Conflict: The History Of The Korean War, 1950-1953
By (Author) Robert Leckie
Hachette Books
Da Capo Press Inc
22nd August 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History: specific events and topics
International relations
951.9042
Paperback
496
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
In June 1950 Communist forces poured across the 38th Parallel (the arbitrary, militarily indefensible line of latitude separating the Communist North from the independent Republic of Korea) to unite the country by force. Three bloody, bitter years of fighting ensued during which the seesawing fortunes of this frustrating war thwarted North Korea's ambitions while treating the ill-equipped, overconfident UN peacekeeping forces, mostly Americans, no less harshly. Conflict examines the war in all its military, political, and human dimensions: the battles at Pusan Perimeter, at Inchon, at Chosin Reservoir, at Heartbreak Ridge; significant figures like Syngman Rhee, Kim Il Sung, Ridgway, MacArthur, and Truman; controversies like MacArthur's dismissal, the difficulties of P. O. W. exchanges, and charges of brainwashing and germ warfare; as well as penetrating analyses of the performance of the American soldier, and the war's effect on the U. S. military and our national psyche. As such, Conflict stands as an unsurpassed, vivid contribution to history.
Robert Leckie's many books include Conflict: The History of the Korean War, 1950-1953,Okinawa, George Washington's War, From Sea to Shining Sea, None Died in Vain and Delivered from Evil. He lives in Andover, New Jersey.