Chinese POWs During the Korean War

Recently a book titled War Trash has been released that documents the experiences of Chinese POWs held by the US military during the Korean War.

Here are some excerpts of the book from Far Outliers:

The audience remained silent for a good minute after he finished speaking. I knew the medic and didn’t think he had made up the story. Wang Yong broke the silence: “The Reds used us like ammo. Look at the GIs, they all wear flak vests on the battleground. The U.S. government cares about their lives. How about us? How many of our brothers could’ve survived if they’d put on the vests like the GIs? Recently I came across an article. It reports that General Ridgway says the U.S. forces could absolutely push the Communist armies all the way back to the Yalu, but he won’t do that because he doesn’t want to sacrifice thousands of his men. Just imagine: what if the People’s Volunteer Army could drive the Americans down to the Pacific Ocean? Wouldn’t Mao Zedong sacrifice every one of the Volunteers to accomplish that goal? You bet he would. Didn’t he already send us here to be wasted like manure to fertilize Korean soil?…

Yes, Mao would of killed as many people as needed to accomplish his twisted goals. After the war, The Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution killed far more Chinese than 3 years of fighting in the Korean War.

Wang’s analogy of us to human fertilizer revived thoughts I had been thinking for a long time. True enough, as Chinese, we genuinely felt that our lives were misused here, but as I have observed earlier, no matter how abysmal our situation was there were always others who had it worse. By now I understood why occasionally some Korean civilians were hostile to us. To them we had come here only to protect China’s interests–by so doing, we couldn’t help but ruin their homes, fields, and livelihoods. From their standpoint, if the Chinese army hadn’t crossed the Yalu, millions of lives, both civilian and military, would have been saved. Of course, the United States would then have occupied all of Korea, forcing China to build defenses in Manchuria, which would have been much more costly than sending troops to fight in our neighboring country. As it was, the Koreans had taken the brunt of the destruction of this war, whereas we Chinese were here mainly to keep its flames away from our border. Or, as most of the POWs believed, perhaps rightly, we had served as cannon fodder for the Russians. It was true that the Koreans had started the war themselves, but a small country like theirs could only end up being a battleground for bigger powers. Whoever won this war, Korea would be the loser.

The Chinese were to an extent cannon fodder for the Russians, but Mao Zedong was eager from the start to jump into this war but Kim Il Sung wouldn’t let him due to concerns about the Chinese wanting to subjugate Korea like the Chinese have in the past. Kim Il Sung only invited Chinese troops into the war once it was clear he had no chance of winning. If China had joined the war earlier the Pusan Perimeter would have never held and Korea would be a very different place today.

I also realized why some Koreans, especially those living south of the Thirty-eighth Parallel, seemed to prefer the American army to us. Not having enough food supplies or money, we had to press them for rice, sweet potatoes, any edibles, and sometimes we stole dried fish and chilies from under their eaves, grabbed crops from their fields and orchards, and even dug out their grain seeds to eat. By contrast, the Americans had everything they needed and didn’t go to the civilians for necessities. Whenever the U.S. troops decamped, the local folks would rush to the site to pick up stuff discarded by them, such as telephone wires, shell boxes, cartridge cases, half-eaten bread, cans, soggy cigarettes, ruptured tires, used batteries. We thought we had come all the way to help the Koreans, but some of us had willy-nilly ended up their despoilers.

If you ask some Koreans now a days, the US GI’s during the war only rounded up civilians and shot them underneath bridges. I will need to get this book soon and read it. I haven’t read a book yet on the Korean War from a Chinese soldiers perspective. So it should be interesting reading.


0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Mr. Smarty Pants
Mr. Smarty Pants
19 years ago

This is a pretty serious book, GI. I read it back in February. It's more of a character study, contrasting the behaviors and mentalities of the different groups within the POW camp system, than an historical study. I don't knoe how much of it is actual, documented, historical event; it doesn't really matter since this is pretty engaging fiction. Good luck. There's not too much in it that your puny GI mind will be able to wrap around; this book won't do for most who buy their books from the Camp Caey PX.

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x