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People's Volunteer Army

The People's Volunteer Army (PVA) was the armed expeditionary forces deployed by the People's Republic of China during the Korean War.[2][note 1] Although all units in the PVA were actually transferred from the People's Liberation Army under the orders of Chairman Mao Zedong, the PVA was separately constituted in order to prevent an official war with the United States. The PVA entered Korea on 19 October 1950, and completely withdrew by October 1958. The nominal commander and political commissar of the PVA was Peng Dehuai before the ceasefire agreement in 1953, although both Chen Geng and Deng Hua served as the acting commander and commissar after April 1952 due to Peng's illness. The initial (25 October – 5 November 1950) units in the PVA included 38th, 39th, 40th, 42nd, 50th, 66th Corps; totalling 250,000 men. About 3 million Chinese civilian and military personnel had served in Korea throughout the war.

People's Volunteer Army
The People's Volunteer Army used a plain red flag during the war.
Active1950–1958 (combat troops)
1954–1994 (delegation)
Country People's Republic of China
Allegiance Chinese Communist Party
Branch
TypeExpeditionary warfare
RoleDefend North Korea and Northeast China
Size780,000 troops[1]
Garrison/HQNorth Korea
Nickname(s)最可爱的人
(Most Beloved People)
Motto(s)抗美援朝,保家卫国
(English: "Resist U.S. aggressors and aid Korea, to defend our homeland")
Colors  Red
MarchBattle Hymn of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army [zh]
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Peng Dehuai
Chen Geng
Deng Hua
Hong Xuezhi
Han Xianchu
Song Shilun
People's Volunteer Army
Simplified Chinese中国人民志愿军
Traditional Chinese中國人民志願軍
Literal meaning"China People Volunteering Army"
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó Rénmín Zhìyuànjūn
Bopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊㄖㄣˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊㄓˋ ㄩㄢˋㄐㄩㄣ
Wade–GilesChung-kuo Jen-min Chih-yüan-chün
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingZung1gwok3 Jan4man4 Zi3jyun6gwan1
First commander and commissar of the PVA Peng Dehuai (1950–1952)
Second commander and commissar of the PVA Chen Geng (1952)
Third commander and commissar of the PVA Deng Hua (1952–1953)

Background

Although the United Nations Command (UN) forces were under United States command, this army was officially a UN "police" force. In order to avoid an open war with the US and other UN members, the People's Republic of China deployed the People's Liberation Army (PLA) under the name "volunteer army".[3]

About the name, there were various opinions. According to some scholars during the mid 1990s, after the PRC made the strategic decision to send soldiers to Korea, the very first name of this army was "support army."[citation needed] However, Huang Yanpei, the vice premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People's Government at that time, suggested that the name "support army" might cause the international community to assume that China was sending soldiers as an act of direct aggression against the United States.[citation needed] Therefore, the army's name was modified to "volunteer army" while different unit designations and footings were used instead, to give the impression that China did not intend to declare war against the US, but rather that Chinese soldiers were only present on Korean battlefields as individual volunteers. On the other hand, some recent studies show that the change was not only due to Huang's advice. Because much earlier on July 7, 1950, the name had already been changed to "volunteer army" by Chinese premier Zhou Enlai on his manuscript about the decision of the army's clothing and flags.[citation needed]

Despite arguments on the changing from "People's Support Army" to "People's Volunteer Army", the name was also a homage to the Korean Volunteer Army that had helped the Chinese communists during the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War. It also managed to deceive the US intelligence and the UN about the size and nature of the Chinese forces that entered Korea.[4] They later realized that the PVA was the PLA's North East Frontier Force (NEFF), with other PLA formations transferred under NEFF's command as the Korean War dragged on.[4][5] But the result was that they still admitted the name, "People's Volunteer Army", in order to minimize the war within the Korean Peninsula and prevent escalation of the war.

Strengths and weaknesses

Clothing

 
Uniform of the PVA. Note the flute and the gong, which was what the PVA soldiers typically used for communications in battle.

The PVA soldier was reasonably well clothed, in keeping with the PLA's guerrilla origin and egalitarian attitudes. All ranks wore a cotton or woolen green or khaki shirt and trousers combination with leaders' uniforms being different in cut.

Equipment

 
Typical firearms used by the PVA

The nominal strength of a PLA division was 9,500 men, with a regiment comprising 3,000 and a battalion consisting of 850. However, many divisions sent to Korea were below-strength while the divisions stationed opposite Taiwan were above-strength. There was also variation in organization and equipment as well as in the quantity and quality of the military equipment. Some of the PLA's equipment was from the Imperial Japanese Army or were captured from the Kuomintang (Nationalist Chinese) military forces. Some Czechoslovak-made weapons were also purchased on the open market by the PRC. During the PVA's first offensive (the so-called First Phase Campaign) in the Korean War between October and November 1950, large quantities of captured US weapons were widely used due to the availability of the required ammunition and the increasing difficulty of constant re-supplying across the Yalu River due to numerous UN-conducted air interdiction operations. In addition, there was also a local copy of the US Thompson submachine gun being produced by the PRC, based on the type of which had already been exported to and used in China since the 1930s and by UN troops during the Korean War as well. Later on, after the first year of the Korean War, the Soviet Union began to send more weapons and ammunition to the PRC, which started to produce licensed copies of some types of Soviet weapons[citation needed], such as the PPSh-41 submachine gun, which was designated as the Type 50. In addition to surplus WWII Soviet arms, the Soviet Union also provided some WWII German small arms to the Chinese like the Karabiner 98k rifle. Surplus Mauser ammunition were also supplied by the Soviet Union or were available from stocks left behind by the KMT forces who also used German ammunition.

Actions during the Korean War

First Phase Campaign (October 25 – November 5, 1950)

 
PVA rations and mess kits

The collapse of the North Korean Korean People's Army (KPA) in September/October 1950 following the Battle of Inchon, the Pusan Perimeter Offensive and the UN September 1950 counteroffensive alarmed the PRC Government. The PRC had issued warnings that they would intervene if any non-South Korean forces crossed the 38th Parallel, citing national security interests. US President Harry Truman regarded the warnings as "a bold attempt to blackmail the UN".[6] On October 8, 1950, the day after UN troops crossed the 38th Parallel and began their offensive into North Korea, Chairman Mao issued the order for the NEFF to be moved to the Yalu River, ready to cross. Mao sought Soviet aid and saw intervention as essentially defensive: "If we allow the U.S. to occupy all of Korea... we must be prepared for the US to declare... war with China", he told Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Zhou Enlai was sent to Moscow to add force to Mao's cabled arguments. Mao delayed his forces while waiting for Soviet help, and the planned attack was thus postponed from 13 October to 19 October. Soviet assistance was limited to providing air support no closer than 60 miles (97 km) from the battlefront. The MiG-15s in PRC colours would be an unpleasant surprise to the UN pilots; they would hold local air superiority against the F-80 Shooting Stars until newer F-86 Sabres were deployed. The Soviet role was known to the US but they kept quiet to avoid any international and potential nuclear incidents. It has been alleged by the Chinese that the Soviets had agreed to full scale air support, which never occurred south of Pyongyang, and helped accelerate the Sino-Soviet split.

On October 15, 1950, Truman went to Wake Island to discuss with UN commander General Douglas MacArthur the possibility of Chinese intervention and his desire to limit the scope of the Korean War. MacArthur reassured Truman that "if the Chinese tried to get down to Pyongyang there would be the greatest slaughter."

On October 19, 1950, Pyongyang, North Korea's capital, was captured by UN forces. On the same day, the PVA formally crossed the Yalu River under strict secrecy.

The initial PVA assault began on October 25, 1950, under the command of Peng Dehuai with 270,000 PVA troops (it was assumed at the time that Lin Biao was in charge, but this notion had been disproved). The PVA assault caught the UN troops by surprise, and employing great skill and remarkable camouflage ability, concealed their numerical and divisional strength after the first engagement with the UN. After these initial engagements, the Chinese withdrew into the mountains. UN forces interpreted this withdrawal as a show of weakness; they thought that this initial attack was all that the Chinese forces were capable of undertaking.

Second Phase Campaign (November 25 – December 24, 1950)

On November 25, 1950, in the Second Phase Offensive (or campaign) the PVA struck again along the entire Korean front. In the west, at the Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River, the PVA overran several UN divisions and landed an extremely heavy blow into the flank of the remaining UN forces, decimating the U.S. 2nd Infantry Division in the process. In December 1950, Chinese forces captured Pyongyang. The city saw a massive evacuation of refugees alongside UN forces heading south in order to avoid the advancing PVA.[7] The resulting UN retreat from North Korea was the longest retreat of an American unit in history.[8] In the east, at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, Task Force Faith – a 3,000 man unit from the 7th Infantry Division – was surrounded by the PVA 80th and the 81st Divisions. Task Force Faith managed to inflict heavy casualties onto the PVA divisions, but in the end it was destroyed with 2,000 men killed or captured, and losing all vehicles and most other equipment. The destruction of Task Force Faith was considered by the PVA to be their biggest success of the entire Korean War. The 1st Marine Division fared better; though surrounded and forced to retreat, they inflicted heavy casualties on the PVA, who committed six divisions trying to destroy the Marines. Although the PVA were able to recapture much of North Korea during the Second Phase Campaign, 40 percent of the PVA was rendered combat ineffective—a loss which they could not recover from until the start of Chinese Spring Offensive.[4]

UN forces in northeast Korea withdrew to form a defensive perimeter around the port city of Hŭngnam, where an evacuation was carried out in late December 1950. Approximately 100,000 military personnel and material and another 100,000 North Korean civilians were loaded onto a variety of merchant and military transport ships. Eighth Army commander General Walton Walker was killed in an accident on December 23, 1950. He was replaced by Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway, who led airborne troops in the Second World War.

Third Phase Campaign (December 31, 1950 – January 8, 1951)

 
Chinese infantrymen in the Battle of Triangle Hill

Hoping to pressure the UN into abandoning South Korea, Mao ordered the PVA to attack the UN forces along the 38th Parallel. On the last day of 1950, PVA/KPA forces attacked several ROK divisions along the parallel, breaching the UN defenses in the process. To avoid another encirclement, UN forces evacuated Seoul on January 3, and PVA/KPA forces recaptured the city on January 4. Both the US Eighth Army and the US X Corps retreated another 50 miles (80 km), but the overextended PVA were completely exhausted after months of nonstop fighting. Ridgway took immediate steps to raise the morale and fighting spirit of the battered Eighth Army, which had fallen to low levels during its retreat from North Korea.

Fourth Phase Campaign (January 30 – April 21, 1951)

The overextended PVA were forced to disengage and to recuperate for an extensive period of time, but the UN forces soon returned to the offensive. On January 23, 1951, the US Eighth Army launched Operation Thunderbolt, attacking the unprepared PVA/KPA forces south of the Han River. This was followed up with Operation Roundup by US X Corps in central Korea. Hoping to regain the initiative, the PVA counterattacked at the Battle of Hoengsong on February 11, stopping US X Corps' advance in the process. But without proper rest and recuperation, the new offensive soon fizzled out at the Battle of Chipyong-ni on February 15. With the entire PVA incapable of any further offensive operations, the US Eighth Army launched Operation Killer on February 21, followed by Operation Ripper on March 6. A revitalized Eighth Army, restored by Ridgway to fighting trim, expelled the PVA/KPA troops from Seoul on 16 March, destroying much of the city with aerial and artillery bombardments in the process.

MacArthur was removed from command by President Truman on April 11, 1951, due to a disagreement over policy. MacArthur was succeeded by Ridgway, who led the UN forces for additional offensives across the 38th Parallel. A series of attacks managed to slowly drive back the opposing forces, inflicting heavy casualties on PVA/KPA units as UN forces advanced some miles north of the 38th parallel to Line Kansas.

Fifth Phase Campaign (April 22 – May 22, 1951)

The PVA counterattacked on 22 April 1951 with the Fifth Phase Campaign (also known as the "Chinese Spring Offensive") and with three field armies (approximately 700,000 men). The offensive's first thrust fell upon US I Corps and IX Corps which fiercely resisted, blunting the impetus of the offensive, which was halted at the No-Name Line north of Seoul. On May 15, 1951, the PVA commenced the second impulse of the Spring Offensive and attacked the ROK and the US X Corps in the east, and initially were successful, yet were halted by May 22. On 20 May the US Eighth Army counterattacked the exhausted PVA/KPA forces in the UN May-June 1951 counteroffensive, inflicting heavy losses. The destruction of the PVA 180th Division of the 60th Army during the counterattack has been considered to be the worst Chinese defeat during the entire Korean War.[9] Roughly 3,000 men managed to escape (including the division commander and other high-ranking officers), but the majority of the division were killed or captured. During the final days of the Fifth Phase Campaign, the main body of the 180th Division was encircled during a UN counterattack, and after days of hard fighting, the division was fragmented, and the regiments fled in all directions. Soldiers either deserted or were abandoned by their officers during failed attempts to wage guerrilla warfare without support from the local people. Finally, out of ammunition and food, some 5,000 soldiers were captured. The division commander and other officers who escaped were subsequently investigated and demoted on return to China.[10] The UN counterattack halted at Line Kansas where they were met with fresh troops from the counterattacking PVA 42nd and 47th Corps on 27 May,[11] and subsequent offensive action stand-down began the stalemate that lasted until the armistice of 1953.

Stalemate (June 10, 1951 – July 27, 1953)

 
Chinese troops in Korea depicted on a 1952 Chinese postage stamp

The UN counterattack in the aftermath of the Chinese Spring Offensive stabilized the front roughly along the 38th Parallel. The rest of the war involved little territory change, large-scale bombing of the population in the north, and lengthy peace negotiations, which started in Kaesong on July 10, 1951. Even during the peace negotiations, combat continued. For the UN forces, the goal was to recapture all of what had been South Korea before an agreement was reached in order to avoid loss of any territory and the PVA attempted similar operations. A major issue of the negotiations was repatriation of POWs. The Chinese and North Koreans insisted on forcible repatriation, while the UN insisted on voluntary repatriation. The war continued until the Chinese and North Koreans eventually dropped this issue.

On November 29, 1952, U.S. President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower fulfilled a campaign promise by going to Korea to find out what could be done to end the war. With the UN's and PVA's acceptance of India's proposal for an armistice, fighting ended July 27, 1953, by which time the front line was back around the proximity of the 38th Parallel. A demilitarized zone (DMZ) was established along the Military Demarcation Line, which is patrolled to this day by North Korean troops on one side and South Korean and American troops on the other.

Tactics

PVA forces used rapid attacks on the flanks and rear and infiltration behind UN lines to give the appearance of vast hordes. This, of course, was augmented by the PVA tactic of maximizing their forces for the attack, ensuring a large local numerical superiority over their opponent.[12][13] The initial PVA victories were a great morale booster for the PVA. However, by late 1951, overextended supply lines and superior UN firepower had forced a stalemate. The KPA that invaded in 1950 had been much better supplied and armed by the Soviets than the PVA had been. The main arms of the PVA were captured Japanese and Nationalist arms.[14]

Historian and Korean War veteran Bevin Alexander had this to say about Chinese tactics in his book How Wars Are Won:

The Chinese had no air power and were armed only with rifles, machineguns, hand grenades, and mortars. Against the much more heavily armed Americans, they adapted a technique they had used against the Nationalists in the Chinese civil war of 1946–49. The Chinese generally attacked at night and tried to close in on a small troop position—generally a platoon—and then attacked it with local superiority in numbers. The usual method was to infiltrate small units, from a platoon of fifty men to a company of 200, split into separate detachments. While one team cut off the escape route of the Americans, the others struck both the front and the flanks in concerted assaults. The attacks continued on all sides until the defenders were destroyed or forced to withdraw. The Chinese then crept forward to the open flank of the next platoon position, and repeated the tactics.

Roy Appleman further clarified the initial Chinese tactics as:

In the First Phase Offensive, highly skilled enemy light infantry troops had carried out the Chinese attacks, generally unaided by any weapons larger than mortars. Their attacks had demonstrated that the Chinese were well-trained disciplined fire fighters, and particularly adept at night fighting. They were masters of the art of camouflage. Their patrols were remarkably successful in locating the positions of the U.N. forces. They planned their attacks to get in the rear of these forces, cut them off from their escape and supply roads, and then send in frontal and flanking attacks to precipitate the battle. They also employed a tactic which they termed Hachi Shiki, which was a V-formation into which they allowed enemy forces to move; the sides of the V then closed around their enemy while another force moved below the mouth of the V to engage any forces attempting to relieve the trapped unit. Such were the tactics the Chinese used with great success at Onjong, Unsan, and Ch'osan, but with only partial success at Pakch'on and the Ch'ongch'on bridgehead.[15]

Discipline and political control

The discipline of the PVA was strict by Western standards, a notable improvement when compared to the Nationalist and warlord armies that ruled the country from 1912 until 1949.[16] Discipline was applied universally within the army, with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) members expected to be punished more than non-Party soldiers for the same infraction.[16] Beatings and abuses were forbidden by regulations.[16] Although capital punishment was enforced for disobeying certain orders, it was rarely used in accordance with the Chinese traditions.[16] Normally, public shamings and political indoctrination camps were the preferred methods for dealing with serious infractions such as desertion, and the punished were expected to return to frontline duty with their original units.[16]

Like the Soviet Army, political and military officers formed a dual chain of command within the PVA, and this arrangement could be found as low as the company level.[17] Political officers were in charge of the control and the morale of the troops, and they were often expected to act like role models in combat.[17] Unlike other communist armies of the same period, although the political officers had authority over military officers on combat decisions, the military officers could issue orders without political officers' approval.[17] Similarly, the line between military and political officers were often blurred in the PVA, since the political officers often had extensive military experiences while most military officers were senior Party members within a unit.[17]

Besides the political officers, Party members and Party candidates also enforced political controls within the ranks.[17] Squads were often divided into three-man fireteams, with each fireteam led by a Party member or a Party candidate.[17] Group meetings were frequently used to maintain unit cohesion, and within the meetings public shamings and criticisms were conducted to raise morale and to indoctrinate soldiers.[18]

The by-product of the tight political control within the PVA is that it relied on the presence of the Party members within its ranks to be combat effective.[19] A PVA unit could disintegrate once the Party members were either killed or wounded in action.[19] Also, the tight political control created a general dissatisfaction amongst the Chinese ranks. Constant political indoctrination and high peer pressure were required to maintain high morale for each soldier.[4]

According to The Korean War, written by Matthew Bunker Ridgway, the commander-in-chief of the UN forces, the positive evaluation of the Chinese Army's good treatment of prisoners is completely different from the KPA's policy of abusing prisoners. He positively praised the Chinese army as a disciplined army and a respectable enemy.[20] During the Korean War, the US front-line combat forces also spoke highly of the fighting will of the PVA.[21]

Prisoners-of-war (POWs)

Prisoners-of-war (POWs) played a major role in the continuation of the war past 1951. The US accused China of implementing mind control, coined "brainwashing", on US prisoners, while China refused to allow the US to repatriate POWs to Taiwan.

United Nations POWs

In contrast with their KPA counterparts, executions committed by the PVA were rather few in number.[4][22] According to author Kevin Mahoney in his study of the PVA, executions of POWs did occur during the heat of the battle.[22] Most of the executions appeared to have been committed by the lower commands without the upper echelons' knowledge,[23] and it is often carried out to prevent the future escapes or rescues of the POWs.[23]

As the PVA rarely executed prisoners, the Chinese considered themselves to be more lenient and humane than the KPA.[24] However, the Chinese were unprepared for the large influx of POWs after their entry into the war and a large number of prisoners were crowded into temporary camps for processing.[25] Mass starvation and diseases soon swept through those camps during the winter of 1950–51, while numerous death marches were conducted by the PVA to move the prisoners into permanent locations.[26] Although the situation started to improve after permanent camps were established by January 1951,[27] death by starvation still continued until April 1951.[28] About 43 percent of all US POWs died from November 1950 to April 1951. In comparison, only 34 percent of all US prisoners died under Japanese captivity during World War II.[28] The Chinese have defended their actions by stating that all PVA soldiers during this period were also suffering mass starvation and diseases due to the lack of a competent logistics system.[29][30] The UN POWs, however, pointed out that a lot of the Chinese camps were located near the Sino-Korean border, and claimed that the starvation was used to force the prisoners to accept the communist indoctrination programs.[29] The starvation and the POW deaths finally stopped by the summer of 1951 after the armistice talks started.[31]

Allegations of mind control

During the Korean War, Edward Hunter, who worked at the time both as a journalist and as a U.S. intelligence agent, wrote a series of books and articles on the allegations of Chinese mind control, which he coined as "brainwashing".[32]

The Chinese term 洗腦 (xǐnǎo, literally "wash brain")[33] was originally used to describe methodologies of coercive persuasion used under the Maoist regime in China, which aimed to transform individuals with a reactionary imperialist mindset into "right-thinking" members of the new Chinese social system.[34] To that end the regime developed techniques that would break down the psyche integrity of the individual with regard to information processing, information retained in the mind and individual values. Chosen techniques included dehumanizing of individuals by keeping them in filth, sleep deprivation, partial sensory deprivation, psychological harassment, inculcation of guilt and group social pressure.[citation needed] The term punned on the Taoist custom of "cleansing/washing the heart" (洗心, xǐ xīn) prior to conducting certain ceremonies or entering certain holy places.

Hunter and those who picked up the Chinese term used it to explain why, unlike in earlier wars, a relatively high percentage of American GIs defected to the enemy side after becoming prisoners-of-war. It was believed that the Chinese in North Korea used such techniques to disrupt the ability of captured troops to effectively organize and resist their imprisonment.[35] British radio operator Robert W. Ford[36][37] and British army Colonel James Carne also claimed that the Chinese subjected them to brainwashing techniques during their war-era imprisonment.

After the war, two studies of the repatriation of American prisoners of war by Robert Lifton[38] and by Edgar Schein[39] concluded that brainwashing (called "thought reform" by Lifton and "coercive persuasion" by Schein) had a transient effect. Both researchers found that the Chinese mainly used coercive persuasion to disrupt the ability of the prisoners to organize and maintain morale and hence to escape. By placing the prisoners under conditions of physical and social deprivation and disruption, and then by offering them more comfortable situations such as better sleeping quarters, better food, warmer clothes or blankets, the Chinese did succeed in getting some of the prisoners to make anti-American statements. Nevertheless, the majority of prisoners did not actually adopt Communist beliefs, instead behaving as though they did in order to avoid the plausible threat of extreme physical abuse. Both researchers also concluded that such coercive persuasion succeeded only on a minority of POWs, and that the end-result of such coercion remained very unstable, as most of the individuals reverted to their previous condition soon after they left the coercive environment. In 1961 they both published books expanding on these findings. Schein published Coercive Persuasion[40] and Lifton published Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism.[41] More recent writers including Mikhail Heller have suggested that Lifton's model of brainwashing may throw light on the use of mass propaganda in other communist states such as the former Soviet Union.[42]

In a summary published in 1963, Edgar Schein gave a background history of the precursor origins of the brainwashing phenomenon:

Thought reform contains elements which are evident in Chinese culture (emphasis on interpersonal sensitivity, learning by rote and self-cultivation); in methods of extracting confessions well known in the Papal Inquisition (13th century) and elaborated through the centuries, especially by the Russian secret police; in methods of organizing corrective prisons, mental hospitals and other institutions for producing value change; in methods used by religious sects, fraternal orders, political elites or primitive societies for converting or initiating new members. Thought reform techniques are consistent with psychological principles but were not explicitly derived from such principles.[43]

Mind-control theories from the Korean War era came under criticism in subsequent years. According to forensic psychologist Dick Anthony, the CIA invented the concept of "brainwashing" as a propaganda strategy to undercut communist claims that American POWs in Korean communist camps had voluntarily expressed sympathy for communism. Anthony stated that definitive research demonstrated that fear and duress, not brainwashing, caused western POWs to collaborate. He argued that the books of Hunter (whom he identified as a secret CIA "psychological warfare specialist" passing as a journalist) pushed the CIA brainwashing theory onto the general public.[44]

In addition, Herbert Brownell Jr., the Attorney General of the United States, once said publicly that "if American prisoners of war cooperate with the Communist Party during their imprisonment in North Korea, they will face charges of treason that may carry out the death penalty. Moreover, the United States official wrote a statement saying: "Those who cooperate with Communists and sign false confessions should be quickly removed from the army, not honored." In addition to threats and pressure by the U.S. government and military, prisoners of war also face great psychological pressure from the impact of their families. This may explain why many American prisoners of war accused "China of abusing prisoners of war" or why they recanted statements in favor of the People's Republic of China after returning home. [45][46]

Chinese POWs

 
Chinese POWs captured by US Marines, December 1950

Anti-communist POWs in communist service

During the Panmunjom Truce negotiations, the chief stumbling block to the arrangement of a final armistice during the winter of 1951–1952 revolved around the exchange of prisoners. At first glance, there appeared to be nothing to argue about, since the Geneva Conventions of 1949, by which both sides had pledged to abide, called for the immediate and complete exchange of all prisoners upon the conclusion of hostilities. This seemingly straightforward principle, however, disturbed many Americans. To begin with, UN prisoner-of-war camps held over 40,000 South Koreans, many of whom had been impressed into communist service and who had no desire to be sent north upon the conclusion of the war. Moreover, a considerable number of North Korean and Chinese prisoners had also expressed a desire not to return to their homelands. This was particularly true of the Chinese POWs, some of whom were anti-communists whom the communists had forcibly inducted during the Chinese Civil War into the PLA unit that was later transferred into Korea.[47][48][circular reference]

Aftermath of the Korean War

In 2011, some former members of the PVA revisited North Korea. After the visit, they commented that they were "very sad" and dissatisfied with the post-war development of North Korea. "[We] liberated them, but they're still struggling for freedom" said Qu Yingkui.[49]

To mark the 70th year of entry into the Korean War by the volunteers' army, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited the cemetery in 2020.[50] The Pyongyang Times described the soldiers as having 'unparalleled bravery, mass spirit and international heroism,' and describing the other help that the volunteer army provided.[51]

Early Chinese involvement

The stated historical importance of the PVA entering the war was that it marked the beginning of Chinese government involvement. However, this is rather from political propaganda needs and there is debate of the time of the beginning of Chinese involvement. Some scholars in the west had argued that the Chinese involvement was much earlier, and in the North Korean invasion on June 25, 1950, out of the 135,000 KPA invasion force, more than 38,000 were former ethnic Korean soldiers of the Chinese Communist Fourth Field Army. An equal number of former ethnic Korean soldiers of Fourth Field Army who did not participate in the invasion also served in the KPA in other regions of North Korea. The KPA invasion force consisted of two corps, the I Corps and II Corps. Jin Xiong (金雄, Kim Woong), the commander-in-chief of the invasion force and the commander of KPA I Corps, was a veteran of Eighth Route Army, and a former member of the CCP. Jin Wuting (金武亭, Kim Mu Jong), also known as Wu Ting (武亭, Mu Jong) the commander of KPA II Corps, even had more seniority than Jin Xiong (金雄), in that he participated in Guangzhou Uprising and the Long March. All of these facts are agreed by the Chinese government.

The former units of the Fourth Field Army transferred to North Korean with all of their weapons were:

  • 5th Division (North Korea): former 164th Division. The commander, Li Deshan (李德山), a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP, was also the political commissar. When the division reached to North Korea on July 20, 1949, its number totaled 10,821. Weaponry brought with them included 5,279 rifles, 588 handguns, 321 light machine guns, 104 heavy machine guns, 206 submachine guns, 8 anti-tank rifles, 32 grenade launchers, 67 50-mm mortars, 87 60-mm mortars, 26 mortars with calibre of 81-mm or greater, 12 anti-tank guns, 1 infantry support gun, 3 other artillery pieces and 734 horses.
  • 6th Division (North Korea): former 166th Division. The commander, Fang Hushan (方虎山, Bang Ho San), a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP, was also the political commissar. When the division reached to North Korea on July 20, 1949, its number totaled 10,320. Weaponry brought with them included: 6,046 rifles, 722 handguns, 281 light machine guns, 91 heavy machine guns, 878 submachine guns, 69 grenade launchers, 31 50-mm mortars, 91 60-mm mortars, 33 mortars with calibre of 81-mm or greater, 10 anti-tank guns, 3 mountain guns, 3 other artillery pieces and 945 horses.
  • 7th Division (North Korea) (later renamed as the 12th): former 156th Division, with additional ethnic Korean soldiers from the 139th, 140th and 141st Divisions of the IV Field Army. The commander, Cui Ren (崔仁, Chu Yol), a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP, was also the political commissar. When the division reached North Korea on April 18, 1950, its number totaled more than 14,000. The weaponry brought into North Korea was greater than that of the other two divisions due to its larger size.

With the exception of the KPA 2nd and 3rd Divisions, which mostly consisted of former-Soviet trained North Korean troops, all other KPA divisions had at least a former regiment of the IV Field Army, and in addition to the three former Chinese divisions, most of commanders were former commanders of the IV Field army, such as:

  • Commander of the 2nd Division Ch'oe Hyon (崔贤) and chief-of-staff Xu Bo (许波)
  • Commander of the 3rd Division Lee Yong Ho (李英镝) and chief-of-staff Zhang Pingshan (张平山)
  • Commander of the 4th Division Lee Kwon Mu (李权武)

Though the Chinese government acknowledged these facts, this early Chinese involvement was kept a secret for more than four decades in China and it was only until the late 1990s when such information was finally allowed to be revealed on large scale. The Chinese government, however, argued that these troops were already transferred to North Korea and thus should be strictly considered as the internal affairs of Korea, and thus still asserts the Chinese involvement in the Korean War began when the PVA joined the fight.

Legacy

Democratic People's Republic of Korea

The legacy of the PVA is commemorated in the DPRK with the Cemetery of the Fallen Soldiers of the Chinese People's Volunteers Army, located in Hoechang County. Wreaths and floral baskets are sent to commemorate their contributions to the war.[52][50]

People's Republic of China

For many Chinese, the Korean War is generally regarded as an honorable struggle in Chinese history. The PVA was the first Chinese army in a century that was able to withstand a Western army in a major conflict. They had earned a name "the most beloved people (最可爱的人)", which is from the essay written by Wei Wei in 1951, "Who are the Most Beloved People?".[53] More and more stories of heroism by members of the PVA continue to be promoted by the PRC government even to this day, and appear in school textbooks. The willingness of China to assist North Korea against the United States, and the show of force they engaged in, heralded that China was once again becoming a major world power.

From official Chinese sources, PVA casualties during the Korean War were 390,000. This breaks down as follows: 110,400 KIA; 21,600 died of wounds; 13,000 died of sickness; 25,600 MIA/POW; and 260,000 more wounded. However, western and other sources estimate that about 400,000 Chinese soldiers were either killed in action or died of disease, starvation, exposure, and accidents with around 486,000 wounded, out of around 3 million military personnel deployed in the war by China. Mao Zedong's oldest and only healthy son, Mao Anying (毛岸英), was a PVA officer during the war, and was killed by a UN air strike.[54]

The war also contributed to the decline of Sino-Soviet relations. Although Chinese had their own reasons to enter the war (i.e. a strategic buffer state in the Korean peninsula), the view that the Soviets had used them as proxies was shared in the Western bloc. China had to use Soviet loans originally intended to rebuild their shattered economy to pay for Soviet arms.

Republic of China

After the war was over, of the PVA POWs held by UNC forces, 14,235 were transported to Taiwan.[55]: 514–5 [55]: 496  They began arriving in Taiwan on January 23, 1954 and were referred to as "Anti-Communist Martyrs" (反共義士). In Taiwan January 23 became World Freedom Day (自由日) in their honor.

The Korean War also led to other long-lasting effects. Until the war, the US had largely abandoned the government of Chiang Kai-shek, which had retreated to Taiwan, and had no plans to intervene in the Chinese Civil War. The start of the Korean War rendered untenable any policy that would have caused Taiwan to fall under PRC control. Truman's decision to send American forces to the Taiwan Strait further deterred the PRC from making any cross-strait invasion of Taiwan. The anti-communist atmosphere in the West in response to the Korean War and Cold War contributed to the unwillingness to diplomatically recognize the People's Republic of China by the United States until 1979. Today, diplomacy between the Republic of China and mainland China remains strained, and mainland China continues to claim the sovereignty of Taiwan.

Media

Who are the Most Beloved People? (Chinese: 《谁是最可爱的人?》) is the title of an essay by Chinese writer Wei Wei about the Chinese soldiers serving in the Korean War. It is considered to be the most famous literary and propaganda piece produced by China during the Korean War.

Battle on Shangganling Mountain (Chinese: 上甘岭; pinyin: Shanggan Ling) is a famous Chinese war movie about the Battle of Triangle Hill. The story is centered around a group of Chinese soldiers that were trapped in a tunnel for several days. Short of both food and water, they hold their grounds till the relief troops arrive. The movie's popularity is largely due to the fact it was one of the few movies that were not banned during the Cultural Revolution.

War Trash is a novel by the Chinese author Ha Jin, who has long lived in the United States and who writes in English. It takes the form of a memoir written by the fictional character Yu Yuan, a man who eventually becomes a soldier in the Chinese People's Volunteer Army and who is sent to Korea to fight on the Communist side in the Korean War. The majority of the "memoir" is devoted to describing this experience, especially after Yu Yuan is captured and imprisoned as a POW. The novel captured the PEN/Faulkner Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Western sources often refer to the Chinese People's Volunteer Army by using the term Chinese Communist Forces (CCF), a title which was synonymous with the Chinese People's Liberation Army during the Cold War.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Тараптардың күштері және шығындар
  2. ^ Shen Zhihua (沈志华) (2000). 《抗美援朝战争决策中的苏联因素》. 《当代中国史研究》, 1, 28–39.
  3. ^ Ryan, Mark A.; Finkelstein, David M.; McDevitt, Michael A. (2003). Chinese warfighting: The PLA experience since 1949. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. p. 125. ISBN 0-7656-1087-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e Roe, Patrick C. (May 4, 2000). The Dragon Strikes. Presidio. ISBN 0-89141-703-6.
  5. ^ PLA Military Science Academy (September 2000). 《抗美援朝战争史》 [History of War to Resist America and Aid Korea]. Vol. I. Beijing: Chinese Military Science Academy Publishing House. ISBN 7-80137-390-1.
  6. ^ Korean War. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved February 04, 2009.
  7. ^ "Pyongyang taken as UN retreats, 1950". BBC Archive. Retrieved August 22, 2021.
  8. ^ The Strange Connection: U.S. Intervention in China, 1944–1972 by Bevin Alexander ISBN 0-313-28008-8, ISBN 978-0-313-28008-5 p. 117
  9. ^ Zhang 1995, p. 152.
  10. ^ Chinese Question Role in Korean War, from POW-MIA InterNetwork 2007-10-23 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Zhang 1995, p. 152.
  12. ^ GlobalSecurity.org – Korean War
  13. ^ Li Tso-Peng, "Strategy: One Against Ten, Tactics: Ten Against One." Foreign Languages Press, Peking 1966, pp. 4–5.
  14. ^ Ryan, Mark A.; Finkelstein, David M.; McDevitt, Michael A. (2003). Chinese warfighting: The PLA experience since 1949. Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe. p. 126. ISBN 0-7656-1087-6.
  15. ^ Appleman, Roy E. . South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu. p. 719. CMH Pub 202-1. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2010.
  16. ^ a b c d e Mahoney 2001, p. 35
  17. ^ a b c d e f Mahoney 2001, p. 36
  18. ^ Mahoney 2001, pp. 36–37
  19. ^ a b Mahoney 2001, p. 37
  20. ^ "[美]李奇微:《朝鲜战争回忆录》". A Da Capo paperback. 1986年.
  21. ^ Halberstam, David (2007年). 《The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War》. Hyperion. ISBN 9781401300524.
  22. ^ a b Mahoney 2001, p. 105
  23. ^ a b Mahoney 2001, p. 106
  24. ^ Kinkhead 1981, p. 94.
  25. ^ Lech 2000, p. 38.
  26. ^ Lech 2000, pp. 2, 57.
  27. ^ Kinkhead 1981, p. 141.
  28. ^ a b Lech 2000, p. 2.
  29. ^ a b Lech 2000, p. 73.
  30. ^ Zhang 1995, p. 168.
  31. ^ Lech 2000, p. 146.
  32. ^ Marks, John (1979). "8. Brainwashing". The Search for the Manchurian Candidate: The CIA and Mind Control. New York: Times Books. ISBN 0-8129-0773-6. Retrieved December 30, 2008. In September 1950, the Miami News published an article by Edward Hunter titled " 'Brain-Washing' Tactics Force Chinese into Ranks of Communist Party." It was the first printed use in any language of the term "brainwashing," which quickly became a stock phrase in Cold War headlines. Hunter, a CIA propaganda operator who worked under cover as a journalist, turned out a steady stream of books and articles on the subject.
  33. ^ Harper, Douglas. "brainwashing". Online Etymology Dictionary. Dictionary.com. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
  34. ^ Taylor, Kathleen (2006). Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-19-920478-6. Retrieved July 2, 2010.
  35. ^ Browning, Michael (March 14, 2003). "Was Kidnapped Utah Teen Brainwashed?". Palm Beach Post. Palm Beach. ISSN 1528-5758. During the Korean War, captured American soldiers were subjected to prolonged interrogations and harangues by their captors, who often worked in relays and used the "good-cop, bad-cop" approach, alternating a brutal interrogator with a gentle one. It was all part of "Xi Nao," washing the brain. The Chinese and Koreans were making valiant attempts to convert the captives to the communist way of thought.
  36. ^ Ford RC (1990). Captured in Tibet. Oxford [Oxfordshire]: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-581570-X.
  37. ^ Ford RC (1997). Wind Between the Worlds: Captured in Tibet. SLG Books. ISBN 0-9617066-9-4.
  38. ^ Lifton, Robert J. (April 1954). "Home by Ship: Reaction Patterns of American Prisoners of War Repatriated from North Korea". American Journal of Psychiatry. 110 (10): 732–739. doi:10.1176/ajp.110.10.732. PMID 13138750. Retrieved March 30, 2008. Cited in Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism
  39. ^ Schein, Edgar (May 1956). "The Chinese Indoctrination Program for Prisoners of War: A Study of Attempted Brainwashing". Psychiatry. 19 (2): 149–172. doi:10.1080/00332747.1956.11023044. PMID 13323141. Cited in Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism
  40. ^ Schein, Edgar H. (1971). Coercive Persuasion: A Socio-Psychological Analysis of the "Brainwashing" of American Civilian Prisoners by the Chinese Communists. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-00613-1.
  41. ^ Lifton, RJ (1989) [1961]. Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism; a Study of "Brainwashing" in China. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4253-2.
  42. ^ Heller, Mikhail (1988). Cogs in the Soviet Wheel: The Formation of Soviet Man. Translated by David Floyd. London: Collins Harvill. ISBN 0-00-272516-9. Dr [Robert J.] Lifton draws attention to a fact of exceptional importance: the effect of 'brainwashing' and its methods is felt even by those whom he calls the 'apparent resisters', those who seem not to succumb to the intoxication. This study showed that they do assimilate what has been hammered into their brain but the effect comes only a certain time after their liberation, like the explosion of a delayed-action bomb. It is not hard to imagine the effect which 'education' and 're-education' has upon the Soviet citizen, who is exposed from the day he is born to 'brainwashing', bombarded every day, round the clock, by all the means of propaganda and persuasion. Heller's footnote explains the phrase "the means of propaganda and persuasion" as "[t]he official name for the means of communication in the USSR. The accepted abbreviation is SMIP [literally from the Russian phrase meaning 'means of mass information and propaganda']."
  43. ^ Schein, Edgar Henry (1963). "Brainwashing". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (14th (revised) ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. p. 91.
  44. ^ Anthony, Dick (1999). "Pseudoscience and Minority Religions: An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean-Marie". Social Justice Research. 12 (4): 421–456. doi:10.1023/A:1022081411463. S2CID 140454555.
  45. ^ Stephen L·Endicott,Germ Warfare and"Plausible Denial":the Korean War,1952~1953,Modern China,Vol.5,No.1,Jan.1979,P87~89
  46. ^ New York Times,Aug.15,1953;Canadian Far Eastern Newsletter,Nov.1953
  47. ^ Birtle, Andrew J. . United States Army Center of Military History. p. 17. Archived from the original on December 14, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  48. ^ Operation Big Switch
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on March 1, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2012.
  50. ^ a b "Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un sends flower baskets in honour of CPV martyrs". www.pyongyangtimes.com.kp. Retrieved March 18, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  51. ^ "CPV performs distinguished services on Korean front". www.pyongyangtimes.com.kp. Retrieved March 18, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  52. ^ "Chinese martyrs honoured". www.pyongyangtimes.com.kp. Retrieved March 18, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  53. ^ Wei, Wei (1951). . People's Daily. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
  54. ^ The Cold War, The Korean War: An Overview
  55. ^ a b Hermes, Walter (1992). United States Army in the Korean War: Truce Tent and Fighting Front. United States Army Center of Military History. ISBN 9781410224842.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

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people, volunteer, army, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, template, m. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The People s Volunteer Army PVA was the armed expeditionary forces deployed by the People s Republic of China during the Korean War 2 note 1 Although all units in the PVA were actually transferred from the People s Liberation Army under the orders of Chairman Mao Zedong the PVA was separately constituted in order to prevent an official war with the United States The PVA entered Korea on 19 October 1950 and completely withdrew by October 1958 The nominal commander and political commissar of the PVA was Peng Dehuai before the ceasefire agreement in 1953 although both Chen Geng and Deng Hua served as the acting commander and commissar after April 1952 due to Peng s illness The initial 25 October 5 November 1950 units in the PVA included 38th 39th 40th 42nd 50th 66th Corps totalling 250 000 men About 3 million Chinese civilian and military personnel had served in Korea throughout the war People s Volunteer ArmyThe People s Volunteer Army used a plain red flag during the war Active1950 1958 combat troops 1954 1994 delegation Country People s Republic of ChinaAllegianceChinese Communist PartyBranchArmyNavyAir ForceTypeExpeditionary warfareRoleDefend North Korea and Northeast ChinaSize780 000 troops 1 Garrison HQNorth KoreaNickname s 最可爱的人 Most Beloved People Motto s 抗美援朝 保家卫国 English Resist U S aggressors and aid Korea to defend our homeland Colors RedMarchBattle Hymn of the Chinese People s Volunteer Army zh EngagementsKorean WarCommandersNotablecommandersPeng DehuaiChen GengDeng HuaHong XuezhiHan XianchuSong Shilun People s Volunteer ArmySimplified Chinese中国人民志愿军Traditional Chinese中國人民志願軍Literal meaning China People Volunteering Army TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōngguo Renmin ZhiyuanjunBopomofoㄓㄨㄥ ㄍㄨㄛˊㄖㄣˊ ㄇㄧㄣˊㄓˋ ㄩㄢˋㄐㄩㄣWade GilesChung kuo Jen min Chih yuan chunYue CantoneseJyutpingZung1gwok3 Jan4man4 Zi3jyun6gwan1First commander and commissar of the PVA Peng Dehuai 1950 1952 Second commander and commissar of the PVA Chen Geng 1952 Third commander and commissar of the PVA Deng Hua 1952 1953 Contents 1 Background 2 Strengths and weaknesses 2 1 Clothing 2 2 Equipment 3 Actions during the Korean War 3 1 First Phase Campaign October 25 November 5 1950 3 2 Second Phase Campaign November 25 December 24 1950 3 3 Third Phase Campaign December 31 1950 January 8 1951 3 4 Fourth Phase Campaign January 30 April 21 1951 3 5 Fifth Phase Campaign April 22 May 22 1951 3 6 Stalemate June 10 1951 July 27 1953 4 Tactics 5 Discipline and political control 6 Prisoners of war POWs 6 1 United Nations POWs 6 1 1 Allegations of mind control 6 2 Chinese POWs 6 2 1 Anti communist POWs in communist service 7 Aftermath of the Korean War 8 Early Chinese involvement 9 Legacy 9 1 Democratic People s Republic of Korea 9 2 People s Republic of China 9 3 Republic of China 10 Media 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 SourcesBackground EditFurther information Chinese People s Volunteer Army order of battle Although the United Nations Command UN forces were under United States command this army was officially a UN police force In order to avoid an open war with the US and other UN members the People s Republic of China deployed the People s Liberation Army PLA under the name volunteer army 3 About the name there were various opinions According to some scholars during the mid 1990s after the PRC made the strategic decision to send soldiers to Korea the very first name of this army was support army citation needed However Huang Yanpei the vice premier of the Government Administration Council of the Central People s Government at that time suggested that the name support army might cause the international community to assume that China was sending soldiers as an act of direct aggression against the United States citation needed Therefore the army s name was modified to volunteer army while different unit designations and footings were used instead to give the impression that China did not intend to declare war against the US but rather that Chinese soldiers were only present on Korean battlefields as individual volunteers On the other hand some recent studies show that the change was not only due to Huang s advice Because much earlier on July 7 1950 the name had already been changed to volunteer army by Chinese premier Zhou Enlai on his manuscript about the decision of the army s clothing and flags citation needed Despite arguments on the changing from People s Support Army to People s Volunteer Army the name was also a homage to the Korean Volunteer Army that had helped the Chinese communists during the Second Sino Japanese War and the Chinese Civil War It also managed to deceive the US intelligence and the UN about the size and nature of the Chinese forces that entered Korea 4 They later realized that the PVA was the PLA s North East Frontier Force NEFF with other PLA formations transferred under NEFF s command as the Korean War dragged on 4 5 But the result was that they still admitted the name People s Volunteer Army in order to minimize the war within the Korean Peninsula and prevent escalation of the war Strengths and weaknesses EditClothing Edit Uniform of the PVA Note the flute and the gong which was what the PVA soldiers typically used for communications in battle The PVA soldier was reasonably well clothed in keeping with the PLA s guerrilla origin and egalitarian attitudes All ranks wore a cotton or woolen green or khaki shirt and trousers combination with leaders uniforms being different in cut Equipment Edit Typical firearms used by the PVA The nominal strength of a PLA division was 9 500 men with a regiment comprising 3 000 and a battalion consisting of 850 However many divisions sent to Korea were below strength while the divisions stationed opposite Taiwan were above strength There was also variation in organization and equipment as well as in the quantity and quality of the military equipment Some of the PLA s equipment was from the Imperial Japanese Army or were captured from the Kuomintang Nationalist Chinese military forces Some Czechoslovak made weapons were also purchased on the open market by the PRC During the PVA s first offensive the so called First Phase Campaign in the Korean War between October and November 1950 large quantities of captured US weapons were widely used due to the availability of the required ammunition and the increasing difficulty of constant re supplying across the Yalu River due to numerous UN conducted air interdiction operations In addition there was also a local copy of the US Thompson submachine gun being produced by the PRC based on the type of which had already been exported to and used in China since the 1930s and by UN troops during the Korean War as well Later on after the first year of the Korean War the Soviet Union began to send more weapons and ammunition to the PRC which started to produce licensed copies of some types of Soviet weapons citation needed such as the PPSh 41 submachine gun which was designated as the Type 50 In addition to surplus WWII Soviet arms the Soviet Union also provided some WWII German small arms to the Chinese like the Karabiner 98k rifle Surplus Mauser ammunition were also supplied by the Soviet Union or were available from stocks left behind by the KMT forces who also used German ammunition Actions during the Korean War EditMain article Korean War First Phase Campaign October 25 November 5 1950 Edit PVA rations and mess kits The collapse of the North Korean Korean People s Army KPA in September October 1950 following the Battle of Inchon the Pusan Perimeter Offensive and the UN September 1950 counteroffensive alarmed the PRC Government The PRC had issued warnings that they would intervene if any non South Korean forces crossed the 38th Parallel citing national security interests US President Harry Truman regarded the warnings as a bold attempt to blackmail the UN 6 On October 8 1950 the day after UN troops crossed the 38th Parallel and began their offensive into North Korea Chairman Mao issued the order for the NEFF to be moved to the Yalu River ready to cross Mao sought Soviet aid and saw intervention as essentially defensive If we allow the U S to occupy all of Korea we must be prepared for the US to declare war with China he told Soviet leader Joseph Stalin Zhou Enlai was sent to Moscow to add force to Mao s cabled arguments Mao delayed his forces while waiting for Soviet help and the planned attack was thus postponed from 13 October to 19 October Soviet assistance was limited to providing air support no closer than 60 miles 97 km from the battlefront The MiG 15s in PRC colours would be an unpleasant surprise to the UN pilots they would hold local air superiority against the F 80 Shooting Stars until newer F 86 Sabres were deployed The Soviet role was known to the US but they kept quiet to avoid any international and potential nuclear incidents It has been alleged by the Chinese that the Soviets had agreed to full scale air support which never occurred south of Pyongyang and helped accelerate the Sino Soviet split On October 15 1950 Truman went to Wake Island to discuss with UN commander General Douglas MacArthur the possibility of Chinese intervention and his desire to limit the scope of the Korean War MacArthur reassured Truman that if the Chinese tried to get down to Pyongyang there would be the greatest slaughter On October 19 1950 Pyongyang North Korea s capital was captured by UN forces On the same day the PVA formally crossed the Yalu River under strict secrecy The initial PVA assault began on October 25 1950 under the command of Peng Dehuai with 270 000 PVA troops it was assumed at the time that Lin Biao was in charge but this notion had been disproved The PVA assault caught the UN troops by surprise and employing great skill and remarkable camouflage ability concealed their numerical and divisional strength after the first engagement with the UN After these initial engagements the Chinese withdrew into the mountains UN forces interpreted this withdrawal as a show of weakness they thought that this initial attack was all that the Chinese forces were capable of undertaking Second Phase Campaign November 25 December 24 1950 Edit Main article Second Phase Offensive On November 25 1950 in the Second Phase Offensive or campaign the PVA struck again along the entire Korean front In the west at the Battle of the Ch ongch on River the PVA overran several UN divisions and landed an extremely heavy blow into the flank of the remaining UN forces decimating the U S 2nd Infantry Division in the process In December 1950 Chinese forces captured Pyongyang The city saw a massive evacuation of refugees alongside UN forces heading south in order to avoid the advancing PVA 7 The resulting UN retreat from North Korea was the longest retreat of an American unit in history 8 In the east at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir Task Force Faith a 3 000 man unit from the 7th Infantry Division was surrounded by the PVA 80th and the 81st Divisions Task Force Faith managed to inflict heavy casualties onto the PVA divisions but in the end it was destroyed with 2 000 men killed or captured and losing all vehicles and most other equipment The destruction of Task Force Faith was considered by the PVA to be their biggest success of the entire Korean War The 1st Marine Division fared better though surrounded and forced to retreat they inflicted heavy casualties on the PVA who committed six divisions trying to destroy the Marines Although the PVA were able to recapture much of North Korea during the Second Phase Campaign 40 percent of the PVA was rendered combat ineffective a loss which they could not recover from until the start of Chinese Spring Offensive 4 UN forces in northeast Korea withdrew to form a defensive perimeter around the port city of Hŭngnam where an evacuation was carried out in late December 1950 Approximately 100 000 military personnel and material and another 100 000 North Korean civilians were loaded onto a variety of merchant and military transport ships Eighth Army commander General Walton Walker was killed in an accident on December 23 1950 He was replaced by Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway who led airborne troops in the Second World War Third Phase Campaign December 31 1950 January 8 1951 Edit Chinese infantrymen in the Battle of Triangle Hill Hoping to pressure the UN into abandoning South Korea Mao ordered the PVA to attack the UN forces along the 38th Parallel On the last day of 1950 PVA KPA forces attacked several ROK divisions along the parallel breaching the UN defenses in the process To avoid another encirclement UN forces evacuated Seoul on January 3 and PVA KPA forces recaptured the city on January 4 Both the US Eighth Army and the US X Corps retreated another 50 miles 80 km but the overextended PVA were completely exhausted after months of nonstop fighting Ridgway took immediate steps to raise the morale and fighting spirit of the battered Eighth Army which had fallen to low levels during its retreat from North Korea Fourth Phase Campaign January 30 April 21 1951 Edit The overextended PVA were forced to disengage and to recuperate for an extensive period of time but the UN forces soon returned to the offensive On January 23 1951 the US Eighth Army launched Operation Thunderbolt attacking the unprepared PVA KPA forces south of the Han River This was followed up with Operation Roundup by US X Corps in central Korea Hoping to regain the initiative the PVA counterattacked at the Battle of Hoengsong on February 11 stopping US X Corps advance in the process But without proper rest and recuperation the new offensive soon fizzled out at the Battle of Chipyong ni on February 15 With the entire PVA incapable of any further offensive operations the US Eighth Army launched Operation Killer on February 21 followed by Operation Ripper on March 6 A revitalized Eighth Army restored by Ridgway to fighting trim expelled the PVA KPA troops from Seoul on 16 March destroying much of the city with aerial and artillery bombardments in the process MacArthur was removed from command by President Truman on April 11 1951 due to a disagreement over policy MacArthur was succeeded by Ridgway who led the UN forces for additional offensives across the 38th Parallel A series of attacks managed to slowly drive back the opposing forces inflicting heavy casualties on PVA KPA units as UN forces advanced some miles north of the 38th parallel to Line Kansas Fifth Phase Campaign April 22 May 22 1951 Edit Main article Chinese Spring Offensive The PVA counterattacked on 22 April 1951 with the Fifth Phase Campaign also known as the Chinese Spring Offensive and with three field armies approximately 700 000 men The offensive s first thrust fell upon US I Corps and IX Corps which fiercely resisted blunting the impetus of the offensive which was halted at the No Name Line north of Seoul On May 15 1951 the PVA commenced the second impulse of the Spring Offensive and attacked the ROK and the US X Corps in the east and initially were successful yet were halted by May 22 On 20 May the US Eighth Army counterattacked the exhausted PVA KPA forces in the UN May June 1951 counteroffensive inflicting heavy losses The destruction of the PVA 180th Division of the 60th Army during the counterattack has been considered to be the worst Chinese defeat during the entire Korean War 9 Roughly 3 000 men managed to escape including the division commander and other high ranking officers but the majority of the division were killed or captured During the final days of the Fifth Phase Campaign the main body of the 180th Division was encircled during a UN counterattack and after days of hard fighting the division was fragmented and the regiments fled in all directions Soldiers either deserted or were abandoned by their officers during failed attempts to wage guerrilla warfare without support from the local people Finally out of ammunition and food some 5 000 soldiers were captured The division commander and other officers who escaped were subsequently investigated and demoted on return to China 10 The UN counterattack halted at Line Kansas where they were met with fresh troops from the counterattacking PVA 42nd and 47th Corps on 27 May 11 and subsequent offensive action stand down began the stalemate that lasted until the armistice of 1953 Stalemate June 10 1951 July 27 1953 Edit Chinese troops in Korea depicted on a 1952 Chinese postage stamp The UN counterattack in the aftermath of the Chinese Spring Offensive stabilized the front roughly along the 38th Parallel The rest of the war involved little territory change large scale bombing of the population in the north and lengthy peace negotiations which started in Kaesong on July 10 1951 Even during the peace negotiations combat continued For the UN forces the goal was to recapture all of what had been South Korea before an agreement was reached in order to avoid loss of any territory and the PVA attempted similar operations A major issue of the negotiations was repatriation of POWs The Chinese and North Koreans insisted on forcible repatriation while the UN insisted on voluntary repatriation The war continued until the Chinese and North Koreans eventually dropped this issue On November 29 1952 U S President elect Dwight D Eisenhower fulfilled a campaign promise by going to Korea to find out what could be done to end the war With the UN s and PVA s acceptance of India s proposal for an armistice fighting ended July 27 1953 by which time the front line was back around the proximity of the 38th Parallel A demilitarized zone DMZ was established along the Military Demarcation Line which is patrolled to this day by North Korean troops on one side and South Korean and American troops on the other Tactics EditPVA forces used rapid attacks on the flanks and rear and infiltration behind UN lines to give the appearance of vast hordes This of course was augmented by the PVA tactic of maximizing their forces for the attack ensuring a large local numerical superiority over their opponent 12 13 The initial PVA victories were a great morale booster for the PVA However by late 1951 overextended supply lines and superior UN firepower had forced a stalemate The KPA that invaded in 1950 had been much better supplied and armed by the Soviets than the PVA had been The main arms of the PVA were captured Japanese and Nationalist arms 14 Historian and Korean War veteran Bevin Alexander had this to say about Chinese tactics in his book How Wars Are Won The Chinese had no air power and were armed only with rifles machineguns hand grenades and mortars Against the much more heavily armed Americans they adapted a technique they had used against the Nationalists in the Chinese civil war of 1946 49 The Chinese generally attacked at night and tried to close in on a small troop position generally a platoon and then attacked it with local superiority in numbers The usual method was to infiltrate small units from a platoon of fifty men to a company of 200 split into separate detachments While one team cut off the escape route of the Americans the others struck both the front and the flanks in concerted assaults The attacks continued on all sides until the defenders were destroyed or forced to withdraw The Chinese then crept forward to the open flank of the next platoon position and repeated the tactics Roy Appleman further clarified the initial Chinese tactics as In the First Phase Offensive highly skilled enemy light infantry troops had carried out the Chinese attacks generally unaided by any weapons larger than mortars Their attacks had demonstrated that the Chinese were well trained disciplined fire fighters and particularly adept at night fighting They were masters of the art of camouflage Their patrols were remarkably successful in locating the positions of the U N forces They planned their attacks to get in the rear of these forces cut them off from their escape and supply roads and then send in frontal and flanking attacks to precipitate the battle They also employed a tactic which they termed Hachi Shiki which was a V formation into which they allowed enemy forces to move the sides of the V then closed around their enemy while another force moved below the mouth of the V to engage any forces attempting to relieve the trapped unit Such were the tactics the Chinese used with great success at Onjong Unsan and Ch osan but with only partial success at Pakch on and the Ch ongch on bridgehead 15 Discipline and political control EditThe discipline of the PVA was strict by Western standards a notable improvement when compared to the Nationalist and warlord armies that ruled the country from 1912 until 1949 16 Discipline was applied universally within the army with the Chinese Communist Party CCP members expected to be punished more than non Party soldiers for the same infraction 16 Beatings and abuses were forbidden by regulations 16 Although capital punishment was enforced for disobeying certain orders it was rarely used in accordance with the Chinese traditions 16 Normally public shamings and political indoctrination camps were the preferred methods for dealing with serious infractions such as desertion and the punished were expected to return to frontline duty with their original units 16 Like the Soviet Army political and military officers formed a dual chain of command within the PVA and this arrangement could be found as low as the company level 17 Political officers were in charge of the control and the morale of the troops and they were often expected to act like role models in combat 17 Unlike other communist armies of the same period although the political officers had authority over military officers on combat decisions the military officers could issue orders without political officers approval 17 Similarly the line between military and political officers were often blurred in the PVA since the political officers often had extensive military experiences while most military officers were senior Party members within a unit 17 Besides the political officers Party members and Party candidates also enforced political controls within the ranks 17 Squads were often divided into three man fireteams with each fireteam led by a Party member or a Party candidate 17 Group meetings were frequently used to maintain unit cohesion and within the meetings public shamings and criticisms were conducted to raise morale and to indoctrinate soldiers 18 The by product of the tight political control within the PVA is that it relied on the presence of the Party members within its ranks to be combat effective 19 A PVA unit could disintegrate once the Party members were either killed or wounded in action 19 Also the tight political control created a general dissatisfaction amongst the Chinese ranks Constant political indoctrination and high peer pressure were required to maintain high morale for each soldier 4 According to The Korean War written by Matthew Bunker Ridgway the commander in chief of the UN forces the positive evaluation of the Chinese Army s good treatment of prisoners is completely different from the KPA s policy of abusing prisoners He positively praised the Chinese army as a disciplined army and a respectable enemy 20 During the Korean War the US front line combat forces also spoke highly of the fighting will of the PVA 21 Prisoners of war POWs EditPrisoners of war POWs played a major role in the continuation of the war past 1951 The US accused China of implementing mind control coined brainwashing on US prisoners while China refused to allow the US to repatriate POWs to Taiwan United Nations POWs Edit In contrast with their KPA counterparts executions committed by the PVA were rather few in number 4 22 According to author Kevin Mahoney in his study of the PVA executions of POWs did occur during the heat of the battle 22 Most of the executions appeared to have been committed by the lower commands without the upper echelons knowledge 23 and it is often carried out to prevent the future escapes or rescues of the POWs 23 As the PVA rarely executed prisoners the Chinese considered themselves to be more lenient and humane than the KPA 24 However the Chinese were unprepared for the large influx of POWs after their entry into the war and a large number of prisoners were crowded into temporary camps for processing 25 Mass starvation and diseases soon swept through those camps during the winter of 1950 51 while numerous death marches were conducted by the PVA to move the prisoners into permanent locations 26 Although the situation started to improve after permanent camps were established by January 1951 27 death by starvation still continued until April 1951 28 About 43 percent of all US POWs died from November 1950 to April 1951 In comparison only 34 percent of all US prisoners died under Japanese captivity during World War II 28 The Chinese have defended their actions by stating that all PVA soldiers during this period were also suffering mass starvation and diseases due to the lack of a competent logistics system 29 30 The UN POWs however pointed out that a lot of the Chinese camps were located near the Sino Korean border and claimed that the starvation was used to force the prisoners to accept the communist indoctrination programs 29 The starvation and the POW deaths finally stopped by the summer of 1951 after the armistice talks started 31 Allegations of mind control Edit Main article Brainwashing The Korean War and brainwashing During the Korean War Edward Hunter who worked at the time both as a journalist and as a U S intelligence agent wrote a series of books and articles on the allegations of Chinese mind control which he coined as brainwashing 32 The Chinese term 洗腦 xǐnǎo literally wash brain 33 was originally used to describe methodologies of coercive persuasion used under the Maoist regime in China which aimed to transform individuals with a reactionary imperialist mindset into right thinking members of the new Chinese social system 34 To that end the regime developed techniques that would break down the psyche integrity of the individual with regard to information processing information retained in the mind and individual values Chosen techniques included dehumanizing of individuals by keeping them in filth sleep deprivation partial sensory deprivation psychological harassment inculcation of guilt and group social pressure citation needed The term punned on the Taoist custom of cleansing washing the heart 洗心 xǐ xin prior to conducting certain ceremonies or entering certain holy places Hunter and those who picked up the Chinese term used it to explain why unlike in earlier wars a relatively high percentage of American GIs defected to the enemy side after becoming prisoners of war It was believed that the Chinese in North Korea used such techniques to disrupt the ability of captured troops to effectively organize and resist their imprisonment 35 British radio operator Robert W Ford 36 37 and British army Colonel James Carne also claimed that the Chinese subjected them to brainwashing techniques during their war era imprisonment After the war two studies of the repatriation of American prisoners of war by Robert Lifton 38 and by Edgar Schein 39 concluded that brainwashing called thought reform by Lifton and coercive persuasion by Schein had a transient effect Both researchers found that the Chinese mainly used coercive persuasion to disrupt the ability of the prisoners to organize and maintain morale and hence to escape By placing the prisoners under conditions of physical and social deprivation and disruption and then by offering them more comfortable situations such as better sleeping quarters better food warmer clothes or blankets the Chinese did succeed in getting some of the prisoners to make anti American statements Nevertheless the majority of prisoners did not actually adopt Communist beliefs instead behaving as though they did in order to avoid the plausible threat of extreme physical abuse Both researchers also concluded that such coercive persuasion succeeded only on a minority of POWs and that the end result of such coercion remained very unstable as most of the individuals reverted to their previous condition soon after they left the coercive environment In 1961 they both published books expanding on these findings Schein published Coercive Persuasion 40 and Lifton published Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism 41 More recent writers including Mikhail Heller have suggested that Lifton s model of brainwashing may throw light on the use of mass propaganda in other communist states such as the former Soviet Union 42 In a summary published in 1963 Edgar Schein gave a background history of the precursor origins of the brainwashing phenomenon Thought reform contains elements which are evident in Chinese culture emphasis on interpersonal sensitivity learning by rote and self cultivation in methods of extracting confessions well known in the Papal Inquisition 13th century and elaborated through the centuries especially by the Russian secret police in methods of organizing corrective prisons mental hospitals and other institutions for producing value change in methods used by religious sects fraternal orders political elites or primitive societies for converting or initiating new members Thought reform techniques are consistent with psychological principles but were not explicitly derived from such principles 43 Mind control theories from the Korean War era came under criticism in subsequent years According to forensic psychologist Dick Anthony the CIA invented the concept of brainwashing as a propaganda strategy to undercut communist claims that American POWs in Korean communist camps had voluntarily expressed sympathy for communism Anthony stated that definitive research demonstrated that fear and duress not brainwashing caused western POWs to collaborate He argued that the books of Hunter whom he identified as a secret CIA psychological warfare specialist passing as a journalist pushed the CIA brainwashing theory onto the general public 44 In addition Herbert Brownell Jr the Attorney General of the United States once said publicly that if American prisoners of war cooperate with the Communist Party during their imprisonment in North Korea they will face charges of treason that may carry out the death penalty Moreover the United States official wrote a statement saying Those who cooperate with Communists and sign false confessions should be quickly removed from the army not honored In addition to threats and pressure by the U S government and military prisoners of war also face great psychological pressure from the impact of their families This may explain why many American prisoners of war accused China of abusing prisoners of war or why they recanted statements in favor of the People s Republic of China after returning home 45 46 Chinese POWs Edit Chinese POWs captured by US Marines December 1950 Anti communist POWs in communist service Edit During the Panmunjom Truce negotiations the chief stumbling block to the arrangement of a final armistice during the winter of 1951 1952 revolved around the exchange of prisoners At first glance there appeared to be nothing to argue about since the Geneva Conventions of 1949 by which both sides had pledged to abide called for the immediate and complete exchange of all prisoners upon the conclusion of hostilities This seemingly straightforward principle however disturbed many Americans To begin with UN prisoner of war camps held over 40 000 South Koreans many of whom had been impressed into communist service and who had no desire to be sent north upon the conclusion of the war Moreover a considerable number of North Korean and Chinese prisoners had also expressed a desire not to return to their homelands This was particularly true of the Chinese POWs some of whom were anti communists whom the communists had forcibly inducted during the Chinese Civil War into the PLA unit that was later transferred into Korea 47 48 circular reference Aftermath of the Korean War EditMain article Aftermath of the Korean War In 2011 some former members of the PVA revisited North Korea After the visit they commented that they were very sad and dissatisfied with the post war development of North Korea We liberated them but they re still struggling for freedom said Qu Yingkui 49 To mark the 70th year of entry into the Korean War by the volunteers army North Korean leader Kim Jong un visited the cemetery in 2020 50 The Pyongyang Times described the soldiers as having unparalleled bravery mass spirit and international heroism and describing the other help that the volunteer army provided 51 Early Chinese involvement EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The stated historical importance of the PVA entering the war was that it marked the beginning of Chinese government involvement However this is rather from political propaganda needs and there is debate of the time of the beginning of Chinese involvement Some scholars in the west had argued that the Chinese involvement was much earlier and in the North Korean invasion on June 25 1950 out of the 135 000 KPA invasion force more than 38 000 were former ethnic Korean soldiers of the Chinese Communist Fourth Field Army An equal number of former ethnic Korean soldiers of Fourth Field Army who did not participate in the invasion also served in the KPA in other regions of North Korea The KPA invasion force consisted of two corps the I Corps and II Corps Jin Xiong 金雄 Kim Woong the commander in chief of the invasion force and the commander of KPA I Corps was a veteran of Eighth Route Army and a former member of the CCP Jin Wuting 金武亭 Kim Mu Jong also known as Wu Ting 武亭 Mu Jong the commander of KPA II Corps even had more seniority than Jin Xiong 金雄 in that he participated in Guangzhou Uprising and the Long March All of these facts are agreed by the Chinese government The former units of the Fourth Field Army transferred to North Korean with all of their weapons were 5th Division North Korea former 164th Division The commander Li Deshan 李德山 a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP was also the political commissar When the division reached to North Korea on July 20 1949 its number totaled 10 821 Weaponry brought with them included 5 279 rifles 588 handguns 321 light machine guns 104 heavy machine guns 206 submachine guns 8 anti tank rifles 32 grenade launchers 67 50 mm mortars 87 60 mm mortars 26 mortars with calibre of 81 mm or greater 12 anti tank guns 1 infantry support gun 3 other artillery pieces and 734 horses 6th Division North Korea former 166th Division The commander Fang Hushan 方虎山 Bang Ho San a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP was also the political commissar When the division reached to North Korea on July 20 1949 its number totaled 10 320 Weaponry brought with them included 6 046 rifles 722 handguns 281 light machine guns 91 heavy machine guns 878 submachine guns 69 grenade launchers 31 50 mm mortars 91 60 mm mortars 33 mortars with calibre of 81 mm or greater 10 anti tank guns 3 mountain guns 3 other artillery pieces and 945 horses 7th Division North Korea later renamed as the 12th former 156th Division with additional ethnic Korean soldiers from the 139th 140th and 141st Divisions of the IV Field Army The commander Cui Ren 崔仁 Chu Yol a veteran of Eighth Route Army and former member of the CCP was also the political commissar When the division reached North Korea on April 18 1950 its number totaled more than 14 000 The weaponry brought into North Korea was greater than that of the other two divisions due to its larger size With the exception of the KPA 2nd and 3rd Divisions which mostly consisted of former Soviet trained North Korean troops all other KPA divisions had at least a former regiment of the IV Field Army and in addition to the three former Chinese divisions most of commanders were former commanders of the IV Field army such as Commander of the 2nd Division Ch oe Hyon 崔贤 and chief of staff Xu Bo 许波 Commander of the 3rd Division Lee Yong Ho 李英镝 and chief of staff Zhang Pingshan 张平山 Commander of the 4th Division Lee Kwon Mu 李权武 Though the Chinese government acknowledged these facts this early Chinese involvement was kept a secret for more than four decades in China and it was only until the late 1990s when such information was finally allowed to be revealed on large scale The Chinese government however argued that these troops were already transferred to North Korea and thus should be strictly considered as the internal affairs of Korea and thus still asserts the Chinese involvement in the Korean War began when the PVA joined the fight Legacy EditDemocratic People s Republic of Korea Edit The legacy of the PVA is commemorated in the DPRK with the Cemetery of the Fallen Soldiers of the Chinese People s Volunteers Army located in Hoechang County Wreaths and floral baskets are sent to commemorate their contributions to the war 52 50 People s Republic of China Edit For many Chinese the Korean War is generally regarded as an honorable struggle in Chinese history The PVA was the first Chinese army in a century that was able to withstand a Western army in a major conflict They had earned a name the most beloved people 最可爱的人 which is from the essay written by Wei Wei in 1951 Who are the Most Beloved People 53 More and more stories of heroism by members of the PVA continue to be promoted by the PRC government even to this day and appear in school textbooks The willingness of China to assist North Korea against the United States and the show of force they engaged in heralded that China was once again becoming a major world power From official Chinese sources PVA casualties during the Korean War were 390 000 This breaks down as follows 110 400 KIA 21 600 died of wounds 13 000 died of sickness 25 600 MIA POW and 260 000 more wounded However western and other sources estimate that about 400 000 Chinese soldiers were either killed in action or died of disease starvation exposure and accidents with around 486 000 wounded out of around 3 million military personnel deployed in the war by China Mao Zedong s oldest and only healthy son Mao Anying 毛岸英 was a PVA officer during the war and was killed by a UN air strike 54 The war also contributed to the decline of Sino Soviet relations Although Chinese had their own reasons to enter the war i e a strategic buffer state in the Korean peninsula the view that the Soviets had used them as proxies was shared in the Western bloc China had to use Soviet loans originally intended to rebuild their shattered economy to pay for Soviet arms Republic of China Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message After the war was over of the PVA POWs held by UNC forces 14 235 were transported to Taiwan 55 514 5 55 496 They began arriving in Taiwan on January 23 1954 and were referred to as Anti Communist Martyrs 反共義士 In Taiwan January 23 became World Freedom Day 自由日 in their honor The Korean War also led to other long lasting effects Until the war the US had largely abandoned the government of Chiang Kai shek which had retreated to Taiwan and had no plans to intervene in the Chinese Civil War The start of the Korean War rendered untenable any policy that would have caused Taiwan to fall under PRC control Truman s decision to send American forces to the Taiwan Strait further deterred the PRC from making any cross strait invasion of Taiwan The anti communist atmosphere in the West in response to the Korean War and Cold War contributed to the unwillingness to diplomatically recognize the People s Republic of China by the United States until 1979 Today diplomacy between the Republic of China and mainland China remains strained and mainland China continues to claim the sovereignty of Taiwan Media EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Who are the Most Beloved People Chinese 谁是最可爱的人 is the title of an essay by Chinese writer Wei Wei about the Chinese soldiers serving in the Korean War It is considered to be the most famous literary and propaganda piece produced by China during the Korean War Battle on Shangganling Mountain Chinese 上甘岭 pinyin Shanggan Ling is a famous Chinese war movie about the Battle of Triangle Hill The story is centered around a group of Chinese soldiers that were trapped in a tunnel for several days Short of both food and water they hold their grounds till the relief troops arrive The movie s popularity is largely due to the fact it was one of the few movies that were not banned during the Cultural Revolution War Trash is a novel by the Chinese author Ha Jin who has long lived in the United States and who writes in English It takes the form of a memoir written by the fictional character Yu Yuan a man who eventually becomes a soldier in the Chinese People s Volunteer Army and who is sent to Korea to fight on the Communist side in the Korean War The majority of the memoir is devoted to describing this experience especially after Yu Yuan is captured and imprisoned as a POW The novel captured the PEN Faulkner Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize See also EditCold War People s Liberation Army Korean WarNotes Edit Western sources often refer to the Chinese People s Volunteer Army by using the term Chinese Communist Forces CCF a title which was synonymous with the Chinese People s Liberation Army during the Cold War References EditCitations Edit Taraptardyn kүshteri zhәne shygyndar Shen Zhihua 沈志华 2000 抗美援朝战争决策中的苏联因素 当代中国史研究 1 28 39 Ryan Mark A Finkelstein David M McDevitt Michael A 2003 Chinese warfighting The PLA experience since 1949 Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 125 ISBN 0 7656 1087 6 a b c d e Roe Patrick C May 4 2000 The Dragon Strikes Presidio ISBN 0 89141 703 6 PLA Military Science Academy September 2000 抗美援朝战争史 History of War to Resist America and Aid Korea Vol I Beijing Chinese Military Science Academy Publishing House ISBN 7 80137 390 1 Korean War 2009 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved February 04 2009 Pyongyang taken as UN retreats 1950 BBC Archive Retrieved August 22 2021 The Strange Connection U S Intervention in China 1944 1972 by Bevin Alexander ISBN 0 313 28008 8 ISBN 978 0 313 28008 5 p 117 Zhang 1995 p 152 Chinese Question Role in Korean War from POW MIA InterNetwork Archived 2007 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Zhang 1995 p 152 GlobalSecurity org Korean War Li Tso Peng Strategy One Against Ten Tactics Ten Against One Foreign Languages Press Peking 1966 pp 4 5 Ryan Mark A Finkelstein David M McDevitt Michael A 2003 Chinese warfighting The PLA experience since 1949 Armonk New York M E Sharpe p 126 ISBN 0 7656 1087 6 Appleman Roy E Chapter XXXIX The Big Question South to the Naktong North to the Yalu p 719 CMH Pub 202 1 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved July 29 2010 a b c d e Mahoney 2001 p 35 a b c d e f Mahoney 2001 p 36 Mahoney 2001 pp 36 37 a b Mahoney 2001 p 37 美 李奇微 朝鲜战争回忆录 A Da Capo paperback 1986年 Halberstam David 2007年 The Coldest Winter America and the Korean War Hyperion ISBN 9781401300524 a b Mahoney 2001 p 105 a b Mahoney 2001 p 106 Kinkhead 1981 p 94 Lech 2000 p 38 Lech 2000 pp 2 57 Kinkhead 1981 p 141 a b Lech 2000 p 2 a b Lech 2000 p 73 Zhang 1995 p 168 Lech 2000 p 146 Marks John 1979 8 Brainwashing The Search for the Manchurian Candidate The CIA and Mind Control New York Times Books ISBN 0 8129 0773 6 Retrieved December 30 2008 In September 1950 the Miami News published an article by Edward Hunter titled Brain Washing Tactics Force Chinese into Ranks of Communist Party It was the first printed use in any language of the term brainwashing which quickly became a stock phrase in Cold War headlines Hunter a CIA propaganda operator who worked under cover as a journalist turned out a steady stream of books and articles on the subject Harper Douglas brainwashing Online Etymology Dictionary Dictionary com Retrieved January 15 2012 Taylor Kathleen 2006 Brainwashing The Science of Thought Control Oxford Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 19 920478 6 Retrieved July 2 2010 Browning Michael March 14 2003 Was Kidnapped Utah Teen Brainwashed Palm Beach Post Palm Beach ISSN 1528 5758 During the Korean War captured American soldiers were subjected to prolonged interrogations and harangues by their captors who often worked in relays and used the good cop bad cop approach alternating a brutal interrogator with a gentle one It was all part of Xi Nao washing the brain The Chinese and Koreans were making valiant attempts to convert the captives to the communist way of thought Ford RC 1990 Captured in Tibet Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 581570 X Ford RC 1997 Wind Between the Worlds Captured in Tibet SLG Books ISBN 0 9617066 9 4 Lifton Robert J April 1954 Home by Ship Reaction Patterns of American Prisoners of War Repatriated from North Korea American Journal of Psychiatry 110 10 732 739 doi 10 1176 ajp 110 10 732 PMID 13138750 Retrieved March 30 2008 Cited in Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism Schein Edgar May 1956 The Chinese Indoctrination Program for Prisoners of War A Study of Attempted Brainwashing Psychiatry 19 2 149 172 doi 10 1080 00332747 1956 11023044 PMID 13323141 Cited in Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism Schein Edgar H 1971 Coercive Persuasion A Socio Psychological Analysis of the Brainwashing of American Civilian Prisoners by the Chinese Communists New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 00613 1 Lifton RJ 1989 1961 Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism a Study of Brainwashing in China Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4253 2 Heller Mikhail 1988 Cogs in the Soviet Wheel The Formation of Soviet Man Translated by David Floyd London Collins Harvill ISBN 0 00 272516 9 Dr Robert J Lifton draws attention to a fact of exceptional importance the effect of brainwashing and its methods is felt even by those whom he calls the apparent resisters those who seem not to succumb to the intoxication This study showed that they do assimilate what has been hammered into their brain but the effect comes only a certain time after their liberation like the explosion of a delayed action bomb It is not hard to imagine the effect which education and re education has upon the Soviet citizen who is exposed from the day he is born to brainwashing bombarded every day round the clock by all the means of propaganda and persuasion Heller s footnote explains the phrase the means of propaganda and persuasion as t he official name for the means of communication in the USSR The accepted abbreviation is SMIP literally from the Russian phrase meaning means of mass information and propaganda Schein Edgar Henry 1963 Brainwashing Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 14th revised ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc p 91 Anthony Dick 1999 Pseudoscience and Minority Religions An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean Marie Social Justice Research 12 4 421 456 doi 10 1023 A 1022081411463 S2CID 140454555 Stephen L Endicott Germ Warfare and Plausible Denial the Korean War 1952 1953 Modern China Vol 5 No 1 Jan 1979 P87 89 New York Times Aug 15 1953 Canadian Far Eastern Newsletter Nov 1953 Birtle Andrew J The Korean War Years of Stalemate United States Army Center of Military History p 17 Archived from the original on December 14 2007 Retrieved August 9 2010 Operation Big Switch 志愿军老兵重返朝鲜谈感受 他们水深火热 很痛心 Archived from the original on March 1 2017 Retrieved March 2 2012 a b Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un sends flower baskets in honour of CPV martyrs www pyongyangtimes com kp Retrieved March 18 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link CPV performs distinguished services on Korean front www pyongyangtimes com kp Retrieved March 18 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Chinese martyrs honoured www pyongyangtimes com kp Retrieved March 18 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Wei Wei 1951 Who are the Most Beloved People 谁是最可爱的人 In Chinese People s Daily Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved October 2 2018 The Cold War The Korean War An Overview a b Hermes Walter 1992 United States Army in the Korean War Truce Tent and Fighting Front United States Army Center of Military History ISBN 9781410224842 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Sources Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to People s Volunteer Army Alexander Bevin R 1986 Korea the First War We Lost New York NY Hippocrene Books Inc ISBN 978 0 87052 135 5 Appleman Roy 1992 South to the Naktong North to the Yalu Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army ISBN 0 16 035958 9 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved July 29 2010 Blair Clay Jr 2003 The Forgotten War America in Korea 1950 1953 Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 075 7 Chen Jian 1996 China s Road to the Korean War the Making of the Sino American Confrontation New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10025 0 PLA Military Science Academy 2000 抗美援朝战争史 History of War to Resist America and Aid Korea in Chinese Vol I II III Beijing Chinese Military Science Academy Publishing House ISBN 7 80137 390 1 George Alexander L 1967 The Chinese Communist Army in Action the War and its Aftermath New York NY Columbia University Press OCLC 284111 Goncharov Sergeĭ Nikolaevich Lewis John Wilson Xue Litai 1993 Uncertain Partners Stalin Mao and the Korean War Palo Alto CA Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2115 8 Hoyt Edwin 1990 The Day The Chinese Attacked Korea 1950 the Story of the Failure of America s China Policy New York NY McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 030632 5 Kinkhead Eugene 1981 In Every War But One Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 23113 3 Lech Raymond B 2000 Broken Soldiers Chicago IL University of Illinois ISBN 0 252 02541 5 Mahoney Kevin 2001 Formidable enemies the North Korean and Chinese Soldier in the Korean War Presidio Press ISBN 978 0 89141 738 5 McMichael Scott R 1987 Chapter 2 the Chinese Communist Forces in Korea PDF A Historical Perspective on Light Infantry Fort Leavenworth KS US Army Combined Arms Center ISSN 0887 235X Archived from the original PDF on November 16 2010 part 2 Pease Stephen E 1992 Psywar Psychological Warfare in Korea 1950 1953 Harrisburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 2592 8 Ryan Mark A Finkelstein David M McDevitt Michael A 2003 Chinese Warfighting The PLA Experience Since 1949 Armonk NY M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 1087 6 Roe Patrick C 2000 The Dragon Strikes Presidio ISBN 0 89141 703 6 Shrader Charles R 1995 Communist Logistics in the Korean War Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 29509 3 Spurr Russell 1988 Enter the Dragon China s Undeclared War Against the U S in Korea 1950 51 New York NY Newmarket Press ISBN 1 55704 008 7 US IX Corps 1951 Enemy Tactics Techniques and Doctrine Korea 1951 PDF Fort Leavenworth KS US Army Combined Arms Center Archived from the original PDF on July 23 2011 Retrieved July 27 2010 Zhang Shu Guang 1992 Deterrence and Strategic Culture Chinese American Confrontations 1949 1958 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 2751 7 Zhang Shu Guang 1995 Mao s Military Romanticism China and the Korean War 1950 1953 Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0723 4 Zhang Xiaoming 2004 Red Wings Over the Yalu China the Soviet Union and the Air War in Korea College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 1 58544 201 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title People 27s Volunteer Army amp oldid 1145618555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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