![]() | |||||
|
|
Korean War QuotesPresident Harry S. Truman, to members of Congress, June 30, 1950"If there is any necessity for Congressional action, I will come to you. But I hope we can get those bandits in Korea suppressed without that." Lieutenant Jack Doody, US Army, sent to Korea with Task Force Smith on June 30, 1950"A month or so before this we had undergone an ordnance inspection and half of our rifles were condemned. They were all left over from World War II, retrieved from Okinawa, or places like that. The same went for the mortars and machine guns. I don't remember ever seeing anything new." Phil Day, Task Force Smith"We thought the North Koreans would back off once they saw American uniforms." Unknown American soldier of TF Smith, upon seeing South Korean wounded"My God, maybe there's a real war going on!" Brigadier General John H. Church, US Army, to the commander of TF Smith"We have a little action up here. All we need is some men who won't run when they see tanks. We're going to move you up to support the ROKs [Republic of Korea soldiers] and give them moral support." 2nd Lieutenant Ollie Conner, TF Smith, on the inability of 2.36-inch bazooka rockets to penetrate Soviet-made tank armor"The seat in Hell closest to the fire is reserved for those who knew this but kept it quiet." Robert Leckie, CONFLICT: THE HISTORY OF THE KOREAN WAR"In May of 1945 the U.S. Army had reached its peak of 8,290,000 men (including, of course, the Army Air Force). Five years later, by the summer of 1950, it had dwindled to 592,000 men or about 7 percent of its former strength. Even at the time of Pearl Harbor, usually regarded as the classic example of American unpreparedness, the Army had 1,600,000 men under arms. Worse, this 1950 army of 592,000 men was top heavy with technicians and service people, for the Maginot Line mentality had produced the myth of the push-button war and so downgraded the foot soldier. "In all this army there were only ten combat divisions, plus the equivalent of one more in the European Constabulary, and perhaps the equivalent of another three in nine independent regimental combat teams - an optimistic total, in all, of fourteen divisions of which only the Constabulary was up to strength. "Of these forces, four divisions were in Japan under General MacArthur. . . . They were at about 70 percent of wartime strength . . . [and] deficient in such modern arms as 57mm and 75mm recoiless rifles, 4.2-inch mortars and 3.5-inch rocket launchers." A Washington ambassador cabeling skepticism to his government three days after North Korea invaded South Korea."The time has come when Uncle Sam must put up or shut up and my guess is it will do neither." Senator Tom Connally, of Texas, summing up Congressional opinion of the Korean crisis three days after the invasion."[Korea is] the clearest test case that the United Nations has ever faced. If the United Nations is ever going to do anything, this is the time, and if the United Nations cannot bring the crisis in Korea to an end, then we might as well wash up the United Nations and forget it." President Harry S. Truman, two days after the invasion"I'm more worried about other parts of the world. The Middle East, for instance. [Iran] is where they will start trouble if we aren't careful. "Korea is the Greece of the Far East. If we are tough enough now, if we stand up to them like we did in Greece three years ago, they won't take any next steps. But if we just stand by, they'll move into Iran and they'll take over the whole Middle East. There's no telling what they'll do, if we don't put up a fight now." Rear Admiral Lamont Pugh, USN, Surgeon General of the Navy in an address before the Association of Military Surgeons of the United States, November 17, 1952"Military medicine is a well conceived, well advised, and well established device, system, or mechanism, the mission of which is to provide the Armed Services with a quality or brand of medical coverage that is not only essential to the proper and efficient function of the military but is moreover essential to the best interests of the individual and of the national welfare." "One would need only to go to Korea, as I have been during the past two summers, and there observe the manner of living and of the activity being engaged in by medical personnel serving with the combatants in the theater of war. One would not need to remain long there to appreciate the essentiality of service doctors being psychologically agile, emotionally stable, professionally genuine, and physically able and tough." "Since when has the doctor of medicine and dentistry become such a pantywaist as to require that a bald responsibility others accept with good grace must be diked out with certain frills before he will buy it." "During my sojourn at the combatant front in Korea this past summer I failed to detect evidence of any special effort being made on the part of anyone to make the service more attractive to the soldiers and Marines who were fighting, bleeding, and dying in the heat and dust on a barren Korean hillside." "The manner of man requisite to filling the bill that needs to be filled by the Medical and Dental Corps of the Armed Services is an individual who to himself clearly realizes that it is a privilege and not a penalty to serve in a uniform of his national defense establishment, that it is his establishment and his nation for the defense of which the establishment exists and that he may be no more honorably distinguished than by wearing that uniform, and that by abhorring ignoble ease he can perform no more worthy mission than that of protecting and restoring the most priceless element, that of health, in our most precious national resource, the men and women who comprise the Armed Forces." Tell A Friend About Korean-War.infoThe contents of this web site are Copyright © 2003 Otherground, LLC and Korean-War.info. Korean War is the best Korean War information resource on the Internet. We offer information on Korean War History, Korean War Timeline, Korean War Facts, Korean War Quotes, Korean War Poems, Korean War Pictures, Korean War Posters, Korean War Propaganda, Korean War Aircraft, Korean War Weapons, Korean War Battles, Korean War Memorial, Korean War Links, and more. | ||||