In 1999, the Associated Press ran what would later become a Pulitzer prize winning article about an incident that had occured during the Korean War, almost 50 years prior, at a place named No Gun Ri.
At the time, allegations were made via a declassified memo that soldiers had been ordered to shoot approaching refugees from South Korea. The AP’s story was met with criticism by other news outlets but the Pentagon took up an investigation.
The Pentagon concluded that the No Gun Ri shootings, which lasted three days, were “an unfortunate tragedy” — “not a deliberate killing.” It suggested panicky soldiers, acting without orders, opened fire because they feared that an approaching line of families, baggage and farm animals concealed enemy troops.
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The reality of the situation, however, is quite different from the conclusions of the Pentagon’s findings.
The soldiers were following orders from the US ambassador to Seoul.
More than a half-century after hostilities ended in Korea, a document from the war’s chaotic early days has come to light — a letter from the U.S. ambassador to Seoul, informing the State Department that American soldiers would shoot refugees approaching their lines.
The letter — dated the day of the Army’s mass killing of South Korean refugees at No Gun Ri in 1950 — is the strongest indication yet that such a policy existed for all U.S. forces in Korea, and the first evidence that that policy was known to upper ranks of the U.S. government.
“If refugees do appear from north of US lines they will receive warning shots, and if they then persist in advancing they will be shot,” wrote Ambassador John J. Muccio, in his message to Assistant Secretary of State Dean Rusk.
The letter reported on decisions made at a high-level meeting in South Korea on July 25, 1950, the night before the 7th U.S. Cavalry Regiment shot the refugees at No Gun Ri.
But Muccio’s letter indicates the actions of the 7th Cavalry were consistent with policy, adopted because of concern that North Koreans would infiltrate via refugee columns. And in subsequent months, U.S. commanders repeatedly ordered refugees shot, documents show.
The Muccio letter, declassified in 1982, is discussed in a new book by American historian Sahr Conway-Lanz, who discovered the document at the U.S. National Archives, where the AP also has obtained a copy.
The Army report’s own list of sources for the 1999-2001 investigation shows its researchers reviewed the microfilm containing the Muccio letter. But the 300-page report did not mention it.
Asked about this, Pentagon spokeswoman Betsy Weiner would say only that the Army inspector general’s report was “an accurate and objective portrayal of the available facts based on 13 months of work.”
There are varied estimates on the number of civilians shot.
When Bill Clinton was president he offered an apology for the incident and established a memorial scholarship fund.
Survivors said U.S. soldiers first forced them from nearby villages on July 25, 1950, and then stopped them in front of U.S. lines the next day, when they were attacked without warning by aircraft as hundreds sat atop a railroad embankment. Troops of the 7th Cavalry followed with ground fire as survivors took shelter under a railroad bridge.
The late Army Col. Robert M. Carroll, a lieutenant at No Gun Ri, said he remembered the order radioed across the warfront on the morning of July 26 to stop refugees from crossing battle lines. “What do you do when you’re told nobody comes through?” he said in a 1998 interview. “We had to shoot them to hold them back.”
Just following orders…
Since that episode was confirmed in 1999, South Koreans have lodged complaints with the Seoul government about more than 60 other alleged large-scale killings of refugees by the U.S. military in the 1950-53 war.
The Army report of 2001 acknowledged investigators learned of other, unspecified civilian killings, but said these would not be investigated.
Meanwhile, AP research uncovered at least 19 declassified U.S. military documents showing commanders ordered or authorized such killings in 1950-51.
In a statement issued Monday in Seoul, a No Gun Ri survivors group called that episode “a clear war crime,” demanded an apology and compensation from the U.S. government, and said the U.S. Congress and the United Nations should conduct investigations. The survivors also said they would file a lawsuit against the Pentagon for alleged manipulation of the earlier probe.
Justice takes a very long time indeed if it is, in fact, ever realized in matters of war.
The Pentagon’s report on No Gun Ri can be found here.
Crossposted from liberal catnip.
I wonder why anyone thinks war is or can be governed by ethical rules.
I wonder if anyone here will try to justify this policy decision or defend the top brass and diplomats who thought it necessary and advisable to slaughter civilians as a defensive strategy.
I wonder if it will take 50 years for similar Iraq war documents to come to light.
I wonder if it will take 50 years for similar Iraq war documents to come to light.
Afaic, the military should not be investigating its own affairs. Too often they either falsify conclusions or, when perpetrators are found guilty, they mete out very light sentences – if any sentence is brought down at all.
In today’s environment of secrecy I have no doubt that we will still be learning the actual facts about the Iraq and Afghanistan wars decades down the line. How some people can go through life with such atrocities on their minds is beyond me. Or perhaps that’s the problem, they truly believe they have done nothing wrong – completely denying reason with no sense of humanity or compassion.
It is at that point that soldiers cease to be vehicles for so-called freedom.
On this day, while most people are honouring soldiers who supposedly died for that freedom, the innocent civilians who died must be remembered as well. They, however, do not have wreaths placed on their graves by the powerful. They are only “collateral damage”.
And, let me add one thing about the Haditha massacre: while right-wing bloggers are dragging Murtha through the mud, they seem to conveniently forget that hundreds of men and children have been held in Gitmo for years who have never been charged with anything. They are presumed guilty until proven innocent. Where’s the outrage on the right about that? They seem to save that not for Marines who are suspected of war crimes but for anyone who dares reveal evidence of such claims. They’re innocent until proven guilty, they cry out. But, they can’t bring themselves to give the Gitmo detainees the same justice.
75 Gitmos detainees are currently on a hunger strike. No doubt, the military will once again force feed them, which is contrary to the Geneva Conventions. But, we all know those conventions just don’t apply to so-called enemy combatants. Hunger strikers are an embarrassment to the Bush administration.
So, on Memorial Day in the US, there is much to remember and it must not only be about the so-called bravery of soldiers – actions of which we may never know the real truth. It must be about all aspects and victims of war or such a day means absolutely nothing.
The Independent UK posted on this
Revealed in the same timeline as the Haditha massacre (now gaining worldwide coverage), places the US in a pattern. And Karen Hughes and Elizabeth Cheney(remember those two?) are missing in action.
btw The Independent UK, reports, in 01 June edition, that Bush promises to punish ‘massacre’ marines. But adds, in addition to Haditha, there’s a separate case involving US soldiers in Samarra. . WARNING: It’s for exceptionally strong stomachs.
See last paragraph in this article.
What have we wrought?
Several Pinochet events in waiting.
How ironic that it was the U.S. 7th Cavalry.
I remember when this came to light back in ’99. I didn’t realize that there was a continued effort to demand reparations.
I just watched the movie We Were Soldiers on TV last nite, which also involved the 7th Calvary. I didn’t realize, until after the movie when I Googled the story, that the second half of the battle was not portrayed. Here’s why, according to Wiki:
Sanitized truth. No wonder though, since the Pentagon has people in charge of reviewing what Hollywood puts out about the military.
I know…body count and all. My reference to the 7th Cavalry was because of it’s attack on Sitting Bull and the Lakota/Cheyenne encampment at Little Big Horn.
Yes, Mel Gibson’s character mentioned that in the movie as well.
It is probably and unfortunately impossible to prevent every unjust killing in a war situation, but to hide our wrongs only means we cannot develop as a society.
We have all heard of the 450,000 German POWs who died in Siberia after the war. Yet who has heard of the up to 700,000 still missing who were captured and held by us and the French? We have all heard of the Germans who came to the West to avoid surrendering to the Soviets, but who has heard of the Germans who fought their way north to surrender to the British and avoid capture by the French or us? Why did the French Foreign Legion have such a large German contingent in Vietnam? Basically they signed up to avoid being starved to death in camps. How many know the stories of German POWs being left to eat only the grass in their US camp at Remagen?
This list of massacres and war crimes can be expanded, but the point is that we have hidden our own attrocities from our own people for so many years. While this may make them feel comfortable and better than others it has not led to us developing as a society. It has meant that we still do the same now. Will we learn from Abu Ghraib etc? It doesnt look likely because our government still want to censor us from seeing the worst, and still cover up and fail to punish.
Well said, observer, and what you mentioned about the German POWs is news to me. Thanks for writing about it.
Catnip, what i mention is just a small contribution. i prefer to just post comments. People like you who are doing the diaries deserve the thanks. Without the diaries i probably wouldnt mention anything, so thank you.
That depends on how you define “small”. Afaic, every nugget of real truth made available is huge.
observer,
any chance you could point me in the direction of some resources about these German Pow’s?
Thanks