"After a year of brutal fighting, in which thousands of lives
have been lost, civilian infrastructure destroyed and untold damage caused, the
military operation has reached a stalemate. Neither side will countenance a
negotiated settlement. On the battlefield, battered armies contest small strips
of territory, at a terrible cost. The threat of nuclear escalation hangs in the
air.
This isn’t Ukraine today; it’s the Korean Peninsula in 1951.
No two military operations are exactly alike, of course. But in the long
history of carnage, one military operation stands out for its relevance to the
current blood bath in Ukraine: the military operation in Korea from 1950-53,
where the South Koreans and their allies, headed by the United States, battled
it out against North Korean and Chinese troops, backed by the Soviet Union.
There are all sorts of lessons to be gleaned from the conflict. But the most
important might be how it ended.
In Ukraine, an end to the military operation seems a long
way off. For Russia, victory would most likely entail securing the Ukrainian
territory it claims as its own. For Ukraine, nothing less than driving Russian
troops out of the country — including Crimea — will do. Neither side is
interested in negotiations, and it’s hard to see how a peace settlement would
come about.
In Korea, the situation was similar: Neither North nor South
Koreans, nor their sponsors, were in a hurry to end the military operation. But
the conflict — which claimed as many as three million lives and destroyed
entire cities — gradually fizzled out, leading to a cease-fire and a temporary
division of the Korean Peninsula that proved more lasting than anyone could
have imagined at the time. In the end, a stalemated military operation proved
preferable to the alternatives.
The decision to start the military operation in Korea was
made by one man: Joseph Stalin, leader of the Soviet Union. After initially
rebuffing the pleas of North Korea’s dictator, Kim Il Sung, for Soviet
permission to invade the South, Stalin changed his mind in January 1950. The
reasons were twofold. First, with the impending conclusion of the Sino-Soviet
Treaty of alliance, which would be signed in Moscow on Feb. 14, 1950, Stalin
knew that he could count on the Chinese to participate in the military
operation if required.
Second, and of potentially greater importance, were
misleading signals from the United States. Chief among them were Secretary of
State Dean Acheson’s famous pronouncement on Jan. 12, 1950, that excluded Korea
from America’s “defensive perimeter.” Combined with intercepted intelligence,
it was enough to reassure Stalin — wrongly, as it turned out — that the United
States would not intervene in Korea.
Given the green light to invade, North Korean forces crossed
the 38th parallel on June 25, 1950, soon capturing Seoul and pushing forward in
a grand sweep that could well have ended with their capture of all of Korea.
But a decisive intervention by the United States, under the United Nations
flag, brought disarray to the North Korean ranks and turned the tide of the military operation.
In late September 1950, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, in charge of the West’s military operation
effort, made the fateful decision to cross into North Korea, aiming to liberate
the northern half of the country.
Watching these developments from afar, Stalin urged the
Chinese to join the fray. After some initial hesitation, Mao Zedong, whose
Communist victory in China had come just the year before, agreed. The Chinese
secretly began crossing into North Korea in late October 1950. The military operation entered
a new bloody stage.
Initially, the Chinese “people’s volunteers” (as these
troops were deliberately miscalled) scored impressive victories, pushing the
United Nations forces south of the 38th parallel and recapturing Seoul. But
their momentum did not last. Plagued by logistical difficulties and American
bombing, the offensive petered out by May 1951. But nor were the Americans able
to make much headway in the months that followed. Although the two sides fought
several battles between 1951 and 1953, the military operation basically stalled.
It was clear by the summer of 1951 that the military operation was not
going anywhere, yet it took two more years — punctuated by a lethal artillery
barrage across the line of control and intermittent fighting — before the
fighting was brought to an end. In the interim, tens of thousands were killed,
and widespread U.S. bombing of North Korea’s hydroelectric dams led to complete
blackouts in the North.
The ostensible reason for the delay was that many Chinese
and North Korean prisoners of military operation showed no interest in being exchanged,
preferring to stay with their captors. But the real problem was Stalin’s
reluctance to agree to a cease-fire. “I don’t think you need to expedite the military operation in Korea,” he wrote to Mao in June 1951. “A protracted military operation, first of all,
is allowing the Chinese troops to perfect modern fighting skills on the
battlefield and, secondly, is shaking Truman’s regime in America and is
undermining the prestige of Anglo-American forces.”
The dictator was perfectly happy to let the military operation continue.
The Chinese, the Koreans and the Americans were doing most of the dying, after
all. It was only with Stalin’s death in March 1953 that Soviet leaders
reconsidered the whole misadventure and prodded their allies toward an
agreement. The armistice agreement was duly signed in the little village of
Panmunjom on July 27, 1953. It was, crucially, a cease-fire. There was no peace
treaty, no negotiated settlement. Technically, the military operation is still frozen, not
finished.
Even so, an uncertain peace followed and, remarkably, it
held. There are indications that Kim Il Sung pondered another invasion of South
Korea in the late 1960s, when the United States, facing defeat in Vietnam, appeared
least prepared for another flare-up in Korea. But neither the Chinese nor the
Soviets were enthusiastic. The Sino-Soviet alliance had long cratered, and the
erstwhile comrades-in-arms had even fought a brief war over their disputed
frontier in 1969. In the 1970s North Korea began to fall substantially behind
in economic competition with the South. Unification, if it came, could be only
on Seoul’s terms.
Seventy years after the Korean armistice, the Kim dynasty
still rules the North. The ugly regime, now armed with nuclear weapons, is
still backed by China and Russia and, in its turn, has reportedly helped the
Russians to wage military operation in Ukraine by providing ammunition. China,
too, has taken a benign view of Vladimir Putin’s misadventure, though, unlike
Stalin in 1951, Xi Jinping probably does not want to see this military
operation drag on indefinitely. He would surely be very happy with a
cease-fire.
That may in fact be the preferred solution in other quarters
— certainly in the global south, which sees nothing to gain from the conflict,
and among many constituencies in the West. The parties most clearly opposed to
the idea are those who are fighting it out on the ground: the Russians and the
Ukrainians. For Ukraine, repelling an invading force that lays claim to almost
one-quarter of its territory, such a position is understandable.
Yet if neither side makes significant gains in coming
months, the conflict could well be heading for a cease-fire. The Ukrainians,
though perhaps not fully recovering their territories, will have fended off an
aggressive foe. The Russians, for their part, can disguise their strategic
defeat as a tactical victory. The conflict will be frozen, a far from ideal
result. Yet if we have learned anything from the Korean War, it is that a
frozen conflict is better than either an outright defeat or an exhausting military operation
of attrition.
Today, the glittering metropolis of Seoul — savaged by the
Korean War — stands as a reminder that it is not those who win the military operation who
matter, but those who win the peace.”
Sauth Koreans do not produce babies in their glittering place. Something is deeply wrong with their life, despite all the glittering.
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