An op ed from the Reporter Herald: Honor those who fought in Korean War
It's hard to imagine that a war in which millions
fought and died can be known as the Forgotten War, but that is one
moniker that has been given to the Korean War.
The war, which was fought from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953,
was fought on the Korean Peninsula between North Korea and South Korea.
North Korea was aided by China, and South Korea was backed by the United
States and other countries under the United Nations flag.
In a century that saw two world wars plus wars in Vietnam, the
Middle East and the Persian Gulf, somehow the Korean War and those who
fought in it were not given their full recognition and appreciation when
the war ended.
North Korean forces invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950. The
United Nations asked for troops to end the aggression. President Harry
Truman ordered U.S. Navy and Air Force personnel to Korea on June 27 of
that year and approved ground forces and air strikes against North Korea
on June 30. Ultimately, almost 38,000 Americans would be killed in
Korea, with another nearly 3,000 noncombat deaths.
Due to the efforts of all who fought for South Korea's position,
the U.S. and South Korea have continued their positive and fruitful
relationship. North Korea, on the other hand, remains a dangerous state,
where famine and a threatening government contribute to an unstable
world.
As the years have passed, the United States has done more to
honor its Korean War veterans, including building a Korean War Veterans
Memorial, which was dedicated on July 27, 1995.
Recently, a bipartisan group of members of the U.S. Senate's
Armed Services Committee sponsored a resolution recognizing the 60th
anniversary of the end of the Korean War and the designation of
2012-2013 as the Year of the Korean War Veteran.
"Nearly 2 million Americans fought in the Korean War, and more
than 120,000 of them were killed or wounded in action," said Sen. Mark
Udall of Colorado, a co-sponsor of the resolution. "I have deep respect
for all those who left behind their families and friends to protect a
distant country from the spread of communism."
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