUT OF WHERE WE WAS DUG IN AFTER THANKSGIVING, WE WENT ON UP THROUGH YUDAM-II.
THAT'S WHEN ALL HELL BROKE LOOSE.
NARRATOR: THE UN FORCES HAD BEEN CAUGHT IN A MASSIVE TRAP, SPRUNG BY THE CHINESE.
MACARTHUR IT SEEMED HAD MISCALCULATED.
MAO'S ARMY HAD ENTERED THE WAR.
ATTACKING AT NIGHT TO RETAIN THE ELEMENT OF SURPRISE AND TO AVOID AERIAL BOMBARDMENT, HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF CHINESE TROOPS STORMED THE FRONTLINE IN AN OVERWHELMING DISPLAY OF FORCE.
BRANDS: OVER 200,000 CHINESE MANAGED TO INFILTRATE ACROSS THE YALU RIVER.
WHEN THE AMERICANS ARE TAKEN BY SURPRISE THEY FIND THAT THEY'RE BASICALLY SURROUNDED, AND INSTEAD OF FIGHTING FOR VICTORY THEY'RE FIGHTING FOR THEIR LIVES.
ODELL: WE COULD HEAR THE BUGLES SOUNDING AND ALL THE SCREAMING AND WHAT HAVE YOU, AND THE CHINESE COMING AT YOU IN HORDES.
WE WAS OUTNUMBERED PROBABLY 5 TO 1, 10 TO 1, SOMETHING LIKE THAT.
AND THEIR SOLE PURPOSE WAS TO ANNIHILATE THE 1ST MARINE DIVISION.
CAREY: WHEN THEY CAME, THEY CAME IN WAVES.
A WAVE, A WAVE, A WAVE, A WAVE.
THE PLATOON SERGEANT AND I WERE IN A FOXHOLE TOGETHER.
SO, HE TOOK THE GRENADES OUT ALL NIGHT, HANDED THEM TO ME, I COUNTED "ONE-THOUSAND-ONE, ONE-THOUSAND-TWO" AND THREW THEM.
I THREW THREE CARTONS OF GRENADES THAT NIGHT.
THAT NIGHT WAS BITTERLY COLD.
GOD, IT WAS COLD.
IT WAS BELOW 50 BELOW ZERO.
BRANDS: MANY OF THESE SOLDIERS, THEY PRETTY MUCH CONSIGNED THEMSELVES TO DIE ONE WAY OR THE OTHER.
THEY WERE GOING TO GET KILLED BY A CHINESE BULLET OR A MORTAR ROUND OR THEY WERE GOING TO FREEZE, AND IT WAS MERELY A MATTER OF HOW LONG CAN WE PUT THIS OFF.
NARRATOR: HOMER GARZA AND THE ARMY'S 7TH CAV WERE WEST OF CHOSIN BATTLING TWO ENEMIES: THE CHINESE AND THE COLD.
GARZA: OUR FINGERS WOULD CRACK AS YOU TRIED TO CLOSE YOUR HAND WITH IT BEING SO DAMN COLD AND WE GOT THE OLD BLANKET SLEEPING BAGS AND WE CUT STRIPS OF THE BLANKETS AND WRAP IT AROUND OUR FEET TO TRY TO KEEP OUR FEET FROM FREEZING, BUT IT WAS SO COLD THAT IT WOULDN'T TAKE MORE THAN FOUR OR FIVE MINUTES AFTER A GUY WAS KILLED THAT HE WAS FROZE SOLID, IF WE WERE STAYING IN THE SAME HILL FOR A WHILE, WE WOULD GET THE DEAD CHINESE AND THE DEAD KOREANS AND STAND THEM UP AGAINST THE TREES FROZEN SOLID.
YEAH.
ODELL: WHEN YOU SAW ONE OF THOSE MARINE'S BODIES FROZEN STIFF, THAT WAS SAD.
ARMS STICKING OUT, LEGS STICKING OUT.
YOU REALLY KNEW YOU WAS AT WAR THEN.
CAREY: IT'S HARD TO DESCRIBE IT TRULY IS.
YOU HAD TO BE CAREFUL HOW YOU PICKED THEM UP.
IF YOU PICK THEM UP BY AN THE ARM, FOR EXAMPLE, YOU CAN BREAK THE ARM OFF.
NARRATOR: THERE WAS NO OPTION BUT TO RETREAT.
OVER TEN DAYS, UN TROOPS FOUGHT THEIR WAY OUT OF THE RESERVOIR, SUFFERING 18,000 CASUALTIES ALONG THE WAY.
BRANDS: THE WHOLE ETHOS OF THE AMERICAN APPROACH TO WAR WAS ADVANCE, ATTACK, AND WHEN THE SOLDIERS SAW THAT WE CAN'T ATTACK.
IN FACT, IT'S GOING TO BE EVERYTHING WE CAN DO SIMPLY TO ESCAPE, TO FLEE AND GET OUT OF THIS ALIVE, IT WAS EXCEEDINGLY DISORIENTING.
THESE WERE SOLDIERS, MANY OF THEM WHOM WERE IN THEIR FIRST COMBAT.
THEY HADN'T SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS.
THEY HAD NEVER REALLY CONFRONTED THE BASIC QUESTIONS OF LIFE AND DEATH.
ODELL: THEY TOLD US TO STRAIGHTEN UP AS WE WAS COMING IN TO HAGARU-RI, WE COME IN THEIR LIKE REAL MARINES, WE WAS SINGIN' THE MARINE CORPS HYMN, ALL GONG HO, YOU KNOW?
NARRATOR: THE TIDE OF THE WAR HAD CHANGED YET AGAIN.
UN TROOPS WERE FORCED BACK BELOW THE 38TH PARALLEL, AND WITHIN WEEKS, SEOUL HAD FALLEN TO THE COMBINED NORTH KOREAN AND CHINESE FORCES.
BLOODY FIGHTING IN AND AROUND SEOUL WOULD SEE THE CAPITOL CHANGE SIDES FOUR TIMES.
WITH AN AMERICAN PUBLIC GROWING RESTLESS WITH BAD NEWS FROM THE FRONTLINES AND BODY COUNTS OF AMERICAN SERVICEMEN INCREASING EVERYDAY, TRUMAN WAS FORCED TO CONFRONT A WAR THAT SEEMED UNWINNABLE WITH CONVENTIONAL FORCES.
BRANDS: NO ONE SERIOUSLY TALKED ABOUT THE USE OF ATOMIC WEAPONS IN KOREA UNTIL THE END OF NOVEMBER, BEGINNING OF DECEMBER, 1950, WHEN AMERICAN FORCES WERE FLEEING FOR THEIR LIVES UPON THE CHINESE ENTRY INTO THE WAR, THEN IT CERTAINLY OCCURRED TO MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC TO ASK, WELL, "HOW CAN WE LOSE TO NORTH KOREA, HOW CAN WE LOSE TO CHINA WHEN WE'VE GOT THE BOMB AND THEY DON'T?"
NARRATOR: IN THE PRESS, GENERAL MACARTHUR MADE CLEAR HIS BELIEF IN EXPANDING THE CONFLICT INTO CHINA.
AND IN THE WAR ROOM, HE WAS MAKING PLANS FOR THE USE OF THE ATOMIC BOMB.
CUMINGS: MACARTHUR WANTED AN UNLIMITED WAR.
HE WANTED TO USE 24 ATOMIC BOMBS.
IN DECEMBER 1950, HE SAID, I WANT 24 ATOMIC BOMBS TO ESTABLISH A RADIATION CORDON ALONG THE YALU RIVER, YOU KNOW, USING COBALT, WHICH HAS A HALF-LIFE OF 90 YEARS, AND THE TWO PLACES WILL BE SEPARATED, YOU KNOW, FOR A LONG TIME, GENERATIONS TO COME.
HANLEY: IN NOVEMBER OF '50, TRUMAN WAS ASKED ABOUT THE USE OF ATOMIC WEAPONS, AND HE SAID "YES, THIS WOULD HAVE TO BE CONSIDERED."
THAT WAS THE FIRST MENTION BY HIM.
BRANDS: THEN THE NEXT QUESTION IS, WELL, WHO IS GOING TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE BOMB WILL BE USED OR NOT?
TRUMAN SAID, WITHOUT THINKING VERY CLEARLY, "THE DECISION WILL BE MADE BY THE COMMANDER IN THE FIELD."
WELL, EVERYBODY REALIZED THE COMMANDER IN THE FIELD IS DOUGLAS MACARTHUR.
HARRY TRUMAN HAS JUST ANNOUNCED THIS POLICY THAT THE ATOM BOMB IS AVAILABLE FOR USE IN KOREA AND THAT DOUGLAS MACARTHUR IS GOING TO MAKE THE DECISION.
OH, BOY, WHAT HAVE WE GOT OURSELVES IN FOR?
NEWSCASTER: THE PRESIDENT HAS STATED THAT THE USE OF THE ATOMIC BOMB IS BEING CONSIDERED TO HALT THE COMMUNIST ONRUSH...
IT MAY WELL PRECIPITATE WORLD WAR III... NARRATOR: NEWS OF TRUMAN'S CONSIDERATION OF USING THE ATOMIC BOMB SET AMERICA'S ALLIES AROUND THE WORLD ON EDGE.
BRANDS: CLEMENT ATTLEE IS THE BRITISH PRIME MINISTER AND HE IS IN A MEETING OF PARLIAMENT AND HE HEARS THIS STIR IN THE BACK AND KIND OF WONDERS WHAT'S GOING ON AND SOMEBODY PASSES HIM A NOTE EXPLAINING THAT THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES HAS THREATENED THE USE OF THE ATOM BOMB IN KOREA.
NEWSCASTER: A NEW WAR BROUGHT PRIME MINISTER ATTLEE TO WASHINGTON FOR TALKS WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN... STUECK: THE PRIME MINISTER OF GREAT BRITAIN RACED ACROSS THE ATLANTIC TO TRY AND BRING SOME SANITY BACK INTO THE SITUATION.
NARRATOR: AT HOME, TRUMAN'S CONFUSING REMARKS ONLY DEEPENED THE PUBLIC'S SKEPTICISM OF HIS ABILITIES AS COMMANDER IN CHIEF.
AND GENERAL MACARTHUR'S PUBLIC CAMPAIGN FOR THE EXPANSION OF THE WAR INTO CHINA INCREASINGLY PUT THE TWO MEN AT ODDS.
CUMINGS: MACARTHUR WANTED A ROLLBACK.
HE WANTED TO KEEP ON GOING INTO CHINA AND TRY TO SETTLE THE HASH OF THE CHINESE REVOLUTION.
THAT WAS HIS GREAT ERROR IN TRUMAN'S EYES.
TRUMAN WANTED A LIMITED ROLLBACK.
HE WANTED TO ROLL NORTH KOREAN COMMUNISTS BACK AND UNIFY THE PENINSULA.
JAGER: MACARTHUR FEELS LIKE THIS IS THE PLACE WHERE WE'RE GOING TO HAVE TO HAVE THIS GREAT BATTLE AGAINST COMMUNISM, EVEN TO THE EXTENT THAT HE'S WILLING TO RISK WORLD WAR III.
BRANDS: TRUMAN SAID TO MACARTHUR "IF THIS WAR GETS ANY BIGGER, WE DON'T HAVE THE RESOURCES, WE DON'T HAVE THE MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT TO DO THAT.
GENERAL MACARTHUR, YOUR JOB IS TO BUY TIME."
WELL THAT CUT AGAINST EVERYTHING MACARTHUR.
NO, NO, IN WAR THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR VICTORY.
WE FIGHT TO WIN.
NOT SIMPLY TO HOLD GROUND.
JAGER: TRUMAN LEARNED FROM HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI THAT NO TRUE VICTORY IN THAT SENSE IS POSSIBLE ANYMORE AND SO HE REALLY WANTED TO LIMIT THE WAR.
MACARTHUR COULDN'T DEAL WITH THAT DEFEAT.
TRUMAN HAD GIVEN HIM A DIRECTIVE ON DECEMBER 5TH NOT TO SAY ANYTHING PUBLICLY AGAINST THE POLICY OF THE TRUMAN ADMINISTRATION, AND MACARTHUR CONSISTENTLY DEFIED THAT DIRECTIVE.
NARRATOR: ON APRIL 11TH 1951, PRESIDENT TRUMAN ADDRESSED THE NATION.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: I HAVE CONSIDERED IT ESSENTIAL TO RELIEVE GENERAL MACARTHUR SO THAT THERE WOULD BE NO DOUBT OR CONFUSION AS TO THE REAL PURPOSE AND AIM OF OUR POLICY.
IT WAS WITH THE DEEPEST PERSONAL REGRET THAT I FOUND MYSELF COMPELLED TO TAKE THIS ACTION.
GENERAL MACARTHUR IS ONE OF OUR GREATEST MILITARY COMMANDERS.
BUT THE CAUSE OF WORLD PEACE IS MUCH MORE IMPORTANT THAN ANY INDIVIDUAL.
BRANDS: FOR TRUMAN THIS WAS AN ISSUE THAT TRANSCENDED THE MOMENT IN KOREA.
THIS HAD EVERYTHING TO DO WITH HOW AMERICA WAS GOING TO BE GOVERNED IN THE COLD WAR.
TRUMAN RECOGNIZED THAT THE KOREAN WAR WAS NOT ONE OF A KIND.
THERE WOULD BE OTHER CHALLENGES LIKE THIS.
AND SO HE MADE A POINT OF RELIEVING MACARTHUR SIMPLY BECAUSE HIS VIEW OF WHAT AMERICAN POLICY SHOULD BE WAS DIFFERENT THAN THE PRESIDENT'S.
NARRATOR: GENERAL MACARTHUR WAS FAR FROM WOUNDED.
ON APRIL 16TH, HE BOARDED HIS PLANE AND LEFT JAPAN.
IN NEW YORK, HE WAS GIVEN A TICKER TAPE PARADE DOWN BROADWAY, AND HE WAS INVITED TO GIVE A SPEECH IN FRONT OF A JOINT SESSION OF CONGRESS.
FOR MANY, MACARTHUR WAS THE PERSONIFICATION OF AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM, THE LAST GREAT WORLD WAR II HERO.
AND IN LIVING ROOMS ACROSS THE COUNTRY, AMERICANS HUNG ON HIS EVERY WORD.
BRANDS: MACARTHUR KNOWS THAT THIS AUDIENCE IS PRIMED TO APPROVE OF HIM.
MACARTHUR: I STAND ON THIS ROSTRUM WITH A SENSE OF DEEP HUMILITY AND GREAT PRIDE.
BRANDS: AND HE SPEAKS IN A VERY STENTORIAN VOICE AND HE PLAYS THE CROWD.
MACARTHUR: BUT I STILL REMEMBER THE REFRAIN OF ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR BARRACK BALLADS OF THAT DAY WHICH PROCLAIMED MOST PROUDLY THAT "OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIE; THEY JUST FADE AWAY."
AND LIKE THE OLD SOLDIER OF THAT BALLAD, I NOW CLOSE MY MILITARY CAREER AND JUST FADE AWAY.
(APPLAUSE) BRANDS: AND THERE WAS NOT A DRY EYE IN THE HOUSE.
NARRATOR: IN PRIVATE, TRUMAN FUMED, CALLING THE SPEECH QUOTE, "A BUNCH OF DAMN BULLSHIT."
BUT HIS DECISION TO FIRE MACARTHUR NEARLY COST HIM HIS PRESIDENCY.
JAGER: I THINK HIS POPULARITY RATE SANK TO 22%.
I MEAN HE WAS AN EXTREMELY UNPOPULAR LEADER BECAUSE HE DIDN'T SEE IN TERMS OF VICTORY OR DEFEAT.
HE SAID WE HAD TO LIMIT THIS WAR.
NARRATOR: DESPITE CONTINUED PRESSURE FROM REPUBLICANS TO EXPAND THE WAR AGAINST COMMUNISM INTO CHINA AND BEYOND, TRUMAN STAYED THE COURSE.
♪ ♪ BY THE SPRING OF 1951, THE KOREAN WAR HAD REACHED A STALEMATE.
UNDER THE NEW LEADERSHIP OF GENERAL MATTHEW RIDGWAY, UN FORCES WERE DUG IN AROUND THE 38TH PARALLEL, TRADING GROUND AGAINST NORTH KOREAN AND CHINESE FORCES ONE BLOODY BATTLE AT A TIME.
KINARD: WHAT WE WERE DOING AT THAT TIME WAS VERY DIFFERENT THAN WHAT HAD BEEN EARLIER IN THE WAR.
THEY CALLED THAT THE STALEMATE AT THE TIME, WHICH IS WHAT IT WAS, BUT LIVING IN THE TRENCHES THERE IS LIKE LIVING AS ANIMALS.
YOU'RE LIVING IN THE DIRT.
YOU ATE IN THE DIRT.
THAT WAS A LITTLE BIT HARD ON THE MORALE.
BRANDS: IT WAS A TERRIBLY BLOODY AND DEMORALIZING EXPERIENCE.
THERE WAS A DYNAMIC THAT BASICALLY MEANT THAT NEITHER SIDE COULD WIN.
MOST OF THE CASUALTIES TAKE PLACE IN THIS PERIOD, FOR NO GOOD PURPOSE.
NARRATOR: ARMISTICE TALKS BETWEEN THE UN, CHINA, AND NORTH KOREA, WHICH HAD BEGUN IN THE SUMMER OF 1951, DRAGGED ON FOR MONTHS, THEN YEARS.
AT EVERY VENUE THE SOVIET UNION CONTINUED ITS STONEWALLING.
UN DELEGATE: UNITED KINGDOM?
MAN: YES.
UN DELEGATE: UNITED STATES?
MAN: YES.
UN DELEGATE: UNION OF SOCIALIST REPUBLICS?
MAN: NO.
NARRATOR: FOR STALIN AND THE COMMUNIST FORCES, KEEPING THE AMERICANS STALLED IN EAST ASIA WAS PREFERABLE.
STUECK: STALIN WAS WILLING TO FIGHT THE KOREAN WAR TO THE LAST CHINESE SOLDIER.
IT WAS KEEPING THE AMERICANS ENGAGED IN KOREA RATHER THAN BUILDING UP IN EUROPE.
NARRATOR: IN ORDER TO BREAK THE COMMUNISTS' WILL, AMERICANS STEPPED UP THEIR AIR CAMPAIGN IN NORTH KOREA.
HANLEY: ALL OF THE CITIES IN NORTH KOREA WERE ESSENTIALLY FLATTENED.
IT GOT SO THAT THE PILOTS AND THE SQUADRON LEADERS, ET CETERA, WERE COMPLAINING THEY HAD NO MORE TARGETS.
A WRITTEN DIRECTIVE TO THE 5TH AIR FORCE IN NORTH KOREA, HAD ORDERED THAT EVERY INSTALLATION, EVERY TOWN, EVERY VILLAGE BE DESTROYED.
CUMINGS: THEY DROPPED A LOT OF NAPALM.
NAPALM HAD BEEN INVENTED AT THE END OF WORLD WAR II, BUT NOT USED MUCH.
IT WAS USED INDISCRIMINATELY ACROSS NORTH KOREA.
JAGER: AND THEY THOUGHT THAT THAT WAS THE PRICE THAT YOU HAD TO PAY TO AVOID A LARGER WAR, WORLD WAR III, WITH CHINA.
AND SO BASICALLY NORTH KOREA BECAME THAT KIND OF VICTIM, TO FORCE THE COMMUNISTS TO NEGOTIATE THE ARMISTICE.
NEWSCASTER: THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IS BACK IN POWER.
GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER IS ELECTED!
NARRATOR: EVEN PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER, A REPUBLICAN WHO HAD WON THE 1952 ELECTION ON A PLEDGE TO GO TO KOREA TO END THE WAR, COULD DO LITTLE TO CHANGE THE SITUATION ON THE GROUND.
BRANDS: THE MERE FACT THAT DWIGHT EISENHOWER, THE HERO OF THE EUROPEAN SIDE OF WORLD WAR II, WAS GOING TO GO.
HE WAS GOING TO PUT HIS MIND TO IT.
NOW, IN FACT, THE END CAME NOT BECAUSE EISENHOWER WENT TO KOREA, HE WENT, HE LOOKED AROUND, BASICALLY CAME HOME.
BUT THE KEY WAS THE DEATH OF JOSEF STALIN.
NARRATOR: IN MARCH OF 1953, THE SOVIET DICTATOR DIED UNEXPECTEDLY OF A CEREBRAL HEMORRHAGE.
STALIN'S SUCCESSORS WASTED NO TIME.
MILLETT: ONCE STALIN'S GONE, HIS BODY'S HARDLY COLD WHEN THE REIGNING CENTRAL COMMITTEE, THE PRESIDIUM, SENDS A MESSAGE TO THE CHINESE AND NORTH KOREANS: "GET AN ARMISTICE."
STUECK: IT TOOK SEVERAL MONTHS TO AGREE ON AN ARMISTICE LINE.
THE COMMUNISTS INITIALLY ARGUED FOR THE 38TH PARALLEL, WHICH WAS AN INDEFENSIBLE LINE ON A MAP.
THE AMERICANS INSISTED ON ANOTHER LINE, A LINE THAT WAS DEFENSIBLE.
THEY WANTED THE ARMISTICE TO SURVIVE.
NARRATOR: EVEN AS NEGOTIATORS ARGUED OVER THE LAST DETAILS, BATTLES CONTINUED TO RAGE.
AT PORK CHOP HILL, AN 800-FOOT-HIGH RIDGE NEAR THE 38TH PARALLEL, THE US ARMY LOST NEARLY 1,000 MEN TO DEATH OR INJURY FIGHTING OVER A PLOT OF LAND OF NO STRATEGIC OR TACTICAL VALUE.
TO THE SOLDIERS IN THE TRENCHES, IT SEEMED THE FIGHTING WOULD NEVER END.
KINARD: WE DIDN'T KNOW TOO MUCH ABOUT WHAT WAS GOING ON WITH NEGOTIATIONS EXCEPT THEY WERE HAPPENING.
ALL OF US HOPED AND THOUGHT ANY DAY WE WERE GOING TO HAVE A TREATY SIGNED.
YOU ALWAYS THOUGHT, I DON'T WANT TO BE THE LAST ONE TO DIE IN THIS WAR.
STEUK: EVENTUALLY THE TWO SIDES AGREED NOT TO ACCEPT THE 38TH PARALLEL.
THEY WOULD ACCEPT A DEMILITARIZED ZONE ON EACH SIDE OF THE LINE OF BATTLE, SO THERE WOULD BE A MINOR RETREAT OF ANYWHERE FROM THREE TO FIVE KILOMETERS AT THE END OF THE WAR, BUT IT WOULD BE ESSENTIALLY THE BATTLE LINE.
NEWSCASTER: THEN THE EXODUS BEGINS, AND FROM THE DISPUTED HILLS HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF MEN PULL BACK, AND THERE'S NOT A REGRET IN A TRUCKLOAD... NARRATOR: WHILE US FORCES WERE HAPPY TO PULL BACK, FOR MANY KOREANS THE LOCATION OF THE NEW BORDER HAD SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES.
FAMILIES WOULD BE PERMANENTLY SEPARATED AS TERRITORY ONCE SITUATED IN THE SOUTH SUDDENLY CAME UNDER NORTHERN CONTROL.
PARK KYUNG SOON'S HOMETOWN OF KAESONG WAS ONE SUCH CITY THAT WAS NOW CAUGHT BEHIND ENEMY LINES.
KYUNG SOON LIVED AT HOME WITH HER TWO YOUNGER SIBLINGS.
HER MOTHER, FEARING WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN TO HER DAUGHTER IN NORTH KOREA, TOLD HER TO FLEE.
NARRATOR: ON JULY 27TH, 1953, AN ARMISTICE WAS FINALLY REACHED BETWEEN THE UN, CHINA AND NORTH KOREA.
IT CALLED FOR A CESSATION OF HOSTILITIES AND ARMED FORCE UNTIL AN OFFICIAL PEACE TREATY IS SIGNED.
TERRY: NORTH KOREA WAS COMPLETELY DESTROYED, NOT A BUILDING LEFT STANDING.
SOUTH KOREA WAS COMPLETELY DESTROYED.
CHINA LOST A MILLION PEOPLE.
MAO LOST HIS OWN SON.
AND U.S. TOO, WHAT DO WE ACCOMPLISH AFTER THREE YEARS OF DESTRUCTION?
WE'RE LEFT WITH WHERE WE STARTED, WITH THE, WITH THE DMZ AND THE 38TH PARALLEL.
♪ ♪ ♪ NAT KING COLE: PRETEND YOU'RE HAPPY WHEN YOU'RE BLUE ♪ ♪ IT ISN'T VERY HARD TO DO ♪ ♪ AND YOU'LL FIND HAPPINESS WITHOUT... ♪♪ KINARD: MOST OF US WHEN WE CAME BACK REALLY FELT LIKE WE HAD NOT ACCOMPLISHED MUCH.
THE AMERICAN PEOPLE GENERALLY, MOST OF THEM REALLY DIDN'T EVEN KNOW WHERE WE'D BEEN.
A NUMBER OF THE KOREAN VETERANS THAT I KNOW OF THAT CAME BACK HOME WOULD WALK DOWN THE STREET AND THEIR FRIENDS WOULD ASK THEM, 'WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN?'
AND THEY SAID, 'OH, WE'VE BEEN IN A WAR IN KOREA.'
'WHERE'S KOREA?'
BRANDS: NO ONE COULD GIN UP ENTHUSIASM FOR A VICTORY PARADE BECAUSE THERE WASN'T A VICTORY.
IN FACT, WHEN THE TROOPS CAME HOME THERE WAS THIS ARMISTICE.
THERE WAS THE POSSIBILITY THAT THEY MIGHT HAVE TO GO BACK.
NARRATOR: DESPITE THE END OF MAJOR COMBAT, THE KOREAN WAR WAS FAR FROM OVER.
THERE WAS NO OFFICIAL PEACE TREATY, THOUSANDS OF POWS WERE STILL AWAITING REPATRIATION AND TENSIONS ALONG THE DMZ WOULD REQUIRE PRESIDENT EISENHOWER TO COMMIT TENS OF THOUSANDS OF TROOPS TO ACT AS A STANDING FORCE ALONG THE BORDER.
BUT AT HOME, AMERICANS WERE TIRED OF WAR AND HAD LONG LOST INTEREST IN EVENTS IN KOREA.
BRANDS: AMERICANS CONCLUDE THAT NOT THAT MUCH WAS AT STAKE IN KOREA.
WE'RE NOT GOING TO WORLD WAR III OVER KOREA, AND THE COMMUNISTS AREN'T GOING TO TAKE OVER SOUTH KOREA.
IT DIDN'T SEEM TO BE THREATENING TO AMERICA'S ACTUAL LIFE AND LIVELIHOOD.
LET'S JUST FORGET ABOUT THIS.
♪ NAT KING COLE: SO WHY DON'T YOU PRETEND ♪♪ NARRATOR: THE LUXURY OF FORGETTING THE WAR WAS NOT POSSIBLE ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA.
THREE YEARS OF BLOODY CONFLICT HAD LEFT BOTH KOREAS DEVASTATED, THEIR CITIES FLATTENED AND THEIR ECONOMIES DESTROYED.
CHA: AFTER THE ARMISTICE WAS SIGNED, THE KOREAN PENINSULA WAS BASICALLY A FIELD OF RUBBLE.
THE UNITED STATES DROPPED MORE ORDINANCE ON NORTH KOREA IN THAT THREE-YEAR WAR THAN WE DROPPED DURING THE ENTIRE SECOND WORLD WAR, BASICALLY LEVELED THE COUNTRY.
THE SOUTHERN SIDE OF THE PENINSULA WAS NO BETTER.
EVERYTHING WAS LEVELED.
THEY WERE STARTING VERY MUCH FROM SCRATCH.
NARRATOR: DESPITE AN INFLUX OF MILLIONS OF AMERICAN DOLLARS TO REBUILD SOUTH KOREA, THE COUNTRY REMAINED AMONG THE WORLD'S POOREST.
SYNGMAN RHEE, WHO AFTER THE ARMISTICE CONTINUED HIS AUTHORITARIAN REGIME, RULED OVER A GOVERNMENT RIFE WITH CORRUPTION AND MISMANAGEMENT.
CHA: SYNGMAN RHEE RULED THE COUNTRY OSTENSIBLY AS A CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRACY, BUT REALLY IN A VERY BRUTAL AND RUTHLESS WAY, VERY CLIQUISH, FOCUSING ON PROVIDING BENEFITS TO HIS FOLLOWERS, PUNISHING HIS DETRACTORS, AND HE ESSENTIALLY SOUGHT ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE FROM THE UNITED STATES AND FROM OTHER COUNTRIES, BUT WAS USING IT LARGELY TO SUBSIDIZE HIS OWN RULE AND WAS NOT REALLY PUTTING IT INTO AN ECONOMIC PLAN.
NARRATOR: IN THE COUNTRYSIDE AND IN MAJOR CITIES FOOD AND BASIC RESOURCES REMAINED SCANT FOR YEARS.
TERRY: I WAS RAISED IN GANGNAM, APGUJEONG-DONG IN GANGNAM, WITH PSY, THE SINGER, SINGS ABOUT IT.
SO, I HAVE A MEMORY OF THAT, WHEN IT WAS JUST A FIELD, AND HAD NONE OF THESE BUILDINGS.
SOUTH KOREA, PEOPLE FORGET, WAS ONE OF THE POOREST COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD.
NARRATOR: IN NORTH KOREA, DESPITE THE COMPLETE DESTRUCTION OF ITS INFRASTRUCTURE, KIM IL SUNG QUICKLY OVERSAW THE COMPLETE TRANSFORMATION OF HIS COUNTRY AND REBUILT IT IN HIS IMAGE.
CHA: AFTER THE END OF THE KOREAN WAR, THE NORTH KOREAN ECONOMY DEVELOPED QUITE RAPIDLY BECAUSE THEY HAD A GREAT DEAL OF SUPPORT FROM THE SOVIET UNION AND FROM COMMUNIST CHINA.
STUECK: ECONOMIC GROWTH IN NORTH KOREA THROUGH THE '50S, AFTER THE ARMISTICE AND REALLY INTO THE EARLY '60S, WAS CLEARLY GREATER THAN THAT OF SOUTH KOREA.
NARRATOR: KIM IL-SUNG USED THE MEMORY OF THE WAR TO DOUBLE DOWN ON HIS AUTHORITY.
IN HIS RE-WRITING OF HISTORY, AMERICA AND SOUTH KOREA WERE THE AGGRESSORS WHO INSTIGATED THE WAR AND IT WAS HE WHO LEAD NORTH KOREA TO VICTORY OVER AMERICAN TYRANNY.
TERRY: THE WAY THE NORTH KOREANS LEARN ABOUT THE KOREAN WAR IS THAT THE UNITED STATES, FIRST OF ALL, DIVIDED THE KOREAN PENINSULA, THEN INVADED NORTH KOREA, BUT UNDER THE GREAT LEADERSHIP OF KIM IL-SUNG, THE NORTH KOREANS EMERGED VICTORIOUS, YET YOU HAVE TO CONTINUALLY FIGHT AGAINST THE AMERICANS, BECAUSE THE AMERICANS ARE BENT ON DESTRUCTION OF NORTH KOREA, AND THIS IS SORT OF REPEATED OVER AND OVER AND OVER.
NARRATOR: TO STRENGTHEN THIS MYTHOLOGY AND CONSOLIDATE HIS POWER, KIM ENFORCED A SERIES OF BRUTAL PURGES.
JAGER: AFTER THE WAR, KIM IL-SUNG WAS IN A VERY VULNERABLE POSITION, BECAUSE HE LED THE COUNTRY INTO THIS DISASTER BUT KIM IL-SUNG IS A SURVIVOR AND HE THEN BEGINS TO CONSOLIDATE HIS POWER AND THEN A HUGE PURGE HAPPENS IN '58 AND '59.
SOME PEOPLE SAY LIKE 100,000 PEOPLE THEN ARE KILLED, BY '61, HE'S TOTALLY IN POWER.
NARRATOR: KIM EVEN CREATED HIS OWN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY IN ORDER TO GOVERN THE COUNTRY.
HE CALLED IT "JUCHE" A REVOLUTIONARY THEORY THAT FOCUSED ON INDEPENDENCE, NATIONALISM AND MOST IMPORTANTLY SELF-DEFENSE.
NARRATOR: BEFORE HE DEFECTED TO THE SOUTH IN 2004, JANG JIN SUNG WAS A PROMINENT MEMBER OF THE NORTH KOREAN PROPAGANDA WING AND WAS RAISED UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF KIM IL-SUNG.
NARRATOR: THOUGH INCREASINGLY ISOLATED, KIM IL-SUNG'S VISION FOR HIS COUNTRY REMAINED TRUE: TO BUILD AN ARMY STRONG ENOUGH TO DEFEND ITSELF FROM AMERICA AND SOUTH KOREA AND TO ONE DAY UNIFY THE PENINSULA.
♪♪ (SINGING IN NATIVE LANGUAGE) BY 1968 SOUTH KOREA HAD EMERGED FROM THE ERA OF CORRUPTION AND ECONOMIC STAGNATION THAT HAD MARRED SYNGMAN RHEE'S ADMINISTRATION.
UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF GENERAL PARK CHUNG HEE, A MILITARY LEADER WITH AN EYE TOWARD MODERNITY, SOUTH KOREA'S ECONOMY WAS BOOMING.
JAGER: BY THE LATE 1960S AND EARLY '70S, PARK CHUNG-HEE IMPLEMENTED AN EXPORT-ORIENTED ECONOMY AND IT WAS THROUGH HIS GUIDANCE THAT SOUTH KOREA AS WE KNOW IT REALLY BEGAN TO TAKE OFF ECONOMICALLY.
I MEAN HE WAS ALSO A DICTATOR, BUT HE WAS ABLE TO CREATE THE ECONOMIC PLATFORM FROM WHICH SOUTH KOREA COULD THEN DEVELOP INTO A DEMOCRACY.
AND OF COURSE SOUTH KOREA'S RISE AND GLOBAL POWER AND SUCCESS THEN REFLECTED BACK ON THE SUCCESS OF THE AMERICAN WAR.
NARRATOR: WHILE SOUTH KOREA'S PROSPERITY WAS HERALDED ACROSS THE WESTERN WORLD, TO KIM IL-SUNG AND NORTH KOREA IT WAS A THREAT.
JAGER: AS SOUTH KOREA STARTED TO TAKE OFF ECONOMICALLY, NORTH KOREA THEN SAW THE WINDOW FOR REUNIFICATION CLOSING BECAUSE IT HAD SURPASSED NORTH KOREA'S ECONOMY.
NORTH KOREA WAS GOING DOWN ECONOMICALLY, SOUTH KOREA WAS GOING UP.
WITH THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN TROOPS SITTING ON ITS BORDER, AND A WELL-ARMED SOUTH KOREAN MILITARY, KIM IL SUNG SAW HIS OPPORTUNITIES TO UNITE THE PENINSULA UNDER HIS OWN CONTROL SHRINKING BY THE DAY.
LANKOV: BETWEEN 1967 AND 1972, IT DID LOOK LIKE THAT NORTH KOREANS REALLY WANTED TO RESTART HOSTILITIES AND MAYBE CREATE HAVOC BY SUCCESSFUL ASSASSINATIONS OF HIGH LEVEL OFFICIALS.
SO, A SHORT PERIOD WHICH IS SOMETIMES CALLED THE SECOND KOREAN WAR BEGAN.
JAGER: AND IT WAS AT THAT POINT THAT NORTH KOREA THEN BEGINS A SERIES OF PROVOCATIVE ACTIONS IN ORDER TO UNIFY THE PENINSULA UNDER KIM IL-SUNG'S RULE.
NARRATOR: ON JANUARY 21ST 1968, KIM IL-SUNG ORDERED HIS MOST BRAZEN MILITARY OPERATION SINCE THE SIGNING OF THE 1953 ARMISTICE.
A UNIT OF HIGHLY TRAINED NORTH KOREAN COMMANDOS CUT THEIR WAY THROUGH BARBED WIRE ALONG THE DMZ AND SNUCK INTO THE SOUTH.
DONNING SOUTH KOREAN MILITARY UNIFORMS AND CREDENTIALS, THE COMMANDOS STORMED THE BLUE HOUSE, THE PRIVATE RESIDENCE OF PRESIDENT PARK CHUNG HEE.
THE COMMANDOS' ORDERS, WHICH CAME DIRECTLY FROM KIM IL-SUNG, WERE CONCISE AND EXPLICIT.
CHA: THE INSTRUCTIONS WERE BASICALLY, TO GO TO THE BLUE HOUSE TO KILL THE SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT, PARK CHUNG-HEE, TO CUT OFF HIS HEAD AND BRING IT BACK TO NORTH KOREA.
NARRATOR: THE NORTH KOREANS GOT WITHIN YARDS OF THE PRESIDENT BEFORE THEY WERE DISCOVERED, AND THE ASSASSINATION WAS THWARTED.
GENERAL BONESTEEL: AND I SINCERELY HOPE KIM IL SUNG AND HIS PEOPLE UP NORTH RECOGNIZE THE FUTILITY AND THE UNWISDOM OF CONTINUING THIS ACTION.
NARRATOR: BUT JUST DAYS LATER, NORTH KOREA CAPTURED THE USS PUEBLO WHICH HAD BEEN SAILING OFF OF THE COAST OF KOREA.
THE 82-MAN CREW WAS BOUND, BLINDFOLDED, AND TRANSPORTED TO PYONGYANG, WHERE THEY WERE CHARGED AS SPIES.
FOR ELEVEN MONTHS, THE SHIP'S CREW WAS TORTURED AND SUBJECTED TO HARSH INTERROGATIONS.
PRESIDENT JOHNSON: THE NORTH KOREANS COMMITTED YET ANOTHER WANTON AND AGGRESSIVE ACT BY SEIZING AN AMERICAN SHIP AND ITS CREW.
CLEARLY, THIS CANNOT BE ACCEPTED.
NARRATOR: BY THE WINTER OF 1968, IT SEEMED AMERICA WAS ONCE AGAIN BEING PULLED INTO THE CONFLICT IN KOREA JUST AS THEIR WAR IN VIETNAM WAS HEATING UP.
CUMINGS: THE SEIZURE OF THE PUEBLO HAPPENED ALMOST CONTERMINOUSLY WITH THE TET OFFENSIVE AND WAS DESIGNED TO PUT PRESSURE ON THE US BY THE NORTH KOREANS, WHO WERE HELPING THE NORTH VIETNAMESE AS PILOTS AND THINGS LIKE THAT.
STUECK: THE PUEBLO INCIDENT KIND OF ILLUSTRATES THE DILEMMA THAT THE AMERICANS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN IN, BECAUSE WE DO HAVE MAJOR INTERESTS IN KOREA, BUT WE HAVE GLOBAL INTERESTS AS WELL.
SO THE AMERICANS WERE DEEPLY ENGAGED IN VIETNAM, AND WERE SCARED TO DEATH THAT PARK CHUNG HEE WOULD TAKE SOME KIND OF ACTION THAT WOULD CREATE A RENEWED KOREAN WAR.
JAGER: PARK CHUNG-HEE IS FURIOUS.
HE WANTS TO GO NORTH.
HE WANTS TO SEEK REVENGE FOR THE BLUE HOUSE RAID, BUT ALL THE OTHER POWERS AROUND THE KOREAN PENINSULA, OF COURSE, ARE NOT INTERESTED IN RESTARTING THE KOREAN WAR.
THE AMERICANS ARE BOGGED DOWN IN VIETNAM.
THE SOVIET UNION HAS DISTRACTIONS IN EASTERN EUROPE, IT INVADES CZECHOSLOVAKIA IN 1968, AND THE CHINESE ARE INVOLVED IN THEIR CULTURAL REVOLUTION, SO THE OUTSIDE POWERS OUTSIDE OF THE KOREAN PENINSULA HAVE NO INTEREST IN STARTING THE KOREAN WAR, BUT THE TWO KOREAS WANT, AGAIN, TO START A WAR.
NARRATOR: WITH PRESSURE FROM AMERICA KOREAN PRESIDENT PARK STOOD DOWN.
THE AMERICAN CREW OF THE PUEBLO WERE RELEASED IN DECEMBER 1968 BUT THE SHIP WAS NEVER RETURNED.
CHA: I THINK IT'S FAIR TO SAY THAT AFTER THE INITIAL HOT WAR BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH KOREA, THERE WAS A COLD WAR COMPETITION BETWEEN THE NORTH AND THE SOUTH THAT WAS QUITE INTENSE.
LOTS OF HOSTILITIES DAY TO DAY ALONG THE BORDER, AND EVERY TIME IN THAT HISTORY WHENEVER WE SAW THE SOUTH KOREANS DOING SOMETHING GOOD, THE NORTH KOREANS WOULD ALWAYS SEEK TO SPOIL THAT PARTY.
NARRATOR: SIMMERING TENSIONS BETWEEN THE TWO KOREAS CONTINUED THROUGHOUT THE 70'S AND 80'S.
THEN AS THE DECADE WOUND DOWN, NORTH KOREA WOULD STRIKE YET AGAIN, THIS TIME WHILE THE WHOLE WORLD WATCHED.
LANKOV: THESE GAMES WERE WIDELY SEEN WORLDWIDE AS A TRIUMPH OF THE SOUTH KOREAN ANTI-COMMUNIST REGIMES.
AND WELL, NORTH KOREANS WANTED TO SPOIL THE SHOW.
NARRATOR: IN NOVEMBER OF 1987, JUST WEEKS BEFORE SOUTH KOREA WAS TO HOLD ITS FIRST DEMOCRATIC ELECTIONS WHILE BUSILY PREPARING FOR THE OLYMPIC GAMES, TWO NORTH KOREAN AGENTS WORKING UNDER ORDERS FROM THE KIM REGIME PLANTED A BOMB ABOARD KOREAN AIR FLIGHT 858.
ALL 104 PASSENGERS AND 11 CREW MEMBERS WERE KILLED.
US OFFICIAL: THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA HAS PRODUCED EVIDENCE THAT KAL 858 WAS DESTROYED BY AN ACT OF TERRORISM BY NORTH KOREA.
LANKOV: THIS BOMBING OF THE KOREAN AIRLINES PLANE WAS JUST A PART OF THEIR EFFORTS TO CREATE A CLIMATE OF FEAR, TO PREVENT PEOPLE FROM GOING TO THE SEOUL OLYMPIC GAMES.
NARRATOR: BUT THE DESPERATE ACT OF TERROR BY KIM IL-SUNG BACKFIRED.
JAGER: AND IT'S AT THAT POINT, THAT REALLY, YOU CAN SAY THAT THE KOREAN WAR HAS BEEN WON BY SOUTH KOREA.
ANNOUNCER: THE WORLD TO SEOUL, SEOUL TO THE WORLD... JAGER: AND THEN THE SOVIET UNION ESTABLISHES DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH SOUTH KOREA IN 1990.
CHINA FOLLOWS IN 1992.
SO NORTH KOREA IS NOW DIPLOMATICALLY ISOLATED, HUMILIATED BY THE SEOUL OLYMPICS, AND UNABLE TO DEAL WITH SOUTH KOREA ON ANY EQUAL TERMS.
AND IT'S THAT TIME THEN, THAT THE NORTH KOREAN REGIME SEEKS ITS NUCLEAR PROGRAM FOR ITS OWN SECURITY.
♪♪ NARRATOR: ON JULY 8TH 1994, KIM IL-SUNG DIED.
ORDINARY NORTH KOREANS WERE FORCED INTO A STATE OF PROLONGED MOURNING.
NARRATOR: KIM'S SON, KIM JONG-IL WAS MADE SUPREME LEADER.
HE INHERITED A COUNTRY IN CRISIS.
THE COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION IN THE EARLY 90'S DEVASTATED THE NORTH KOREAN ECONOMY AND A SERIES OF SUCCESSIVE FAMINES KILLED AN ESTIMATED ONE MILLION KOREANS.
BUT EVEN AS HIS PEOPLE WERE STARVING, KIM DOUBLED DOWN ON HIS FATHER'S EXPENSIVE NUCLEAR AMBITIONS.
JAGER: SO EVERYONE REALLY THINKS AT THAT POINT THAT NORTH KOREA'S GOING TO COLLAPSE AND YET IT DOESN'T.
KIM JONG-IL CONTINUES WITH HIS NUCLEAR PROGRAM AND HE KNOWS THAT IS THE ONLY LEVERAGE HE HAS FOR SURVIVAL.
PRESIDENT CLINTON: THE SITUATION IN KOREA IS SERIOUS, WE ARE EXAMINING WHAT WE CAN DO, WE'RE TALKING TO OUR SOUTH KOREAN PARTNERS... NARRATOR: IN 1994, AFTER IT WAS DISCOVERED THAT THE NORTH WAS SECRETLY PRODUCING PLUTONIUM FOR A BOMB, PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON DISPATCHED A TEAM OF AMERICAN DIPLOMATS TO GENEVA TO DEFUSE THE CRISIS.
PRESIDENT CLINTON: WE ARE PURSUING OUR SANCTIONS DISCUSSIONS IN THE UNITED NATIONS.
NARRATOR: AFTER MONTHS OF NEGOTIATIONS, KIM JONG IL CONSENTED TO FREEZE HIS NUCLEAR PROGRAM IN EXCHANGE FOR INCREASED AID.
THEY CALLED IT THE "AGREED FRAMEWORK."
BILL CLINTON REFERRED TO THE DEAL AS THE FIRST STEP ON THE ROAD TO A NUCLEAR FREE KOREAN PENINSULA.
TERRY: SO, THAT WAS SORT OF THE HEIGHT OF DIPLOMACY.
MADELEINE ALBRIGHT AS THE SECRETARY OF STATE WENT TO NORTH KOREA.
THE PROBLEM IS THAT NORTH KOREANS WERE PURSUING A SEPARATE TRACK, A URANIUM ENRICHMENT PROGRAM, BEFORE THE 1994 AGREED FRAMEWORK, DURING THE NEGOTIATION, AND AFTER THE AGREED FRAMEWORK.
SO, NORTH KOREANS WERE ALWAYS BENT ON KEEPING SOME ASPECT OF THEIR NUCLEAR PROGRAM.
CHA: FOR NORTH KOREA, NUCLEAR WEAPONS ARE NOT ONLY THE ULTIMATE SIGN OF STRENGTH, BUT THEY HAVE MEANING FOR NORTH KOREA AND THEIR HISTORY BECAUSE KIM IL-SUNG SAW HOW JAPAN'S OCCUPATION OF KOREA, WHICH LOOKED LIKE IT WOULD NEVER END, SUDDENLY BEING TERMINATED BY TWO ATOMIC BOMBS THAT THE UNITED STATES DROPPED ON JAPAN.
THEY SAW CHINA EXPLODE A NUCLEAR DEVICE IN 1964 AND THEN BECOME A PERMANENT MEMBER OF THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL.
THESE ARE THE INTERPRETATIONS, THE LESSONS THE NORTH KOREANS LEARNED FROM THE ABILITY TO HAVE NUCLEAR WEAPONS.
NARRATOR: AS NORTH KOREA RETREATED FURTHER AND FURTHER INTO ISOLATION, SOUTH KOREA WAS BECOMING A PARAGON OF CAPITALISM, AND DEMOCRACY.
EVEN THOUGH THE WAR BETWEEN THE TWO HAD NOT ENDED, MEMORIES OF IT RECEDED BEHIND GLOWING MONUMENTS TO ECONOMIC PROGRESS, SPEARHEADED BY THE SUCCESS OF COMPANIES LIKE SAMSUNG AND HYUNDAI.
BUT BY THE LATE 90S, AS DEMOCRACY RIPENED AND WITH IT A FREE PRESS, HARROWING TRUTHS ABOUT THE WAR FINALLY CAME TO LIGHT AND THREATENED TO STRAIN THE LONG STANDING ALLIANCE BETWEEN AMERICA AND SOUTH KOREA.
NARRATOR: CHOE SANG-HUN WAS REPORTER FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS IN SEOUL IN THE LATE '90S.
NARRATOR: CHOE PARTNERED WITH A TEAM AT AP'S NEW YORK BUREAU, LED BY CHARLES HANLEY.
HANLEY: THE INVESTIGATION WAS A VERY DETAILED, VERY ARDUOUS, ONEROUS, DRAWN-OUT INVESTIGATION.
IT WASN'T EASY.
NARRATOR: THE TEAM BEGAN TO INTERVIEW SURVIVORS WHO DESCRIBED ATROCITIES PERPETRATED BY AMERICAN MILITARY IN THE EARLIEST DAYS OF THE WAR.
ONE OF THE WORST WAS THE MASSACRE AT NO GUN RI WHERE HUNDREDS OF SOUTH KOREAN CIVILIAN REFUGEES WERE KILLED WHILE THEY HUDDLED UNDER A TRAIN OVERPASS.
HANLEY: THE STORIES FROM THE KOREAN SURVIVORS WERE JUST HORRIBLE.
AND THE KEY THING THEN WAS TO FIND THE AMERICANS INVOLVED.
WE NEEDED TO FIND CORROBORATION.
MY COLLEAGUE MARTHA MENDOZA AND I BEGAN MAKING COLD CALLS TO THESE VETERANS.
NARRATOR: HOMER GARZA WAS A 17 YEAR OLD PRIVATE WITH THE ARMY'S 7TH CAVALRY.
HE SAYS HE ARRIVED AT NO GUN RI JUST AFTER THE MASSACRE ENDED.
GARZA: THERE WAS TWO TUNNELS SIDE BY SIDE.
WHEN WE GOT THERE, THERE MUST'VE BEEN ABOUT 300 SOUTH KOREAN CIVILIANS THAT WERE KILLED THERE.
ONE THING I'LL NEVER FORGET, THERE WAS A WOMAN, A MOTHER, LAYING THERE ON HER BACK.
AND SHE HAD A LITTLE BABY ABOUT, PROBABLY ABOUT, NOT MORE THAN 8 OR 9 MONTHS OLD TRYING TO NURSE ON THE DEAD BODY THERE, YOU KNOW.
NARRATOR: GARZA CONTENDS AMERICAN SOLDIERS WERE NOT TO BLAME FOR THE MASSACRE BUT ALONG WITH OTHER VETERANS HE HAS CONFIRMED THAT THEIR ORDERS DURING THE WAR WERE CLEAR.
GARZA: WE RECEIVED ORDERS THAT ANYTHING IN FRONT OF US WAS THE ENEMY, NO MATTER WHO WAS IN FRONT OF US.
IF THEY DIDN'T SHOOT AT YOU, YOU WOULD SHOOT AT THEM.
YEAH.
WHETHER THEY WAS A MALE OR A FEMALE.
NARRATOR: CHOE, HANLEY, AND A TEAM OF AP REPORTERS DUG INTO THE PENTAGON'S FILES, MANY OF THEM FORMERLY CLASSIFIED WHAT THEY FOUND THERE SUPPORTED THE SURVIVORS' ACCOUNTS.
HANLEY: THERE WERE ORDERS FLYING AROUND THE WARFRONT TO TREAT CIVILIANS AS ENEMY.
ORDERS FROM THE VERY TOP COMMAND, THE 8TH ARMY, TO STOP ANY REFUGEE MOVEMENT ACROSS LINES.
THIS WAS JUST A PRIMA FACIE CASE OF A WAR CRIME.
TARGETING NONCOMBATANTS HAS ALWAYS BEEN CONSIDERED A WAR CRIME, AND THESE WERE THE FIRST DOCUMENTS LIKE THIS TO BE TURNED UP.
NARRATOR: ON SEPTEMBER 29, 1999, THE AP PUBLISHED THE FIRST PIECE OF THEIR INVESTIGATIVE REPORT.
HANLEY: BY THE NEXT DAY, DEFENSE SECRETARY WILLIAM COHEN HAD ORDERED AN ARMY INVESTIGATION, WHICH DRAGGED ON FOR MANY MONTHS.
GARZA: SOMEHOW MY NAME GOT ALL THE WAY TO THE PENTAGON.
AND I GOT ON THE PHONE AND HE SAID, "THIS IS COLONEL SO-AND-SO."
SAYS, "WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU ABOUT NO GUN RI."
I SAYS, "NEITHER ONE OF YOU HAVE BEEN IN COMBAT SO YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT THE HELL YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT.
YOU'RE FIGHTING TO KEEP YOUR ASS ALIVE.
THAT'S WHAT YOU'RE DOING."
NARRATOR: OUTRAGED SOUTH KOREANS DEMANDED AN OFFICIAL APOLOGY FROM THE U.S.
BUT ONE NEVER CAME.
PRESIDENT CLINTON: WE KNOW THINGS HAPPEN WHICH SHOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED.
AND THAT THINGS HAPPEN WHICH WERE WRONG.
HANLEY: PRESIDENT CLINTON DID NOT OFFER AN APOLOGY.
AN APOLOGY WOULD BE AN ADMISSION OF CULPABILITY.
WHAT CLINTON ISSUED WAS A STATEMENT OF REGRET.
WHICH OF COURSE SIMPLY SAYS, "IT'S TOO BAD THIS THING HAPPENED TO YOU, WE REALLY FEEL SORRY FOR YOU."
♪ ♪ NEWSCASTER: A MAJOR DISASTER IS OCCURRING IN NEW YORK CITY THIS MORNING.
IF YOU ARE A NEW YORK CITY FIREFIGHTER, DROP WHAT YOU'RE DOING.
REPORT TO YOUR COMPANY.
PRESIDENT BUSH: EVERY NATION, IN EVERY REGION, NOW HAS A DECISION TO MAKE.
EITHER YOU'RE WITH US.
OR YOU ARE WITH THE TERRORISTS.
NARRATOR: IN A SPEECH AFTER THE DEVASTATING TERRORIST ATTACKS ON SEPTEMBER 11TH, 2001, PRESIDENT BUSH THRUST NORTH KOREA BACK INTO AMERICA'S CONSCIOUSNESS, USING THE ROGUE NATION AS JUSTIFICATION FOR HIS BROADER WAR ON TERROR.
PRESIDENT BUSH: NORTH KOREA IS A REGIME ARMING WITH MISSILES AND WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION WHILE STARVING ITS CITIZENS.
STATES LIKE THESE, AND THEIR TERRORIST ALLIES, CONSTITUTE AN AXIS OF EVIL ARMING TO THREATEN THE PEACE OF THE WORLD.
(APPLAUSE) NARRATOR: PRESIDENT BUSH TOOK A HARDLINE APPROACH TO NORTH KOREA, APPLYING ECONOMIC SANCTIONS TO FORCE KIM JONG-IL TO GIVE UP HIS NUCLEAR PROGRAM, BUT HIS EFFORTS FAILED.
ON OCTOBER 9, 2006, KIM ACHIEVED THE GOAL THAT HE AND HIS FATHER HAD LONG HOPED FOR, THE SUCCESSFUL TEST OF A NUCLEAR WEAPON.
PRESIDENT BUSH: WHAT WE DON'T KNOW IS HIS INTENTIONS.
AND SO, I THINK WE'VE GOT TO PLAN FOR THE WORST AND HOPE FOR THE BEST.
AND PLANNING FOR THE WORST MEANS TO MAKE SURE THAT WE CONTINUE TO SEND A UNIFIED MESSAGE TO KIM JONG-IL THAT, YOU KNOW, WE EXPECT YOU TO ADHERE TO INTERNATIONAL NORMS.
NARRATOR: KIM JONG-IL CONTINUED TO DEFY THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, REFUSING TO ALLOW NUCLEAR INSPECTIONS.
AND AFTER HIS SUDDEN DEATH IN 2011, HIS SON KIM JONG-UN VOWED TO CARRY ON THE FAMILY'S NUCLEAR DREAMS.
AT JUST 28 YEARS OF AGE, KIM JONG-UN BECAME THE YOUNGEST LEADER IN NORTH KOREAN HISTORY.
IN ORDER TO SOLIDIFY HIS AUTHORITY HE DREW ON THE IMAGERY OF HIS ICONIC GRANDFATHER.
JAGER: YOU KNOW, HERE IS THIS GUY, WHO'S A YOUNG GUY, EDUCATED IN THE WEST, HE WAS NOT INTRODUCED TO THE NORTH KOREAN PUBLIC UNTIL A YEAR BEFORE HIS FATHER'S DEATH IN 2011.
AND YET, HE COMES IN THERE AND IS ABLE TO CONSOLIDATE HIS POWER SO QUICKLY.
THAT JUST SHOWS THE POWER OF THE KIM IL-SUNG MYTH, AND HOW IT'S STILL ALIVE.
HIS POWER HAS SOMETHING TO DO WITH THE FACT THAT HE IS KIM IL-SUNG'S GRANDSON.
TERRY: HE KNOWS THAT KIM IL-SUNG HAD POPULARITY AND LOVE OF THE KOREAN PEOPLE, NORTH KOREAN PEOPLE.
SO THAT'S WHY HE WANTED TO SORT OF EVEN LOOK LIKE HIS GRANDFATHER, THE WAY HE DRESSES, HIS HAIRCUT, JUST THE WHOLE OUTER APPEARANCE LOOKS LIKE HIS GRANDFATHER, AND HIS BEHAVIOR IS ALSO MORE LIKE HIS GRANDFATHER.
NARRATOR: BY 2016, PRESIDENT OBAMA, HOPING TO PRESSURE THE YOUNG LEADER TO END HIS PURSUIT OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS, PILED ON MORE SANCTIONS.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: NORTH KOREA'S CONTINUED PURSUIT OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS IS A PATH THAT LEADS ONLY TO MORE ISOLATION.
IT'S NOT A SIGN OF STRENGTH.
NARRATOR: BUT RATHER THAN CAPITULATE, KIM JONG UN RATCHETED UP HIS NUCLEAR PROGRAM INVOKING THE MEMORY OF THE KOREAN WAR.
NARRATOR: IN THE FINAL WEEKS OF OBAMA'S PRESIDENCY, NORTH KOREA TESTED THEIR 5TH NUCLEAR WARHEAD, THEIR MOST POWERFUL YET.
STUECK: THE NORTH KOREANS, THE MESSAGE THAT THEIR LEADERS GIVE THEM IS THAT WE'RE NOT GOING TO LET THE UNITED STATES TO DO US WHAT THEY DID BETWEEN 1950 AND '53, AND THAT'S WHY WE NEED NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND THAT'S WHY WE NEED TO HAVE MISSILES THAT CAN DELIVER THEM TO THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I JUST HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE AN EXCELLENT CONVERSATION WITH PRESIDENT-ELECT TRUMP, IT WAS WIDE RANGING... NARRATOR: IN A MEETING IN THE OVAL OFFICE, OBAMA TOLD HIS SUCCESSOR DONALD TRUMP THAT NORTH KOREA WOULD BE HIS GREATEST CHALLENGE AS PRESIDENT.
SOON AFTER, PRESIDENT TRUMP WENT ON THE OFFENSIVE... PRESIDENT TRUMP: NORTH KOREA BEST NOT MAKE ANY MORE THREATS TO THE UNITED STATES.
THEY WILL BE MET WITH FIRE AND FURY.
NARRATOR: STARTING A WAR OF WORDS WITH THE NORTH KOREAN LEADER, THAT PUSHED THE TWO NATIONS TOWARD WORLD WAR III.
ARCHIVAL: FROM KIM JONG-UN, A FIRST MESSAGE IN ENGLISH, VOWING TO MAKE PRESIDENT TRUMP QUOTE 'PAY DEARLY', CALLING HIM A 'MENTALLY DERANGED DOTARD' OR SENILE OLD MAN.
PRESIDENT TRUMP: ROCKET MAN SHOULD HAVE BEEN HANDLED A LONG TIME AGO.
(APPLAUSE) LITTLE ROCKET MAN.
PRESIDENT TRUMP: NORTH KOREA BETTER GET THEIR ACT TOGETHER, OR THEY'RE GOING TO BE IN TROUBLE, LIKE FEW NATIONS EVER HAVE BEEN IN TROUBLE, IN THIS WORLD.
CUMINGS: TO CALL TRUMP A BULL IN A CHINA SHOP IS AN UNDERSTATEMENT.
PRESIDENT TRUMP: THE UNITED STATES HAS GREAT STRENGTH AND PATIENCE, BUT IF IT IS FORCED TO DEFEND ITSELF FOR ITS ALLIES, WE WILL HAVE NO CHOICE BUT TO TOTALLY DESTROY, NORTH KOREA.
CUMINGS: THREATENING TO TOTALLY DESTROY NORTH KOREA, AT THE UN, WITHOUT ANYBODY POINTING OUT THAT WE ALREADY DID THAT DURING THE KOREAN WAR.
NARRATOR: BUT UNDERNEATH THE FIERY RHETORIC, TRUMP WAS PREPARING A STEP NONE OF HIS PREDECESSORS WERE WILLING TO TAKE.
BLITZER: PRESIDENT TRUMP AND KIM JONG-UN ARE SCHEDULED TO SHAKE HANDS AND SIT DOWN FOR A SUMMIT MEETING.
THE WHOLE WORLD WILL BE WATCHING.
NARRATOR: AGAINST THE BACKDROP OF NORTH KOREAN AND AMERICAN FLAGS, TRUMP AND KIM SHOOK HANDS, THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY LEADERS FROM THESE TWO COUNTRIES HAD EVER MET IN PERSON.
THE TWO MEN SPOKE FOR A FEW HOURS AND LATER SIGNED A DECLARATION VOWING TO WORK TOWARD PEACE AND DENUCLEARIZATION.
DESPITE THE VAGUE AND TEPID LANGUAGE OF THE DOCUMENT, TRUMP LEFT SINGAPORE PROCLAIMING VICTORY.
PRESIDENT TRUMP: THEY'RE GONNA GET RID OF THEIR NUCLEAR WEAPONS, I REALLY BELIEVE THAT HE WILL, I'VE GOTTEN TO... STEPHANOPOULOS: DID HE TELL YOU THAT?
PRESIDENT TRUMP: IN A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME, YEAH SURE, IT'S DENUC-DENUCLEARIZE, HE'S DENUKING THE WHOLE PLACE, AND HE'S GOING TO START VERY QUICKLY, I THINK HE'S GOING TO START NOW.
TERRY: TRUMP ADMINISTRATION THINKS IF KIM JONG-UN IS SAYING, "I'M NOW INTERESTED IN DENUCLEARIZATION OF THE KOREAN PENINSULA," THAT HE'S NOW WILLING TO GIVE UP NORTH KOREA'S NUCLEAR WEAPONS, BUT THAT'S NOT WHAT KIM JONG-UN IS TALKING ABOUT.
KIM JONG-UN IS TALKING ABOUT CONCLUDING A PEACE TREATY, ENDING US/SOUTH KOREA ALLIANCE, AND THEN HE'S SAYING, ONLY THEN, WHEN THE REGIME'S SECURITY IS GUARANTEED, HE WILL THINK ABOUT GIVING UP NUCLEAR WEAPONS.
REPORTER: US INTELLIGENCE SAYS, 'NO SIGNIFICANT SIGNS OF DENUCLEARIZATION', CONTRADICTING THIS TWEET FROM PRESIDENT TRUMP ONE DAY AFTER SINGAPORE.
DECLARING, "THERE IS NO LONGER A NUCLEAR THREAT FROM NORTH KOREA."
REPORTER: THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION IS BEING TAKEN FOR A RIDE.
REPORTER: I THINK IT'S BECOMING INCREASINGLY CLEAR THAT HE GOT PLAYED.
GRAHAM: ARE THEY PLAYING US?
I DON'T KNOW.
THIS IS THE LAST, BEST CHANCE FOR PEACE RIGHT HERE.
CHA: THE UNITED STATES STARTED ENTERING NEGOTIATIONS FROM THE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION ONWARDS.
AND IN ALL OF THESE CASES WHAT THE UNITED STATES HAS PUT ON OFFER IS REMARKABLY CONSISTENT WHICH IS THE PROMISE OF NORMAL POLITICAL RELATIONS, THE PROMISE OF A PEACE TREATY ENDING THE KOREAN WAR, ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE, ENERGY ASSISTANCE.
ALL OF THESE THINGS WOULD BE ON OFFER TO NORTH KOREA IF THEY DID ONE THING WHICH IS GIVE UP THEIR NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND BALLISTIC MISSILES.
BUT I THINK THE MAIN LESSON WE'VE LEARNED FROM ALL OF THIS IS THAT THE PROBLEM IS NOT THE UNITED STATES.
THE PROBLEM IS THAT NORTH KOREA DOESN'T WANT TO GIVE UP ITS WEAPONS.
NARRATOR: IN THE END, THE PROSPECTS FOR PEACE MAY DEPEND NOT ON THE UNITED STATES, BUT ON THE TWO LEADERS OF THIS LONG-DIVIDED NATION AND ON ITS PEOPLE, STILL SEPARATED BY A NEVER-ENDING CONFLICT.
NARRATOR: FOR THESE KOREANS WHO WISH FOR REUNIFICATION, THEIR HOPE TO SEE THEIR FAMILIES MAY ONLY BE FULFILLED WITH AN OFFICIAL END TO THE WAR.
TERRY: THIS IS A BLIP IN THE HISTORY OF KOREA.
THIS DIVISION SINCE 1945 AND THEN THE KOREAN WAR SINCE 1950.
IT'S THE SAME ETHNIC MAKE-UP, SAME LANGUAGE, SAME CULTURE.
THE TWO KOREAS WERE ONE KOREA FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS.
SO I'M HOPING THAT THIS DIVISION IS THE ANOMALY IN HISTORY.
CHA: WE DON'T GET FAIRY TALE ENDINGS ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA.
SO WHETHER IT IS THE JAPANESE OCCUPATION OF KOREA, THE START OF THE KOREAN WAR IN 1950, DEMOCRATIZATION IN SOUTH KOREA IN 1987, THE LIST GOES ON AND ON.
HISTORY HAS SHOWN THAT CHANGE ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA ALWAYS COMES SUDDENLY, IT NEVER COMES GRADUALLY.
(APPLAUSE)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 57s | As negotiators discuss the Armistice, troops continue fighting along the border. (57s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 1m 44s | The Armistice draws a new border across Korea and creates chaos. (1m 44s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 39s | Just five years after World War II, the world needs saving again. (39s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 52s | The war nearly resumes after Kim Il Sung sends assassins to South Korea. (52s)
Korea: The Never Ending War | Lt. Richard Carey
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 44s | Lt. Richard Carey narrowly avoids a sniper’s bullet at Incheon. (44s)
North Korea Promises To Disarm
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 1m 18s | In 1994, North Korea promises to disarm its nuclear program in return for increased aid. (1m 18s)
Video has Closed Captions
Preview: Ep1 | 30s | Shedding new light on a geopolitical hot spot, narrated by actor John Cho. (30s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 56s | The refugee crisis creates a moral dilemma for American troops. (56s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 1m 25s | A thirty-minute decision divides Korea, a nation united for thousands of years. (1m 25s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 1m 9s | For a generation of young men, the war against Communism in Korea comes as a shock. (1m 9s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 52s | The heroes of World War II meet their match. (52s)
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: Ep1 | 1m 12s | The war takes a turn when China sends thousands of troops across the Yalu River. (1m 12s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipSupport for PBS provided by: