Posted on 07/27/2013 10:15:24 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
Obama: 'Korea was a win' By Peter Schroeder - 07/27/13 11:19 AM ET
President Obama hailed veterans of the Korean War Saturday, saying their sacrifices ensured that millions of Koreans could live safely in a democracy.
Speaking on the 60th anniversary of the Korean War's armistice, he noted that some had expressed their dissatisfaction with the war's resolution, which resulted in the establishment of a demilitarized zone separating North and South Korea and did not end with a definitive truce. He noted that many dismissed the conclusion with the phrase "die for a tie."
But he argued that, decades later, those efforts have proven fruitful.
"That war was no tie. Korea was a victory," he told those gathered in Washington at the Korean War Memorial. "When 50 million South Koreans live in freedom, a vibrant democracy a stark contrast to the repression and poverty of the North, that is a victory and that is your legacy."
Obama also noted that Korean War veterans did not receive the praise and thanks upon returning home, and "deserve better."
"Unlike World War II, Korea did not galvanize our country, these veterans did not return to parades," he said. "Unlike Vietnam, Korea did not tear at our country, these veterans did not return to protests.
"Among many Americans tired of war, there was, it seems, a desire to forget, to move on," he added. "Here in America, no war should ever be forgotten, no veteran should ever be overlooked."
The president also noted that the Korean War offers lessons for the U.S. even today. He said that war taught the U.S. to be ever-vigilant, noting that the rapid withdrawal of troops after World War II allowed the conditions for Communism to spread, sowing the seeds for the Korean conflict. And as the U.S. withdraws its troops from Afghanistan, the president vowed to maintain a fierce fighting force.
"Our allies and adversaries must know the United States of America will maintain the strongest military the world has ever none, bar none," he said.
Obama was joined at the event by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, who hailed veterans of the war who "stepped forward at a defining time in our history."
"We acted out a belief that peace and security among nations must depend on the rule of law, not the rule of force," he said. "The Korean War teaches us an important lesson, that alliances and international institutions are extensions of our influence, not constraints on our power."
Veteran Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki and Interior Secretary Sally Jewell also attended and spoke, as well as envoys from South Korea.
Roughly five thousand people gathered for the event, according to a pool report.
This “history” is being taught to the vast majority of our kids.
They did not keep the Chinese/NK/Russian MiGs out of the south. Much of the south was overrun and the commies sacked and looted everything, they kidnapped people to the North and killed a list of those deemed enemies.
The US and allies had been pushed to a tiny toehold in the southern tip of the peninsula before they reinvaded behind much of the occupying forces. A historic amphibious landing that should be right there in the annals underneath D-Day (of course).
In 1492 Abraham Muhammad bin Muhammad sailed the ocean blue....
So a war that legally is still ongoing after 50 years, one that has continual low-level combat, sabotage and infiltration, one who’s trenches are separated by a narrow band of the most heavily mined and booby trapped real estate on the planet is a victory?
Interesting insight into the mind of a [redacted]
There were NO winners in Korea. After three years of fighting, the front stabilized roughly on the prewar boundary of the 38th Parallel. There was a ceasefire, armistice, signed and it has remained in place for 60 years. There were NO winners, except there were a bunch of dead NorKs, Chinese, Americans and allies. Both North and South Korea were devastated. The difference was that South Korea recovered from the war and prospered. North Korea remains a total disaster.
Actually, he’s right. Tactically it was a loss, but strategically US forces, fighting NK, Russian air, and Chinese ground, badly outnumbered and thousands of miles from home, regained all lost ground, denied the Soviets yet one more expansion, and did it all without nukes. Pretty damn impressive, and we make a more detailed argument for this in our forthcoming “Patriot’s History of the Modern World, vol 2, 1945-2012.”
I agree
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