The Local Setting of the Korean War
JOHN MERRILL
===
in Child Of Conflict by Bruce Cumings, Editor
Publication date 1983
===
LITTLE IS KNOWN, EVEN YET, ABOUT THE ORIGINS OF THE KOREAN WAR, IT
has become commonplace, in fact, to preface discussions with the
disclaimer that, like the morning fog that covers that not so peaceful
land, there is much about the war that remains clouded, obscure, and
wrapped in mystery. It is not for lack of theories. The war has been
variously attributed to the perfidy of Syngman Rhee, factional disputes
within the North Korean leadership, the first stirrings of the Sino-Soviet
conflict, and the imperatives of either U.S. or Soviet foreign policy.
Political satirists have begun to exploit the potential of this confusion,
Kim Tong-gil’s recent best seller, The President’s Laughter,! which
barely made it past the Korean censors, is one example. The book
spins a surrealistic tale of how Stalin, his senses numbed by an excess
of wine and beautiful P’ySngyang kisaeng (geisha, entertainer), finally
agreed to Kim Il-sung’s persistent requests to support an attack on the
1, Kim Tong-gil, Taet'ongny3ng iti usitm [The president’s laughter] (Seoul
1975),
138
134 JOHN MERRILL
South, As history, Kim’s satire is probably not much worse than many
of the more serious attempts to explain the war put forth by both
scholars and propagandists.
There are several reasons for this lack of understanding, but perhaps
most important is that our images of Korea were set at the height of
the cold war in the mold of our World War II experience with surprise
attacks across international boundaries. There was an understandable
tendency to interpret Korea in these same terms, and to relate it
exclusively to the global pattern of interaction between the United
States and the Soviet Union. This inclination was reinforced by the
long history of great-power involvement on the peninsula that made
it natural to see events in Korea as determined by what went on else-
where in the international system.
Information on Korea has also been limited. Interest in Korea has
never been great, and during the years preceding the war both Syngman
Rhee and the American Military Government took care to censor
news leaving the country. The public was thus not prepared for the
North Korean attack. Moreover, until recently primary sources neces-
sary for a study of the origins of the war have not been available.
Karunakar Gupta’s article, which appeared in the China Quarterly, is
a good example. His account is based entirely on newspaper clippings
he collected during his student days in Europe on events that occurred
during the first days of the war.”
The two Koreas have not been forthright in their versions of the
origins of the war.> The history of these years poses special problems
since it raises questions concerning the legitimacy of the two states, the
role of leading personalities in prewar events, and responsibility for
the war. Most North Korean accounts have been either official white
papers on alleged U.S. aggression or party histories of Kim Il-sung’s
struggle against factional elements in the Workers’ party. South Korean
accounts have tended to be military histories compiled by committees
of scholars that are less than candid about the extent of violence in
the Republic of Korea (ROK) before the war. The problem is com-
pounded by the reluctance of North Korea’s allies to discuss any-
thing about the war that might damage their relations with the Demo-
cratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).
Authors have begun to examine previously neglected local factors
and to reconsider the relationships of the two Koreas to their allies.
2. Karunakar Gupta, “How Did the Korean War Begin?” China Quarterly,
October-December 1972, pp. 699-716.
3. Recent accounts are Kim Chum-kon, The Korean War (Seoul: Kwangmy6ng
Publishing Co., 1973); and The U.S. Imperialists Started the Korean War (P’yong-
yang: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1977).
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 135
This trend has been strengthened by the burgeoning literature on the
“big power of small allies” and the growing volume of revisionist
histories of the cold war. Nevertheless, the lack of primary sources
on the war has caused some authors to resort to exercises in textual
exegesis to extract from the available material (sometimes in transla-
tion) more than is there. There is also the difficulty of choosing an
appropriate time frame. The question of the origins of the war can be
completely sidestepped if, as is often true of Communist accounts, one
talks only about the subsequent U.S. intervention, Viewing the North
Korean attack as an impulsive decision also ignores the need to ex-
amine the local background. Where is the best place to begin? With
the liberation in 1945, when the American Military Government’s
decision to suppress the People’s Committees becomes the crucial
event? With the outpouring of popular discontent evident in the dem-
onstrations against the military government in October 1946? Or
later? Finally, there is the failure to place the war within some wider
theoretical framework, a failure characteristic of many recent West-
ern works. This is a problem especially if one sees the war as the re-
sult of a complex interplay of local and international factors and
not simply of U.S. imperialism or Communist aggression, which tell
us nothing about the timing of the attack except in the most round-
about way. The words ‘‘civil war’ and “intervention” are frequently
used to describe the war and they offer a useful starting point, but
no attempt has yet been made to place the Korean case within the
extensive literature on these subjects.
Korea continues to be a major trouble spot, with the highest
concentration of weapons and men under arms anywhere in the world.
The Carter administration’s aborted plan to withdraw U.S. ground
forces from the peninsula focused new attention on the issue of Korean
security. Critics of Carter’s policy appealed to the lessons of the past
by pointing to the disastrous consequences of our troop withdrawal
from Korea in 1949. But, given the controversy that still surrounds
the war, it is not clear just what these lessons are. American liberals
are poorly equipped to come to grips with either the war or present
policy toward Korea, They have always been somewhat ambivalent
about our involvement in Korea, and their unease has grown with
recent revelations of influence buying in Washington and human
rights violations in Seoul, Many American liberals, otherwise committed
to internationalist views of collective security, are troubled by the
difficulty of reconciling the negative consequences of our involvement
in Korea with the ideals that it once so clearly represented, The Korean
War fits neither the World War Il model nor our more recent experience
in Vietnam, A better understanding of the history of the war may not
136 JOHN MERRILL
resolve present policy dilemmas, but it is a necessary first step to any
new departures. Finally, the Korean War is important as the forerunner
of a type of intervention by lesser powers that has become increasingly
common in the post-World War II international system, A long-run
trend toward greater equalization of military power has permitted
smaller states, acting independently or with the support of their allies,
to intervene much more frequently in neighboring countries disrupted
by civil strife. Korea is a useful test case for theories of interventionary
behavior and a means to explore its early stages.
The following discussion examines the outbreak of the Korean War
in the context of domestic political violence. The relationships between
local and international factors are explored, and the North Korean
attack is studied from the perspective of theories of interventionary
behavior, Rather than adopting a decision-making approach that would
require data unavailable for North Korea, the analysis will look at the
background of the North Korean attack in broad situational terms.
PATTERNS OF NORTH-SOUTH INTERACTION BEFORE THE WAR
The most striking characteristic of Korean domestic politics in the
years before the war was a persistent pattern of political violence that
resulted in approximately one hundred thousand casualties before
June 1950. This civil war between Left and Right has received only
little attention, but it is impossible to understand the origins of the
war without considering it. Gregory Henderson points out that the
October 1946 uprisings in the American zone established ‘‘an enduring
pattern of subversion and repression . . . from which an unbroken
chain stretched to the subversion attempts of Communists in later
months, the infiltration of the constabulary, the revolt of Ydsu in
1948, and the rise of guerrilla activity thereafter, which ebbed only
in the spring before the Korean war.’* The account presented here
begins somewhat later, with the arrival of the United Nations Tempo-
rary Commission in early 1948, and takes Henderson’s analysis a step
further by viewing the war itself as the last link in the chain of internal
violence,
U.S. Army data contain a great deal of information about internal
warfare in Korea during this period. The most accessible is the Far
Eastern Command’s daily Intelligence Summaries, which about every
two weeks listed in tabular form information on both guerrilla activity
in the ROK and incidents along the thirty-eighth parallel. The notorious
“body counts” of Vietnam have put us on guard when examining such
4. Gregory Henderson, Korea: The Politics of the Vortex (Cambridge; Harvard
University Press, 1968), p, 147
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 137
statistics, and it would be foolish to deny that there are similar prob-
lems with the army data for Korea. Every border incident, for instance,
is reported as initiated by the North, although we know from other
sources that the majority were started by the South. Moreover, casualty
figures on the northern side must have been virtually impossible to
determine, Finally, the border clashes seem to have been deliberately
played up by the South to demonstrate their need for more arms.
For these reasons, statistical data on border incidents have not been
presented here.
The army data on guerrilla incidents in the South are better, yet
they should not be viewed as indicating the absolute magnitude of
political violence in South Korea before the war. They greatly under-
state the seriousness of these incidents for several reasons, First, many
incidents from remote rural areas (where the guerrillas were strongest)
were not reported due to inadequate communications facilities. Second,
the FEC data are several stages removed from the actual events, and
many incidents may have been filtered out in the reporting process.
Where field reports by American observers are available as a cross
check—such as for some periods of the Cheju-do Rebellion—they
indicate a much higher level of guerrilla activity, Third, since the
data were conveyed through army channels they probably do not
fully reflect casualties caused by the Korean police, Finally, the report-
ing system itself seems to have broken down during periods of es-
pecially heavy fighting, such as at YOsu. Nevertheless, the data do
reveal the seriousness of internal violence and its general trend.
The data are summarized in figure 1. Looking at the figure, three
things become apparent: first of all, it is clear that the level of political
violence surged after the establishment of the two governments in
Korea in the fall of 1948, specifically with the YOsu Rebellion in
October, two months after the establishment of the ROK. (Although
not shown, border incidents also increased markedly as the August 15
date for the transfer of authority to the Rhee government approached,
and American troops began to turn over their positions on the parallel
to their South Korean counterparts; the last U.S. tactical forces, how-
ever, did not leave until June 1949.) Second, the intensity of fighting
increased greatly in the months after YSsu and peaked during the
winter of 1949-50. Thereafter, guerrilla activity declined sharply in a
period of artificial quiet in the months before the war. Third, the chart
shows a number of distinct periods in the development of internal
warfare in South Korea between 1948 and 1950, Used in conjunction
with other information, they can serve as a guide to the changing
pattern of interaction between the two Koreas in the years before the
war. The broad outlines of six such periods can, in fact, be identified,
138 JOHN MERRILL
Y Osu rebellion
Number killed
2000
ROK counterguerrilla drive
1500
1000
May 10 elections
1948 1949 1950
Fig. 1, Far East Command data on guerrilla activity in South Korea, 1948-1950
(data on YOsu rebellion from MBC and Dong-a Ilbo, Sinydn Kwa yongkwang ii
minjok-sa |Seoul, 1975] ).
In each of them, the extent and type of foreign involvement, the issues
around which the political struggle revolved, and the military balance
on the peninsula were different.
In general, the approach used here in describing the interaction
between North and South Korea before the war is similar to Charles
McClelland’s in his analysis of the Taiwan Strait crisis. McClelland
found that the development of a crisis is not random, but exhibits
patterns of action and reaction, temporary status quos, and systems
of tacit communication that can be uncovered by charting the flow
of events. Once the main stages in the evolution of a crisis are identified
and their characteristics described, the reasons for the transitions from
one to another can be analyzed. This approach has the advantage of
bypassing the thorny problem of trying to determine the real motives
of statesmen in situations where sufficient information is unavailable.
We can summarize the stages in the development of the Korean
crisis as follows:
1. A period of rapidly escalating political violence and polarization
of opinion between Left and Right, precipitated by the arrival of the
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 139.
UN Commission in January 1948, and culminating in the Cheju-do
Rebellion in April.
2. A lull in guerrilla activity during the summer of 1948 as both
the South Korean Labor Party (SKLP) and the American Military
Government concentrated on preparations for the establishment of
rival governments.
3. A period of acute crisis for the new ROK government after the
Y6su Rebellion during which its very survival seemed at stake.
4, An upsurge in border clashes and naval incidents in the spring
and summer of 1949 caused primarily by a much more aggressive
southern policy vis-i-vis the North.
5. A period of heavy fighting in South Korea during the winter of
1949-50 in which the military arm of the SKLP was virtually de-
stroyed.
6. A period of artificial quiet just before the war when the political
situation in the ROK and the regional balance of power in East Asia
underwent major changes.
The first period (fall 1947-spring 1948) began with the establish-
ment of the UN Temporary Commission, which made the Korean
question no longer a matter of bilateral Soviet-U,S, negotiations and
began the process that led to the setting up of separate governments
in the two occupation zones. The Commission’s presence in the South
prompted an opposition campaign by the SKLP that escalated from
demonstrations to sabotage to a major popular rebellion on Cheju-do,
The period also saw the isolation of moderate and right-wing opponents
of Rhee, who alone among major political leaders supported separate
elections in the South, The pull of Korean nationalism was great
enough to attract many of Rhee’s opponents to a North Korean-
sponsored unification conference held in Haeju, The U.S. government,
anxious to pull out of Korea, pushed hard for UN involvement.> The
decision to hold separate elections ran counter to the opinion of most
members of the UN Commission and Korean political leaders. The
SKLP campaign against separate elections plunged Cheju-do into
more than a year of bloody internecine warfare, resulting in the deaths
of 15 percent of its population (some thirty to forty thousand people),
The complexity of the Communist response to the UN Commission
5. I have relied on three recent Ph.D. dissertations for details on the evolution
of American policy towards Korea during the 1948-1950 period: Charles M. Dobbs,
“American Foreign Policy, the Cold War, and Korea” (Indiana University, 1978);
James I, Matray, “The Reluctant Crusade; American Foreign Policy in Korea,
1941-1950" (University of Virginia, 1977); and Kenneth R, Mauck, “The Forma-
tion of American Foreign Policy in Korea, 1945-1953" (University of Oklahoma,
1978).
140 JOHN MERRILL
reflected deep divisions within the Korean leadership over the proper
strategy to adopt toward the commission. The initial reaction to its
formation in the North Korean press was relatively mild. And although
the commission was not admitted into the Russian zone, the P’ydng-
yang authorities ordered a sprucing-up drive to prepare the city for a
possible visit. Most SKLP leaders believed that a wave of arrests
earlier in the year had left the party too weak to actively oppose the
work of the commission, but Pak Hdn-ySng’s more militant view was
that the SKLP should lead a mass campaign against it ‘‘modelled on
the October 1946 People’s Resistance.’” He was later criticized for
leading an ‘‘adventurous charge” that needlessly exposed the party
organization to attack, but his position made sense at the time. There
was widespread public speculation about the extent of divisions within
the commission, and Pak may have felt that a show of opposition
would influence its decision.®
The SKLP called a three-day general strike beginning on February 7
that was accompanied by sabotage, mass demonstrations, and attacks
on police boxes. More than forty railroad locomotives were disabled
in one night, and communications links were cut in hundreds of places.
Several thousand demonstrators were arrested and more than forty
people killed. Such incidents continued sporadically through late
February.?
These tactics had some success. Unable to gain entrance to the
North and faced with the opposition to separate elections by most
southern leaders, the commission deferred to the UN Interim Assembly.
There, in a virtual coup that ran counter to the ‘‘nearly unanimous
opinion of the members of the Commission,” the United States pushed
through a resolution calling for ‘‘elections in that part of Korea acces-
sible to the (UN) Commission.”!° Thereafter, the UN group confined
itself to doing what it could to ensure a free atmosphere for the elec-
tions. The elections were held on May 10 amid great tension, with the
main responsibility for “processing voters” entrusted to the right-wing
6. Far Eastern Command (hereafter FEC) Intelligence Summaries (hereafter
IS), Jan, 17, 1948, National Archives, Washington, D.C,
7. IS, Jan. 30, 1948.
8. See Glenn D, Paige, ‘‘Korea,’’ in Communism and Revolution, ed, Cyril E.
Black and James P. Thornton (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1964), p. 222.
Also, Kim Min-ju, ed., Cheju-do inmin dill ii 4.3 mujang t’ujaeng sa—charyejip
[Materials on the April 3 armed uprising of the Cheju-do people] (Osaka, 1963),
p. 7.
9. U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, ‘Communist Capabilities in Southern
Korea’ (ORE-44-48), Oct. 28, 1948, Record Group (hereafter RG) 319, ORE-44-
48, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
10. 7S, Mar. 15, 1948.
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 14]
Community Protective Associations formed by the American Military
Government. Polling places were ringed by members of this group,
police, and constabulary men, who searched all voters before allowing
them to cast their ballots.!!
On Cheju-do, at least, all these precautions were needed. On April
3, a popular rebellion broke out as guerrilla units descended from
Halla-san, the volcanic peak that dominates the island, and occupied
most of the coastal towns. Seoul newspapers speculated that U.S.
tactical forces would have to be called in to contend with the “three
thousand armed rioters” who controlled most of the island.!2 Voting
was disrupted in two of the three electoral districts on Cheju-do where,
“during election week, there were fifty assorted demonstrations,
disorders, arson cases, and attacks on rightists’ offices and houses,
Sixty-three towns were attacked, in addition to three government
buildings,’*}8
Although the official casualty figures were low, many “‘stories were
told of raided villages where there were found the bodies of hanged
women and children run through with spears. Tales of villages nearly
wiped out kept coming in. Numbers of rightists and police were kid-
napped, then hanged or beheaded.”!* Additional police and right-
wing youth association members were rushed to the island to restore
government control, A U.S. destroyer took up station between Cheju-do
and the mainland to prevent guerrilla infiltration, and planes flew over
the island in a show of force.
The fighting subsided once the elections were over, but flared up
again in the following October and January. Before it ended, the
rebellion claimed some 30,000 lives, about 10 percent of the island’s
population. Throughout the rebellion, the guerrilla forces persisted
in the face of extremely adverse circumstances. (This was in marked
contrast to the peasant rebellions that occurred on the island at the
turn of the century, which tended to melt away at the first show of
government force.) Class divisions on the island do not appear to have
been as important as the tight clan structure and social solidarity of
the islanders in contributing to the rebellion. Many of the leaders of
(he uprising were returnees from Japan and teachers in the island’s
schools, The SKLP also had considerable support among the locally
recruited constabulary forces stationed on the island, The efforts of
11. JS, “Special Edition on the Korean Elections,” May 30, 1948,
12. United States Armed Forces in Korea (hereafter USAFIK), South Korean
Interim Government Activities (Seoul, May 1948), pp. 156-57; and April, p, 179
13, FEC, “History of USAFIK,” pt. 3, p. 18, ms, on file at the U.S, Army
Genter for Military History, Washington, D.C,
l4, Ibid,
142 JOHN MERRILL
government troops were hampered by information leaks, assassinations
of key officers, defections to the guerrillas, and a poor relationship with
police and rightist groups, which made coordinated action impossible,
Some Japanese arms were probably available on Cheju-do, which was
heavily garrisoned during World War II. The importance of this factor,
however, is greatly exaggerated in South Korean accounts. The SKLP
probably did not plan the rebellion; more likely it was the result of
the island’s remoteness, the weakness of government control, and the
long-standing grievance against the mainland authorities.
During the second period (summer, 1948) internal violence in Korea
subsided markedly. The elections were over and both sides were preoc-
cupied with laying the foundations for the governments to be estab-
lished in the Soviet and American zones, While the South was embroiled
in a constitutional debate in the newly elected National Assembly, the
SKLP attempted to carry out an underground election in late July and
August to select delegates to the conference that would formally estab-
lish the DPRK in early September. With the formation of two rival gov-
ernments in Korea, each claiming exclusive jurisdiction over the whole
peninsula, the process begun by the UN Commission was nearly complete.
The SKLP was busy with three main tasks throughout the summer.
The first was a shake-up of the party organization to make it more
responsive to central control. Pak HOn-ySng was reported to be greatly
dissatisfied with the party’s performance in the February resistance
campaign. Local cadres were reassigned and a greater centralization
imposed on provincial party branches to ensure that future directives
would be more effectively implemented.!® The second goal was the
creation of guerrilla ‘‘flying columns’? in mountain bases to provide
the party with the strong military arm that was lacking during the
February campaign. The most important task, however, was the August
underground elections, Communist claims that elections were held
to establish the DPRK in the southern zone as well as in the North
have usually been received with extreme skepticism, if not entirely
dismissed. Nevertheless, U.S. sources indicate that the SKLP did
organize a signature-gathering campaign in the summer of 1948 to
select delegates to the conference that established the DPRK. As much
as 25 percent of the rural population may have participated in this
drive, whether they voted “knowingly” or out of fear.!”
15. For details see my article, ‘The Cheju-do Rebellion,” Journal of Korean
Studies, vol. 2 (1980), pp. 139-98.
16. IS, Sept. 27, 1948; and USAFIK, Weekly Report, Sept. 6, 1948, copy in
Supreme Command, Allied Powers (SCAP) Adjutant General’s File, RG 331,
National Archives.
17. Exchange of messages between Department of the Army (Sept. 10, 1948)
Jv. (Ret.), “Pre-War South Korea Questionnaire Response,’
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 143
As this period drew to a close, a fundamentally different situation
emerged. Two hostile governments now faced each other across the
parallel, Tensions began to mount along the border as U.S. and Soviet
troops turned their positions over to their Korean counterparts. Rumors
were rife of an imminent invasion from the North. The presence of
wecupation forces still prevented direct military conflict, but the
Soviets announced that their troops would be withdrawn by the end
of the year and the United States began a similar pullback, Another
diplomatic round remained to be fought in the General Assembly
debate in the fall of 1948, but the lines of the future conflict in Korea
were now essentially drawn.
The third period (fall 1948-winter 1948-49) was a time of acute
crisis for the ROK government with its very survival at stake. The
period opened with the October 19 Ydsu Rebellion. Two thousand
South Korean constabulary troops mutinied as they were about to
embark for Cheju-do. The rebellion revealed a widespread Communist
penetration in the constabulary, undermining public confidence in
the security forces and widening the gulf between the police and the
urmy. The South Korean leadership was poorly equipped to handle
the crisis. The cabinet was split by dissension and personal rivalries,
und President Rhee, according to one report, was showing signs of
“incipient senility.’? Moreover, there was fear that the United States
was about to abandon the South; this anxiety was aggravated by a
steady stream of invasion rumors floated by the North. The DPRK’s
policy toward the South seemed to follow a dual course, On the one
hand, it attempted to undercut the legitimacy of the Rhee government
by unsettling the domestic situation in the South. On the other, it
launched a diplomatic offensive against the ROK with the aid of the
Soviet bloc in the fall General Assembly debate.
Renewed fighting on Cheju-do in early October led to the decision
to reinforce the constabulary forces operating on the island with the
Vourteenth Regiment from YOsu. As it was about to embark, the
regiment rebelled.!8 The uprising seems to have been prematurely
und General Hodge (Sept. 30, 1948) on the elections in SCAP Adjutant General’s
Vile, National Archives.
18. The account of the Yosu Rebellion is based on the following sources:
Maj. John R. Reed, ‘The Truth About the Yosu Incident,’’ ms. on file at the
U.S. Army Center for Military History, Washington, D.C. Maj. Bernie W. Griffith,
> ms. in answer to the
author’s inquiries, January, 1979; Capt, James H. Hausman, ‘‘History of Rebellion,
idth Constabulary Regiment,’ interview with a “long-time observer of Korean
security affairs,’ Seoul, Nov. 30, 1977; and the JS reports on the incident in the
weeks following the rebellion.
144 JOHN MERRILL
precipitated by a special set of local circumstances. The regiment had
been reinforced for duty on Cheju-do with light mortars and machine
guns drawn from other constabulary units. It also had just been sup-
plied with M-1 carbines but had not yet turned in the japanese rifles
with which it was originally equipped. A statement by the Soldiers’
Committee published in the YOsu papers while the city was under rebel
control explained that the soldiers “refused to murder the people of
Cheju-do [fighting] against imperialist policy.” SKLP cells in the
regiment and neighboring towns cooperated in staging the rebellion,
People’s courts were established in YSsu and Sunch’dn, and police
and rightists were searched out and executed. The rebels never intended
to hold the two towns, and retreated to the nearby Chiri massif to
carry on protracted guerrilla warfare. Since two American combat
divisions were still stationed in Korea, it seems unlikely that the rebel-
lion sought the immediate overthrow of the Rhee government. Its
main goal was to obtain a large supply of arms and set up a guerrilla
infrastructure in the Chiri mountains. The absence of immediate
support to the guerrillas from the North also suggests that the rebellion
was not centrally planned.
The rebellion had immediate and far-reaching consequences, YSsu
was a major embarrassment to the ROK in the fall UN debate and
produced a tremendous sense of insecurity among the South Koreans.
The military situation was touch and go for the first few days after the
rebellion, No one was sure whether the revolt was planned and if it
would spread to other constabulary regiments. Enough incidents
occurred elsewhere to keep alive doubts about their reliability. The
Soviet announcement of its troop withdrawal from the North put
pressure on the United States to make a similar move. American with-
drawals after YOsu slowed down on the entreaties of the Rhee govern-
ment, but it appeared for a time that the United States might leave
the ROK to face its fate alone. A CLA study made shortly after YOsu
mirrored this pessimism in its title—‘‘Prospects for the Survival of the
ROK.” Its conclusion was that the Rhee government would flounder
without substantial amounts of American military and economic
aid, and that even then its chances were no better than even.!9 Exact
casualty figures for YOsu are not available, though South Korean
accounts state that about 1,200 civilians and progovernment forces
were killed, as against 1,500 rebels and their supporters.2° Warning
19. U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, ‘‘Prospects for the Survival of the Re-
public of Korea,” Oct. 28, 1948, RG 319, ORE 44-48.
20. Dong-a Ibo, Siry¥n kwa y¥nggwang Wi minjok-sa [History of the trials
and glories of the nation] (Seoul, 1975),
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 145
that Korea had never before in its history had as many traitors, Rhee
also pushed a National Security Act through the National Assembly,
tightened control of the press, and embarked on a widespread purge
of the constabulary in which over a thousand persons were arrested.
The fourth period (spring through summer of 1949) was charac-
terized by an outbreak of large scale fighting along the parallel and the
opening of a major guerrilla offensive in the South. The border fighting,
which began in the midst of discussions between the ROK and the
United States over troop withdrawal, reflected a new assertiveness
by the Rhee government towards the North. This so-called ‘policy
of bluff” involved a series of military, diplomatic, and propaganda
activities designed to secure an American security commitment, pry
loose additional aid, and maintain pressure on the North?!
By the spring of 1949, the Rhee government was prey to a mood
of self-confidence that verged on bravado. The new ROK had success-
fully weathered the difficult challenges that faced it in its first months.
The Y6su Rebellion had been suppressed. On Cheju-do, an all-out
pacification drive begun in February had prepared the island for Rhee’s
April visit. Accompanied by a large entourage of foreign and domestic
reporters, Rhee scored a “‘public relations home run’’ on his swing
through the troubled southern provinces.?? Furthermore, the South
had been successful in winning widespread recognition among the
Western powers after the fall UN debate. Most likely, the southern
leaders felt that they had been too long on the receiving end of Com-
munist attacks and that they were now in a position to return the
fire. There were several aspects to this much more active southern
policy.
For one thing, Rhee and his ministers made repeated public calls
for a march north. All that held Rhee back was the knowledge that
this would result in a break with the United States, and the South’s
lack of sufficient offensive weapons (especially an air force). To attract
more American military aid, the Ministry of Education mobilized tens
of thousands of students to participate in ‘‘give us arms’’ demonstra-
tions in front of the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, A parallel effort in Wash-
ington involved lobbying congressmen and Defense Department of-
ficials.
A diplomatic offensive was also begun as Rhee threw his support
behind a Philippine initiative for a Pacific pact. Modeled on NATO,
21. Yi Ho-jae, Han’guk oegyo ch®ngch'aek ti isang kwa hyBnsil: Yi Stingman
vegyo wa miguk [The ideal and reality of Korean diplomatic policy: Syngman
Rhee’s diplomacy and America (1945-1953)| (Seoul, 1975),
22. Roberts to Wedemeyer, May 2, 1949, in U.S. Department of the Army,
G-3 Plans and Operations Viles (hereafter ? & O Piles), National Archives,
si JOHN MERRILL
the goal of the proposal was to draw a reluctant United States into a
more definite commitment to the security of its allies in Asia. Discus-
sions progressed to the point of a visit by Chiang K’ai-shek to Chinhae
in August for a conference with Rhee. Although Chiang offered fighter
squadrons in return for Korean bases to bomb the mainland, Rhee
wisely balked at becoming involved in the Chinese civil war. The
release of the U.S. White Papers on China on the final day of the
conference killed any chances of agreement with the Nationalists.
Ultimately, the proposal for a Pacific pact turned out to be a major
embarrassment that further isolated the ROK when it was excluded,
along with the Nationalists, from the Baguio Conference early in 1950.
But more was involved than threats, lobbying, and diplomacy.
Serious fighting also broke out for the first time along the parallel.
Three points should be made. First, unlike previous incidents, these
were not spontaneous outbursts. Some were undoubtedly started on
the initiative of local commanders, particularly on the southern side;
General Roberts feared that these “boy scout tactics” might provoke
a major conflagration. Not much seems to have been done, however,
by the Rhee government to control these commanders. In at least
some cases, they were acting on the direct orders of political leaders,
not on their own. The North exercised much tighter control over its
forces along the parallel. While the DPRK started its share of incidents,
these were limited engagements designed to drive home political points.
The North had a relatively restrained posture, concentrating on the
build-up of a “revolutionary base” in the North and supporting a
limited guerrilla offensive in the South. A second point about the
border incidents is that they were closely related to political events:
the withdrawal of American occupation forces, the formation of a
Democratic Front for the Unification of the Fatherland (DFUF), the
visit of Chiang K’ai-shek, and a propaganda campaign against “South
Korean border provocations.” Finally, a close examination of the
pattern of these incidents reveals a complex sequence of actions and
reactions as each side adjusted and responded to the moves of the
other. Since only fragmentary newspaper accounts of these battles have
been available in English, it is necessary to examine them in some detail
here,
The fighting started in early May 1949 when ROK forces began a
“general consolidation of the parallel” in the midst of discussions with
the United States over troop withdrawal. The first incident occurred
near Kaesong on May 4 when North Korean border guards pushed
South Korean troops from newly occupied positions straddling the
parallel, touching off four days of heavy fighting that eventually
involved battalion-sized units, On May 5, elements of two ROK bat-
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 147
tallions, in the most serious instance of disaffection in the security
forces since Y8su, defected to the North in the Ch’unch’Sn area.
Unsettled by these incidents, Rhee went public with his doubts on
troop withdrawal, demanding that the United States “sit down im-
mediately and state its policies and plans in respect to the immediate
future of Korea.” In an attempt to offset the effects of the defections
the South Korean media played up the deaths of “ten brave soldiers”
killed in a suicide charge on the North Korean positions during the
Kaesng fighting. The heroism of the “ten human bombs” received so
much publicity, in fact, that the phrase entered the language in the
South, ROK forces also attempted to ambush North Korean border
guards in the UijSngbu area on May 7 by baiting them with a staged
defection. During the course of this unsuccessful operation, South
Korean units penetrated ‘four kilometers into the North and shot up
several villages,”’
The North responded on May 18 with an attack by several com-
panies of border guards in the Packch’Sn area that carried almost ten
kilometers south of the parallel before it was repulsed by South Korean
reinforcements rushed to the scene, A more serious incident occurred
three days later when a series of minor clashes escalated into a major
attack by two North Korean battalions in the Turak mountain area
on the Ongjin peninsula. The South poured reinforcements into the
peninsula by landing ships from Inch’Sn, rapidly expanding its forces
from a few companies at the onset of the fighting to more than eight
battalions by early June, Despite this massive build-up, adverse terrain
and North Korean superiority in artillery made it difficult to dislodge
the DPRK forces from their five-kilometer deep salient. During the
course of the fighting, a South Korean guerrilla unit attacked T’aet’an
some ten kilometers north of the parallel, in an attempt to put pressure
on the rear of the northern forces, The ROK forces finally succeeded
in retaking most of their positions and occupying Unp’a-san, a moun-
tain several hundred meters north of the border dominating the ap-
proaches to the North Korean city of Haeju. By the end of June, the
situation on the peninsula had stabilized, About half the southern
lorce was withdrawn, and the chief of staff of the ROK Army guided
members of the UN Commission and reporters on a tour of the area
declaring that the South had “recovered the initiative on all fronts,”
Serious fighting continued through June and July in numerous
small unit engagements, In June, a company of South Korean guerrillas
lrom the Ho-rim (Forest Tiger) unit was captured while on a deep
penetration raid into the North, According to American sources com-
menting on northern propaganda on their trial in P’ySngyang in Sep-
tember, ROK guerrilla units had previously been reported attacking
148 JOHN MERRILL
targets as far north as the outskirts of Wdnsan on the east coast, al-
though the exact extent of their operations was unknown, In July,
elements of an ROK batallion were also beaten back in an attack ona
guerrilla base at Yangyang, just across the parallel. The minister of
national defense may have been referring to the ROK’s ability to
stage successful incursions on the east coast when he told reporters on
July 17 that the army was “awaiting an order from President Rhee
and [was] confident of completely occupying Yangyang or Wdnsan in
a day.” '
Heavy fighting flared up again in August as clashes involving bat-
talion-sized units broke out at Ongjin, Kaesdng, and Ch’unch’dn. The
incidents began on July 25 when a South Korean battalion attacked a
northern observation post on Hill 488, a few hundred meters north
of the parallel, overlooking Kaesdng. The position changed hands twice
over the next few days. KaesOng itself was shelled in a fierce artillery
duel between the two sides that lasted a week. The incident was sig-
nificant since it demonstrated an overwhelming northern superiority
in artillery, and marked the first major involvement by the North
Korean army in support of the border guards. Another battle broke
out on Ongjin on August 4, causing a brief panic among the southern
forces in which an order was nearly given to evacuate the whole penin-
sula. A third incident began two days later when North Korean forces
occupied several strategic hills along the parallel near Ch’unch’dn. Two
weeks of heavy fighting followed before ROK troops retook the heights
in a regimental assault supported by artillery. General Roberts, the head
of the Korean Military Advisory Group (KMAG), described these
August clashes as follows:
Each was in our opinion brought on by the presence of a small South ‘Korean
salient north of the parallel, Each was characterized by the CO’s screaming “in-
vasion, reinforce, ammo!” . . . The South Koreans wish to invade the North. We
tell them that if such occurs, all advisors will pull put and the ECA spigot will be
turned off. In case they’d lost the Ongjin peninsula, they felt they’d have to invade
to Chorown about twenty miles in, in order to save face. . .. Most incidents on the
parallel are due to needling by opposing local forces. Both North and South are at
fault. No attacks by the North have ever been in serious proportions.
These Kaesdng battles appear to have been designed by the South to
exploit the attention focused on Korea by the upcoming visit of Chiang
K’ai-shek to discuss a Pacific pact. The Ongjin and Ch’unch’6n incidents
may have been Northern attempts to embarrass the ROK during the
Chinese leader’s visit.
23. Roberts to Bolte, in ‘Personal Comments on KMAG and Korean Affairs,"
Aug. 19, 1949, in P & O Files, National Archives,
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 149
There was no ambiguity about the causes of several serious naval
engagements that also took place during this month, South Korean
intelligence personnel disguised as fishermen sailed from Inch’5n early
in August to raid North Korean coastal shipping. ROK vessels also
shelled shore installations near the mouth of the Taedong River on
August 11. The most serious incident occurred six days later when a
ROK task force of six mine sweepers attacked the military harbor of
Monggump’o, capturing one North Korean ship and sinking four,
The naval chain of command was bypassed in this attack with the
commander of the ROK ships, Lee Yong-woon, acting on the direct
orders of the minister of national defense, an ex-navy man, After the
incident, Lee was quickly reassigned by his patrons to an obscure port
command to get him out of harm’s way as Ambassador Muccio and
KMAG advisers clamored for disciplinary action,*# Although American
advisers seem to have been kept in the dark, learning about these ac-
tions only after the fact, port calls by U.S. warships over the summer
and ROK-initiated discussions concerning basing agreements may have
contributed to the South Korean naval offensive.
The parallel remained relatively quiet after this until mid-October.
In the midst of a North Korean campaign against ROK border provoca-
tions, two battalions of the DPRK’s forces pushed southern troops
from the positions they still held on Unp’a-san on the northern side of
the parallel. Concerned about the continuing fighting on Ongjin, where
ROK forces would be trapped if war broke out, KMAG pressured the
South Korean military to pull back from the exposed peninsula. ROK
strength was further reduced to two battalions and Colonel Paek In-ydp
was assigned as the new commander with orders to keep things quiet.
Despite these instructions, Paek staged a surprise attack in mid-Decem-
ber on the North Korean positions to “increase morale,” Briefly retak-
ing Unp’a-san, Paek brought the northern forces into a hasty counter-
attack in which one of their battalions was badly mauled in a ROK
ambush, After this, the Ongjin peninsula, and the border in general,
was quiet until just before the war.
24, This account of the border clashes is based upon the following sources:
Committee for the Compilation of War History, Han’guk ch¥njaeng-sa I, Haebang
kwa k&n’gun [History of the Korean War, vol. 1: The liberation and the establish-
ment of the army] (Seoul, 1967), pp. 506-37; Sasaki Harutaka, Han "gukch&n-bisa,
sang-gwon: kon’gun kwa sirydn [Secret history of the Korean War, vol. 1: The
establishment of the army and its trials} (Seoul: Py&nghaksa, 1977), pp. 417-62;
and U.S, Military Attache (USMILAT), and /S reports for the period. Interestingly,
the second edition of Han'euk ch Unjaeng-sa omits all reference to the border Clashes
since they were regarded as being “too political.” Interview with Yi HySng-sdk,
chairman of the Gommittee for the Compilation of War History, Seoul, 1978.
150 JOHN MERRILL
While these border incidents clearly marked a major escalation in
the confrontation between the South and the North, it is difficult to
gauge their seriousness, General Roberts believed that the clashes were
deliberately exaggerated by the South to obtain more aid and “a
general rule of thumb” was to discount casualty figures by a factor
of ten. KMAG estimates, on the other hand, were biased in the opposite
direction and tended to downplay the seriousness of the military
situation in Korea, The size of the units involved and the weapons
employed suggest that some of those border engagements were major
battles. Reliable casualty figures are not available, but they must
have been heavy. Intelligence reports mentioned North Korean trains
crowded with wounded after some engagements and a KMAG observer
reported seeing South Korean dead ‘‘stacked in a tent like cordwood”
during one phase of the Ongjin fighting.
It is apparent that both sides initiated some engagements and that
neither considered the parallel an international boundary. The North
seems to have gotten the worst of it in the actual fighting. The reason
for this was that it garrisoned its border with a lightly armed police
force under the ministry of the interior, like most Communist states,
while holding its main forces in reserve. The South was often able,
therefore, to achieve local superiority in the initial stages of an engage-
ment before the North could bring its army into play. But the fighting
was a costly diversion for the South. It reduced the readiness of ROK
forces by cutting down on training and using up scarce supplies. Sus-
picion of Rhee’s motives among American policy makers growing out
of these incidents also contributed, along with economic constraints
and consideration of responsibilities elsewhere, to the decision to
limit military aid to “defensive weapons.’’ The border incidents, more-
over, made it more difficult to read the DPRK’s intentions. The gradual
deployment of North Korean forces toward the parallel that began in
the fall could easily be interpreted as a defensive reaction, The North
was clearly worried by the border fighting: rumors of an invasion from
the South began to be heard in the North for the first time as the
DPRK began a major campaign against southern “‘border provocations.”
One conclusion follows from these border incidents. Although one
of the best arguments against the Gupta thesis that the war began with
a small South Korean incursion at Haeju is the relatively restrained
response of the North to the incidents during the earlier period, the
cumulative effect of these incidents may well have been to create an
image among the northern leadership of a long-term threat from the
South, Therefore this may have lent a certain preemptive quality to
the June 1950 attack,
At any rate, North Korean and Soviet policy underwent a decisive
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 151
shift early in this period, By the spring of 1949, the DPRK had aban-
doned any hopes it might have had of gaining support for its position
in the United Nations. The North suffered a major diplomatic setback
when the General Assembly adopted a U,S. resolution recognizing
the ROK as the only legitimate government on the peninsula, Pak
H6n-y6ng, the DPRK’s foreign minister, announced soon after that
the North would henceforth “rely on its own resources” to unify the
country. Soviet policy also changed. In March 1949, Kim Il-sung and
Pak headed a high-level North Korean delegation that traveled to
Moscow for negotiations with the Soviet leadership. The trip resulted
in cultural and economic treaties as well as a secret military aid agree-
ment. It is apparently to these meetings that Khrushchev refers in his
memoirs, when he recalls how Kim pushed for an attack that would
touch off a domestic uprising in the South. That something unusual
was afoot seemed to be indicated by the failure to sign a mutual se-
curity treaty. Observers surmised that this departure from normal
practice might indicate a Soviet unwillingness to become involved if
a conflict flared up in Korea, It is doubtful, however, that a decision
(o attack the South was reached at this point. Stalin had a reputation
lor extreme caution in his foreign policy initiatives, and was unlikely
to commit himself irrevocably to such a course of action so far in
advance. The initial Soviet arms deliveries were limited, probably not
yreatly exceeding the standard satellite level and certainly not bringing
the North Korean forces up to the strength of the Soviet occupation
troops formerly in the country, That the Soviets were not munificent
in their initial aid to the DPRK is also suggested by the formation of
u Military Sponsorship Committee in July to solicit contributions
\o purchase arms. The main build-up of the North Korean forces did
not occur until the fall, and arms were still arriving in the spring of
1950 when war broke out, The main thrust of North Korean policy
was a renewed emphasis on armed guerrilla struggle in the South,
The major unification initiative on the northern side during this
period was the formation of the DFUF on June 25 in response to an
appeal by leftist groups in the South for a united front against the
Khee government. Despite its name, the formation of the front re-
‘lected the intensified suppression of leftists in the ROK, which made
open political action in concert with opponents of Rhee impossible.
Sull, the president was taking no chances. The day after the establish-
inent of the DFUF, his chief opponent on the Right, Kim Ku, who
had been in touch with the North in an attempt to form a Peaceful
Unification Conference, was assassinated, The DFUF was also an
attempt to capitalize on the pull-out of the last American combat
troops (five hundred KMAG advisers remained behind) in June, The
152 JOHN MERRILL
main proposal to come out of the inaugural meeting of the DFUF
was a call for elections in the North and South to form an all-Korea
legislative body by September.
Along with the formation of the DFUF, the SKLP opened a large-
scale guerrilla offensive in the South. Aided by the diversion of ROK
forces to the parallel clashes, the remnants of the Chiri-san guerrillas
succeeded in regrouping and breaking out of the remote mountainous
areas to which they had been confined over the winter by the pressure
of ROK operations. In a ‘‘surge of activity,” the guerrillas began to
expand their base areas ‘‘and increase their hit-and-run attacks on
villages, police boxes, police stations, and small government installa-
tions, such as power stations. Roadblocks were established in remote
areas and other transportation was harassed. Atrocities became com-
mon practice ... by late spring or early summer of 1949, these guerrilla
bands had become a real problem.””°
The North supported the offensive by infiltrating several guerrilla
units trained at the Kangdong Political Institute into the South. A
second base area was established in the Odae mountain area, just below
the parallel on the east coast, with the dispatch of some six hundred
guerrillas in June and July. The revival of the insurgent movement
was reflected in a shift in casualty figures, which began to tilt in the
guerrillas’ favor. The police also began to pull back from isolated
outposts, and formed special units to guard railroad and other com-
munications links, By midsummer, guerrilla bands were ‘‘attacking at
will” in many areas of the South,
A more serious wave of attacks came in early August as the SKLP
attempted to implement the call for all-Korea elections in September.
A captured directive urged the guerrillas to make an all-out effort,
stating that “‘the final reckoning was at hand.” The offensive was
supported by two more infiltrations of guerrillas on the east coast.
Three hundred guerrillas, commanded by Kim Tal-sam, the leader of
the Cheju-do rebellion who had fled to the North, penetrated into the
Andong area in early August to establish a third base area. Three
hundred and sixty guerrillas infiltrated into the T’aebaek mountains
under Yi Ho-je in five separate groups a month later. With these
new infiltrations, the guerrilla movement reached a peak strength of
some three thousand men, with three to five times as many supporters
in the base areas. Why the September elections were never held remains
something of a puzzle. While some accounts have speculated that the
25. USMILAT, Weekly Report, Sept. 24, 1949; and the captured North Korean
newsfilm of the trial, “Ho Rim Army Group Trials, Oct. 1949,” MID 5402, RG
242, National Archives,
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 153
SKLP may have been encouraged by Kim Il-sung to exhaust its strength
in futile attacks to undercut the position of Pak Hdn-ySng, or was
forced to call off a planned attack under Soviet pressure, neither
explanation seems convincing. The most likely explanation is that the
guerrillas were unable to demonstrate enough strength to make a
northern initiative possible, Although the guerrilla groups were ap-
parently in contact with the North by radio, they were isolated from
each other and unable to effectively coordinate operations. The guer-
rillas, all of whom were originally from the South, received almost no
support from the North after their infiltration and had to rely on a
greatly weakened SKLP organization. When it became clear that the
offensive was not achieving its objectives, Radio P’ySngyang simply
dropped all mention of the elections.
Guerrilla activity also fell off in mid-September, but picked up
again early the next month. Responding to calls for a ‘‘winter offen-
sive,’ the guerrillas shifted tactics to large-scale attacks on towns.
On October 2, Kim Tal-sam’s unit launched coordinated assaults on
the police station, prison, and army barracks at Andong, Later in the
month, on October 27, several hundred Chiri-san guerrillas mounted
an attack on Chinju, the base of the newly formed ROK Marine Corps.
Guerrilla units on the east coast also began to consolidate their forces.
The badly mauled remnants of Yi Ho-je’s guerrilla unit joined up
with Kim Tal-sam’s group in the P’ohang area, when they were re-
inforced on November 6 by one hundred men infiltrated by sea. De-
spite the continuing play given by radio P’ySngyang to their activity,
it was apparent that the North was losing touch with the guerrillas.
The truth was that the guerrillas were falling back as an ROK counter-
offensive, launched in October, gathered momentum,
During the fifth period (winter of 1949-50), most of the fighting
shifted to the interior of the ROK. To deal with the revival of guerrilla
activity, the South Korean government launched a major offensive
against the guerrillas that succeeded over the winter in breaking the
back of the insurgent movement. The substantial SKLP party organiza-
tion also came under increasing attack by ROK security agencies
utilizing the National Guidance Alliance, a network of former Com-
munist informants. But if the internal situation in the ROK was improv-
ing, its international position seemed to be increasingly in question.
Doubts about the American security commitment were raised early in
the new year by Secretary of State Acheson’s speech excluding the
ROK from the U.S. defense perimeter in Asia and the vote of the
House of Representatives to cut off Korean aid. The military balance
on the peninsula, meanwhile, was tilting sharply in the DPRK’s favor
as large quantities of Soviet aid arrived and Korean veterans of the
Chinese Communist forces returned to the North,
154 JOHN MERRILL
The South Korean offensive against the guerrillas began in early
September and continued throughout the winter. Several hundred
separate counterguerrilla operations were conducted by the ROK
army and police, some of them involving several battalions of troops.
The offensive was designed to break the hold of the guerrillas on the
countryside by employing a classic strategy of area clearance. The
first step was to blockade the base areas by setting up check points,
roadblocks, and a coast watcher system to prevent the guerrillas from
moving freely and to stop reinforcements from reaching them, In
the second stage, the rural population in areas of guerrilla activity was
relocated by the police to villages under government control, thus
depriving the insurgents of food, shelter, and manpower. Along the
western margins of the Chiri mountains alone, more than ninety thou-
sand persons were moved out of villages exposed to guerrilla attacks,
Village guard forces were established to watch fields at night, man
roadblocks, and assist in operations against the guerrillas. The evacuated
areas were considered “‘free fire zones” in which anyone remaining
behind was assumed to be associated with the guerrillas. During the
final phases of the operations, government forces conducted sweeps
of the isolated base areas one by one. The increasingly desperate
situation of the guerrillas was reflected in their changing pattern of
activity as the winter continued. Avoiding contact with the ROK
forces whenever possible, the guerrilla units began to conduct foraging
raids over wider areas to secure food and supplies. Winter operations
in the South Korean mountains were extremely difficult, even for
the government task forces, with many deaths from exposure,
The military operations were coupled with highly effective meas-
ures to undercut popular support for the guerrillas. An amnesty pro-
gram begun in late October, lasting five weeks, succeeded in inducing
over forty thousand defections. The activities of the 200,000-member
National Guidance Alliance also helped to uncover SKLP sympathizers
and assisted the police in maintaining surveillance of former Com-
munists. The stepped-up pressure began to pay off in late March when
Kim Sam-nyong and Yi Chu-ha, the two top-ranking leaders of the party
remaining in the South, were arrested in Seoul. Their prominence is
suggested by the DPRK’s proposal to exchange them for Cho Man-sik,
a nationalist purged by the Soviets in 1946 for refusing to go along
with trusteeship. The swap fell through because of suspicions of both
sides. In fact, the SKLP organization was beginning to crumble, Even
though CIA reports and Khrushchev’s memoirs agree in placing the
SKLP’s strength at half a million members, widespread arrests had
badly disrupted its communications and seemed to render it incapable
of taking coordinated action.
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 155
Things were not going so well, however, for the Rhee government in
its relations with the United States, As mentioned, in a still contro-
versial speech delivered to the National Press Club on January 12, the
U.S. Secretary of State Acheson seemed to exclude the ROK from the
American defense perimeter in Asia. The speech seemed to represent
a new departure in policy, and its delivery by an authoritative spokes-
man to an audience of news editors gave it much greater prominence
than any previous statement on the subject. For some weeks after-
wards, Rhee made a habit of buttonholing every American that he
encountered to lecture him on the inconstancy of U.S, policy with
the aid of a pocket map with Acheson’s defense perimeter outlined
in red ink,*6 According to a former North Korean journalist, Kim Il-sung
was also “much excited’? when informed of wire service reports of
Acheson’s remarks.*” The rejection of the Korean aid bill by the House
of Representatives a week later, though subsequently reversed, only
compounded the adverse impact of the speech, Serious tensions were
also developing in the Korean-American relationship over Rhee’s
drift towards authoritarianism and his casual handling of economic
problems, Rhee was seen by many Americans as a “little Chiang K’ai-
shek”? whose government was likely to go the same way as the Kuomin-
tang in China. Increasing strains in the relationship culminated in an
aide-mémoire on April 25 threatening a cut-off in assistance if National
Assembly elections were not held on schedule and if steps were not
taken to curb inflationary pressures on the ROK economy,
At the same time the DPRK’s conventional military capabilities
were rapidly expanding. In addition to the flow of arms from the
Soviet Union, the DPRK’s forces were augmented by the return of
Korean veterans who had served with the Chinese Communists. The
victory of the People’s Liberation Army over the Nationalists in the
fall of 1949 made possible the repatriation of as many as forty thou-
sand of these troops to the DPRK. These experienced and ideologically
committed volunteers were incorporated as units into the North Korean
army in a major addition to the DPRK’s military strength. There
were several signs, moreover, that DPRK policy was in a state of flux.
The North apparently began to reassess its strategy toward the South
at a three-day meeting attended by several members of the SKLP
faction in P’ySngyang at the end of the year. A North Korean delega-
tion headed by Kim Tu-bong also reportedly attended an ‘Asiatic
26. Interview with a “long-time observer of Korean security affairs,” Seoul,
Nov. 30, 1977.
27. According to the story of Han Ghae-ddk, now deceased, as recounted in
interviews with Yi Chong-hak, Seoul, July 28, 1978 and James Lee, Seoul, June 16,
1978.
156 JOHN MERRILL
defense discussion” held in Moscow in late December. Future courses
of action in Korea may have been discussed, moreover, during Mao’s
visit to the Soviet Union early in the year, although there is no definite
evidence one way or the other on this point.
The sixth period (spring 1950) was characterized by an artificially
quiet military situation and a series of fast-breaking political develop-
ments, Guerrilla activity and border clashes fell off dramatically in the
months before the war. The only border fighting occurred when the
remnants of the east coast guerrillas attempted to exfiltrate to the
North in early March. Two heavily armed units of over six hundred
men assigned to escort them were almost completely wiped out by
ROK forces. The political atmosphere in the South also heated up
during this period with opposition proposals for a constitutional
amendment leading to a cabinet-dominant system, disputes between
the legislature and Rhee over the budget and scheduling of elections,
and the May 30 National Assembly elections. Radio P’ySngyang made
increasingly strident attacks stating that Korea was at a crossroads
and only through the overthrow of Rhee could the country be saved.
In late March, the guerrilla units that had been sent South over
the previous summer attempted to make their way back to the North,
Much reduced in size, the guerrilla bands came under heavy pressure
as they tried to reach the parallel. On March 24 and 26, two groups
of about three hundred members each were sent to guide the remnants
of the guerrillas to the North. The relief columns were unable to carry
out their mission and were almost totally wiped out by the ROK Army.
The exfiltration of these east coast guerrillas, who would have been
ideally placed to support a North Korean attack, suggests to some that
the decision to invade the South was made after this point.
The National Assembly elections were finally held on May 30
after strong representations by the United States. While the election
results represented a setback for Rhee, their importance in the timing
of the North Korean attack has been greatly exaggerated. The
composition of the new legislature was still not clear on the eve of the
war. While the main winners were independent candidates who had
sat out the 1948 balloting, this was not necessarily a defeat for Rhee.
Rhee himself had encouraged independents to run, realizing the weak-
ness of his own organization and the lack of a leader of comparable
stature around whom opponents could rally. The main conservative
opposition group, in fact, had lost even a greater percentage of its
seats than had supporters of the president. Moderate and progressive
candidates had captured about a quarter of the seats. What the election
results seemed to show was the existence of considerable latent dis-
satisfaction with the government and greater willingness to explore
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 157
an accommodation with the North. But Rhee had been in tight spots
before, and still had ample resources to bring the new assembly into
line.
The North made two unification proposals in the weeks before the
war. The first proposal was made by the DFUF on June 7 as a counter
to the South Korean elections. It called for new all-Korea elections to
choose representatives to a unification conference to be held either in
Haeju or Kaesdng, the goal being to unify the country by August 15,
the fifth anniversary of liberation. The second unification initiative
calling for the merger of the two Korean legislatures into a single body
was made by the Supreme People’s Assembly on June 19. The initiative
probably represented an attempt to feel out the opinion of the new
assembly, whose members might be more receptive to a scheme that
did not call for a new round of elections.
The final decision to attack was apparently made sometime in
April or May. Three days after the first unification proposals were
made, a hundred heavily armed guerrillas were infiltrated into the
South with orders to split up and contact provincial SKLP committees
to organize uprisings when war broke out. There is no mention of an
attack in captured Central Committee and cabinet documents dated
early in the year. That the decision to intervene in the South came
suddenly does not necessarily mean that the North “jumped the gun”
on an invasion scheduled for later in the year.7® The same factors
determining DPRK policy (one step removed, with somewhat different
weight, and combined with considerations of global strategy) would
also have influenced a Soviet decision. Even if the exact moment of the
attack could not be foreseen, the Korean crisis had been building
toward an explosion for several years. Little was required to set it off,
TOWARD A MODEL OF THE NORTH KOREAN INTERVENTION
In light of the widespread violence in the South before the war, it
is useful to look at the North Korean attack as a case of intervention
in a situation of civil strife. No claim is made for the exclusiveness of
this approach, but it does seem able to bring out aspects of the war
that are obscured in other accounts. Admittedly, the divided-country
context makes Korea an extreme case. But the theoretical issues in-
volved may stand out with greater clarity for just that reason, and
Korea, after all, may not be so different from other third world coun-
tries where arbitrarily drawn borders cut across ethnic, racial, and
28. Robert R. Simmons, The Strained Alliance: Peking, Pyongyang, Moscow
and the Politics of the Korean Civil War (New York: Free Press, 1975); Wilbur
Hitchcock, ‘‘North Korea Jumps the Gun,” Current History (March 1951)
158 JOHN MERRILL
religious groups. Looking at the war from this perspective can also
facilitate comparison with similar interventions by lesser powers else-
where. These have become increasingly common in recent years and
Korea seems to have been one of the first. The most important reason
for looking at the war in this way, though, is that it may help resolve
several issues in the literature: Was the war primarily civil or interna-
tional in character? Was the DPRK acting as a proxy for the Soviet
Union, or is Korean nationalism the key to understanding the attack?
How important was the group centered on Pak Hdn-ySng in the North
Korean decision? Were the border clashes in the summer of 1948 a
factor in the North Korean decision? What determined the timing of
the attack?
A starting point in answering these questions is the framework of
four variables proposed by C. R. Mitchell for the comparative study of
interventions.” The factors, which would seem to apply to any dyadic
relationship, are: (1) the progress of the guerrilla struggle in the dis-
rupted state; (2) the linkages between it and the potential intervening
state; (3) the structure of the latter’s decision-making process; and
(4) how conducive the international environment is to intervention.
Mitchell suggests that all four factors are systemically related in deter-
mining the ‘‘threshold of violence’’ at which intervention is likely to
occur, That is, neither “‘civil war’ nor “unprovoked aggression’? is
likely to prove helpful, by itself, in understanding intervention in
general, or the North Korean attack in particular.
As for the first factor, the most important conclusion to be drawn
is that the war came at a time when the guerrilla movement in the
South had been virtually destroyed. The SKLP organization was also
crumbling under successive waves of arrests and was a rapidly wasting
asset for the DPRK. North Korean hopes of achieving unification
29. C. R. Mitchell, “Civil War and the Involvement of External Parties,”
International Studies Quarterly 14, no, 2: 166-94. The venturesome reader is also
referred to C.A. Insard and E,C. Zeeman, ‘Some Models from Catastrophe Theory
in the Social Sciences,” reprint from The Use of Models in the Social Sciences
(London: Tavistock Publications, 1976); Zeeman et al., “A Model for Institutional
Disturbances,” British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology 29,
no. 1: 66-80; and Rodney G. Tomlinson, ‘“‘The Application of Catastrophe Theory
to International Events Flows,’ paper presented at International Studies Asso-
ciation meeting, March 1977. I have been working with Professors John Deiner
(political science) and Stanley Samsky (mathematics) at the University of Dela-
ware to see if similar models may be developed for interventions by ‘‘outside
parties” in situations of civil strife. The FEC data on internal warfare events in
Korea have been coded (by type of incident, date, location, initiator, weapons
used, forces involved, and casualties) for some 1,800 incidents. The analysis,
however, has only begun and results are not yet available,
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 159
through a united front with opponents of Rhee, through the Soviet
initiative for simultaneous troop withdrawal, and through armed guer-
rilla struggle had been successively dashed. The only weapon remain-
ing was its conventional military force, which held an overwhelming
advantage over the South. So long as the guerrilla movement seemed
to have a chance of success, the DPRK held back from exercising
this option, exhibiting some restraint in the border clashes over the
summer of 1949. But by the spring of 1950, a conventional military
attack was the only alternative left.
With regard to the second factor, it is possible to distinguish several
types of linkage operating in the Korean case, The most important of
these was the pull of Korean nationalism, The country had been liber-
ated from thirty-six years of Japanese colonial rule only to find itself
divided into two hostile states. All political groups considered unifica-
tion to be an immediate and pressing goal. The strength of this commit-
ment was strong enough to induce many non-Communist political
leaders in the South, at some personal risk, to boycott the 1948 elec-
tions, and to come to the P’ySngyang Conference instead. A more
volatile linkage was the interaction of the two Koreas along the parallel.
An obvious counterpoint to the North’s view of the potential of the
guerrilla movement was its perception of the threat from the South,
The border clashes in the summer of 1949 left no doubt about the
bellicose stance of the Rhee government. North Korean pique over
these incidents and nervousness concerning southern intentions was
evident during a campaign in the early fall focused on “border provoca-
tions.”” The Rhee government’s future course of action as it increased
its military capabilities, moreover, must have been clear to the North,
There was also a “penetrative” linkage between the two halves of the
country based on a partially overlapping leadership. Members of the
SKLP faction involved with Pak H6n-ySng continued to direct guerrilla
operations in the South while holding positions in the North Korean
party and state structure.
The third set of variables, the decision-making characteristics of
the intervening state, is a difficult subject to research. Little informa-
tion is presently available on the day-to-day operation of the North
Korean political system, and decision-making approaches demand
large amounts of inside information that must be analyzed anew for
every policy shift. There is also the thorny question of the degree of
autonomy of the North Korean leadership. Probably, neither the
“puppet” nor “independent actor” model wholly applies. Instead
the relationship was most likely characterized by a broad middle
range of influence and consultation,
We do know that there was a factional debate within the North
Korean leadership over the proper strategy to pursue toward the
160 JOHN MERRILL
South. This suggests that the DPRK had some independence in for-
mulating policy. The outlines of this debate are far from clear, but
most speculation centers on the role of Pak Hdn-ydng. There seem to
be three main views.°° Kim Chum-kon, Kim Ch’ang-sun, and the
Japanese ‘‘Neighboring Countries Research Institute” maintain that
Pak advocated a two-pronged strategy of keeping up pressure on the
South through the guerrillas, and seizing border areas to discredit
Rhee and force the ROK into political negotiations. The position
of Kim Nam-sik is that Pak pushed for the war, assuring the DPRK
leadership and the Soviets that the SKLP would rise up to support
a North Korean attack. The third opinion, held by Pak Kap-dong and
Kim Sam-kyu, is that Pak opposed the war as “leftist adventurism,”
saw the role of the guerrillas as keeping the South tied down so as to
prevent an attack on the DPRK, and continued to advocate united
front tactics.
Caution is necessary in sorting through these differing interpreta-
tions, Although most of the accounts assume that factional positions
remained constant over time, it seems reasonable to expect that they
would change in response to a developing situation. The first view of
Pak’s role is particularly open to criticism since U.S. intelligence
reports indicate that this position had jelled as early as February 1949.
It also seems, at least on the surface, to be somewhat self-serving to
place responsibility for the border incidents solely on the North. The
main objection to the third account, which seems to be a minority
opinion, is that it appears to contradict what is known about Pak’s
character. The problem with Kim Nam-sik’s view, which otherwise
seems the most plausible, is that there is considerable evidence to
indicate that the North was well aware of the desperate plight of the
SKLP. It may be, however, that the DPRK leadership felt that the
only way to galvanize the remaining SKLP organization into action
was through a military thrust across the parallel. Kim Nam-sik’s views
of Pak’s role are supported to some extent by the accusations leveled
against the SKLP leader when he was purged after the war. The grava-
men of the charges against him was that he had “engaged in circulating
false reports” that misled the DPRK about the strength of the Com-
munist movement in the South. What is most interesting about this
charge is its implication that the North indeed started the war. In
evaluating the importance of factionalism in the origins of the war,
30. Kim Chum-kon, The Korean War (Seoul: Kwangmyong Publishing Co.,
1973), pp. 197-211; Sasaki, Han’gukchon-bisa, pp. 470-74; Han’guk chonjaeng-sa,
pp. 503-5; interviews with Kim Nam-sik, May 22, 23, and June 1, 1978; /S and
USMILAT reports for the period,
INTERNAL WARFARE IN KOREA 161
it is necessary to keep in mind that it was only one of the factors
bearing on the decision to intervene. Its importance has probably been
overblown in some accounts. In general, its effect seems to have been
to bias North Korean decision making toward a somewhat more active
policy vis-a-vis the South,
The final factor influencing the threshold of violence at which
intervention will occur is the conduciveness of the international environ-
ment, International factors were obviously very important in the Korean
case. The initial division of the peninsula owed to outside interference,
The superpowers sponsored the establishment of rival governments
in their respective occupation zones, and lent the two Koreas political,
economic, and military support. At the same time, as Okonogi Masao
points out, their continuing presence led to a kind of “stabilization by
deterrence,’ which temporarily froze the inherently unstable situation
they had created on the peninsula. With the disengagement of the two
superpowers, however, the status quo began to come unstuck as the
confrontation between the North and South escalated in its intensity
and directness. The situation had developed by the spring of 1950 to
a point where a major conflict was virtually inevitable. In addition
to this “built-in’’ pattern of outside interference, support, and dis-
engagement, sudden changes in the international environment in the
winter and spring before the war produced a situation that was ex-
tremely permissive of North Korean action. The victory of the Chinese
Communist movement, the Soviet explosion of the atomic bomb, and
the increasing tensions in the Korean-American relationship all worked
to remove the barriers to North Korean action, Several possible com-
binations of domestic and international events may have triggered the
North Korean attack. But there is little point in speculating on these
precipitating events without also considering the mix of factors that,
over a period of years, had built the situation in Korea to the point
of an explosion.
In this paper, I have attempted to sketch the pattern of political vio-
lence in Korea before the war and to outline the complex interaction of
local and international factors influencing it. Looked at against this
background, the Korean war appears as merely the last and most
serious escalation in the increasingly violent confrontation between
the two halves of the divided country. After the establishment of
separate regimes and the pull-out of occupation forces, it was only
a matter of time before a major conflict broke out. Both sides were
deeply committed to unification and tried their best, with the instru-
ments available to them, to achieve it on their own terms. The North’s
162 JOHN MERRILL
decision to resort to conventional warfare came only after other policy
options had been tried and had failed. Far from being crazy or irra-
tional, northern behavior seems to have been closely keyed to develop-
ing events on the peninsula and the situation it found itself confronted
with by the spring of 1950.
Commentary by JON HALLIDAY
JOHN MERRILL IS TO BE COMPLIMENTED ON HIS EXCELLENT PAPER, IT NOT ONLY introduces important new material, but also handles the evidence with
scrupulous fairness, His contribution destroys numerous stereotypes
about the background of the Korean War and helps set it in its correct
context.
My comments are limited to a few key points.
1, Merrill opts for a methodology based on work by Charles Mc-
Clelland that, he says, “has the advantage of bypassing the thorny
problem of trying to determine the real motives of statesmen where
sufficient information is unavailable.” Later, he introduces a model
developed by C. R. Mitchell to determine “the threshold of violence
at which intervention is likely to occur.”
Neither McClelland nor Mitchell contributes anything substantial
to Merrill’s discussion, which, in my opinion, would be strengthened
by eliminating reference to them, McClelland’s approach is weak
because it does not address the necessity of examining as thoroughly
as possible, and however sketchy the information, why a people, or
a political movement, or a state do fight. Neither the guerrilla war in
Korea prior to June 1950, nor the Korean War itself—any less than
say, the Vietnam War—can be understood without tackling the question
of why the people were fighting. Merrill posits as an essential precondi-
tion for his own method identifying the characteristics of a given
crisis. Yet a failure to examine and assess the motives behind the
light is likely to lead to the sort of manipulative approach widespread
among technocratic U.S. policy makers in the mid-sixties. Strong
evidence to this effect is provided by Merrill who does not fail to
speculate on motives when it comes to June 1950. Mitchell’s model
presents a different problem: as Merrill acknowledges, Korea was a
divided country, not a country threatened from without, This is a
crucial point; surely the very specificity of the Korean situation is that
it was one country, Finally, the third of Mitchell’s variables, the struc-
ture of the intervening state’s decision-making process is, by Merrill's
own admission, of little use regarding the Democratic People’s Republic
of Korea (DPRK) given present knowledge,
164 JON HALLIDAY
2. Merrill raises the fundamental question of the legitimacy of the
two states and also notes the difficulty of choosing an appropriate
time frame. These two issues go together. On the latter, one must
go back to 1945, however cursorily, This is when Korea was divided,
and the question of ‘North versus South” or “Left versus Right”
cannot be answered fairly without going back this far. Without due
emphasis on the division and its origins, it is hard to answer the main
question: Why the Korean War? If one compares Korea with Vietnam,
it is striking that no one asks who started the Vietnam War. It is simply
not deemed relevant. The repeated emphasis in the West (and in the
socialist countries, too) on who started the Korean War dehistorizes
the issue of class struggle in Korea.
A discussion of the Korean War must be set firmly in the con-
text of class struggle from 1945 on, and it must also consider fairly
the legitimacy of the two Korean regimes, The reasons for the war—
and the nature of the war itself—are integrally tied to the legitimacy
of the two regimes. To his great credit, Merrill does raise this issue,
but in my opinion fails to explore it deeply enough. If one takes just
three basic criteria—political origins, social policies, and degree of
dependence on outside forces—the DPRK had an incomparably
stronger claim not only to legitimacy, but to represent the Korean
people as a whole. The DPRK leadership emerged out of the anti-
Japanese struggle and guerrilla warfare; the Republic of Korea (ROK)
regime, including the army and police, was heavily staffed by former
members of the Japanese occupation and collaborators, The DPRK
carried out a major land reform and formally recognized the equality
of women in 1946; in the South, although some land reform did
take place, social and economic relations were not changed substan-
tially. As for foreign dependence, the Soviet Red Army had with-
drawn from the North by 1949, certainly formally and perhaps de
facto. (This is controversial; the evidence is inconclusive, but even
by hostile Western estimates, its presence was considerably weaker than
the U.S. military’s in the South.) The United States left behind a major
military organization in the South in 1949, the Korean Military Advi-
sory Group (KMAG), which, according to official U.S. Army history,
expanded as U.S. troops withdrew.!
Unlike most commentators and analyists, Merrill also mentions
a number of episodes in 1948 that bear directly on the claims of
P’yongyang and Seoul to represent the Korean people. In particular,
Merrill provides valuable information on the summer 1948 underground
1, Robert K. Sawyer, Military Advisors in Korea: KMAG in Peace and War
(Washington, D,C.: Office of Chief of Military History, 1962), p. 42.
COMMENTARY 165
plebiscite, and also refers to the Haeju Conference, attended by leaders
from both South and North. By now the evidence that the majority
of Korea’s population was against separate elections in 1948 is over-
whelming. But | think two further points need to be made, First, the
discredit and political ostracism cast on the Rhee regime as a result of
its collaboration with an operation devised and imposed by outside
forces, and that split the country—perhaps the greatest crime in the
eyes of the Korean people—must not be underestimated, The Haeju
and P’yongyang conferences (the latter was attended by virtually
every political leader in Korea except Rhee,” all of whom agreed on
a basic minimum platform) gave, I believe, tremendous legitimacy to
the DPRK’s claim to represent the Korean people and, conversely,
delegitimized the Rhee regime. Second, it is also necessary to scrutinize
the DPRK’s claims as they were put forward. The DPRK has always
centered its case on the summer 1948 underground plebiscite. This has
usually been dismissed in the West either as never having taken place
at all, or as an overwhelmingly fraudulent claim. Merrill’s most valuable
information (from U.S. sources) helps to put this claim into perspective
and confirms that a referendum did indeed take place. But can this
be considered good grounds for the DPRK claim? In my opinion it
cannot, on the basis of current evidence. The whole point of the DPRK
claim is to establish legal grounds for its legitimacy. But such grounds
need firm proof. It is not only a question of whether the DPRK claims
are true or not; it is also a question of the essentially nonverifiable
nature of the evidence, and the inherently unsatisfactory conditions
in which the poll took place (of course, the DPRK cannot be blamed
for this). My point is that it is necessary to consider all of this evi-
dence—the Haeju and P’ySngyang conferences, plus the underground
plebiscite—and weigh each aspect independently. In my opinion, the
Haeju and P’ySngyang conferences are compelling evidence in favor
of the DPRK’s claims, and the plebiscite is not.
3. Closely related to this is the role of the United Nations. Merrill
notes that “the decision to hold separate elections ran counter to the
opinion of most members of the UN Commission and Korean political
leaders.’ I would have liked to see more emphasis on this important
point, which is still not generally given adequate attention in the
West, For the UN role in 1947-48 ties in directly with its role in 1950.
In 1947-48, the UN intervened in Korea in tremendous ignorance and
sanctioned the division of Korea against the wishes of the Korean
2. George McCune, Korea Today (Cambridge; Harvard University Press, 1950),
p. 263; John Gunther, The Riddle of MacArthur (New York: Harper and Bros.,,
1951), p. 170,
166 JON HALLIDAY
people. Not only that, it lied in order to do so. Its claim to have “ob-
served” the 1948 elections when the team briefly visited only 2 per-
cent of the polling stations? is like a referee for a jousting match
who, without making a proper check of the weapons each side carried,
looks at part of the field for less than two minutes, Anyone claiming
to have “observed” such a match would be called a liar, and his evi-
dence treated with circumspection, The UN role deserves even more
attention because its sloppy work was repeated in 1950, as was its
use by the United States to swing world opinion.
4. Merrill’s paper leads up to the start of the Korean War in June
1950, The author gives us very valuable information about both the
guerrilla warfare in the South and the level of fighting along the thirty-
eighth parallel prior to June 25, 1950—especially the letter from
General Roberts to General Bolté (Aug. 19, 1949), which pins the
responsibility for heavy fighting across the parallel in the summer of
1949 squarely on the ROK. Nevertheless, the information about the
fighting near the parallel could be drawn more tightly together with
information about the guerrilla warfare, and the latter with the high
level of general political struggle throughout the South from 1945 on.
The war was not just a military episode, and in my opinion its causes
are found at the political level. The 1946 Taegu riots and the popular
uprisings of 1948 are two links in a long chain of political struggle,
which is the essential background of the guerrilla struggle and the
outbreak of full-scale warfare in June 1950. Second, Merrill does not
properly categorize the decision by the DPRK to cross the parallel in
force in June 1950, nor set this decision in context, Given that Korea
was one country, that the legitimacy of the Rhee regime was open to
serious question, and that there had been heavy fighting across the
parallel initiated by the ROK, it would seem fair to compare the North’s
“invasion” of the South to the 1944 “invasion of France’? (as it is
called, interestingly). In other words, whatever one’s reservations about
the DPRK regime in 1950, what was the political nature of the attempt
to topple the Rhee regime, remembering that the DPRK (like the
ROK) claimed to represent all of Korea? Did de Gaulle invade France
in 1944 or help to liberate it? Or both?
5. Merrill discusses relations between the southern and northern
Communists prior to June 1950. Evidence on this issue is flimsy, but
it is an important question, not least because the North’s decision to €x-
ecute the top southern Communists at the end of the war continues to
affect the attitudes of the Left in the South toward the northern
$3, Jon Halliday, ‘“The United Nations and Korea,” in Without Parallel: The
American-Korean Relationship Since 1945, ed, Frank Baldwin (New York; Pan-
ee TY | ee Gr ) |
COMMENTARY 167
regime, and deeply influences the attitudes that outsiders sympathetic to
the Korean people hold toward the DPRK leadership and reunification.
Without going too deeply into the strength of the evidence, it
must be said that the case made by the DPRK on this issue is uncon-
vincing. In a verbal presentation, Merrill noted that U.S. intelligence
reports indicate that Pak Hdn-ydng had a cautious policy. In any event,
it is hard to believe the accusation that Pak misled the DPRK leadership
as to the political situation in the South. First, as a southern emigré
once put it to me, ‘Pak Hon-ydng knew the South like the back of his
hand.” Given the lack of evidence that Pak was in any way an adven-
turer, plus his acknowledged close awareness of the situation in the
South, it is unlikely that he was responsible for giving misleading
information or advice. But, second, the content of the accusation is
completely irrelevant. The evidence (e.g., in General Dean’s memoirs)*
is that popular support for the overthrow of Rhee and for the Korean
People’s Army (KPA) was high, even if actual political organization was
poor (as claimed by Kim Il-sung, for example, in his speech to the
Aliarcham Academy in Indonesia in 1965).° But in any case, this was
not the factor that led to the failure of the DPRK to reunify the
country. The crucial factor was the scale and swiftness of the U.S.
intervention. If Pak had been accused of failing to predict this, the
accusation would at least have been relevant (although it could still
have been misplacing the blame).
Moreover, if the accusation about misleading the DPRK leadership
were true, then Pak should have been fired in 1950, as was Mu Jong,
for example (another important case that raises disturbing questions).
That Pak was not removed in 1950, but only tried with the other
top southern leaders after the end of the war, raises questions about
the relationship between northern and southern Communists that
badly needs further study. The timing makes it tempting to think that
the problem had more to do with the ending of the war (although this
could be misleading, since it might have been thought best to postpone
the trials until after the war was over, even if the accusations referred
to earlier events).
Last, and most interesting, the upshot of the accusation is that
the North did indeed ‘‘invade” the South. The DPRK decision to cross
the parallel in force on June 25 was based on criteria other than the
very narrow one adduced then and now by the DPRK—namely repelling
4. William F. Dean, General Dean’s Story (New York: Viking Press, 1954),
p. 68.
5, Kim Ilsung, “On the Socialist Construction in the DP RK and the Revolution
in South Korea,”’ Lecture at the Aliarcham Academy of Social Sciences, Indonesia,
Apr. 14, 1965, in Kim, Selected Works, 2 (P’yongyang, 1965): 554-55,
168 JON HALLIDAY
an ROK Army invasion earlier that morning. The DPRK has never
produced evidence to show that whatever the ROKA did early on the
morning of June 25 was anything out of the ordinary, in a military
sense. Indeed, the information given me by KPA officers (who had
been on the front line on June 25) whom I interviewed in P’yS6ngyang
in July 1977 was that the ROKA advance did not get very far—only
some two kilometers.® In other words, the accusation against Pak is
indirect confirmation that the DPRK decision was based on political
criteria—namely, cross the parallel and topple Rhee—and that the size
of any military action initiated by the ROKA on June 25 is of second-
ary importance (which does not rule out the possibility that there
was indeed some fairly major ROKA assault, or that the North inter-
preted some ROKA action to be particularly serious).
6. Finally, two points of detail. First, I cannot quite agree with
Merrill’s criticism of the study by Karunakar Gupta in China Quarterly.’
Admittedly, Gupta did present limited evidence, but his basic claims
were not dented by his critics, and he raised important, still unanswered
questions, The second point concerns the famous Acheson speech of
January 1950 about Korea and the U.S. “defense perimeter.” I am not
at all sure that the conventional interpretation of this speech—either
what Acheson meant, or how the speech was read in P’yongyang or
Moscow—is accurate. After all, the United States had KMAG going
strong in Korea and was training Koreans in Japan. There may have
been room for serious doubt about U.S. intentions, but I think if
the Acheson speech is to be relied on as a major piece of evidence,
then it must be weighted both against U.S. deeds in Korea and sub-
sequent acts, particularly the appointment of John Foster Dulles in the
spring of 1950 to supervise U.S. Far East policy, and his specific
activities and commitments in Korea immediately before June 25.
6. Interview with six senior KPA officers, P’yOngyang, July 26, 1977.
7. Karunakar Gupta, ‘How Did the Korean War Begin?” China Quarterly,
no. 52 (1972); Gupta’s critics in China Quarterly, no. 54 (1973), with Gupta’s
reply.
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