America in Korea, 1950-1953
The complete narrative history of the Korean War — Truman, MacArthur, Inchon, the Chosin Reservoir, military integration, and America's first limited war of the nuclear age, 1950-1953.
President Truman called it a police action, and the phrase stuck in the craw of every soldier who fought it. Police actions did not kill 36,500 Americans. Police actions did not end without victory in a permanent division enforced by an armistice that never became peace. The Korean War was America's first limited war of the nuclear age — the first time the United States fought not for unconditional surrender but to restore a status quo, establishing the template for every limited conflict that followed.
Across twenty-four chapters, historian Thomas Andrew Buckley traces the Korean War from its origins — two Army colonels drawing the 38th parallel in thirty minutes on a National Geographic map — through MacArthur's Inchon masterstroke, the catastrophic Chinese intervention of November 1950, and the long stalemate on bloody hills. Along the way, Buckley examines Task Force Smith's disaster at Osan, the Pusan Perimeter's last stand, Truman's firing of MacArthur, military integration under Executive Order 9981, and the POW brainwashing controversy.
The Korean War was forgotten not because it didn't happen but because America had no category for a war that was neither victorious nor shameful — simply difficult, costly, and unresolved. Buckley restores it to its place as the conflict that militarized NATO, rebuilt Japan's economy, desegregated the American military, and established the limited-war template the United States has used ever since.
For readers of David Halberstam's THE COLDEST WINTER and Max Hastings's THE KOREAN WAR.
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