Koje-do Reference

  • Sequence of Events
    • January 1951, the UNC decided to isolate captured personnel on Koje-do, an island off the southern coast of Korea.
      • Col. Hartley F. Dame, the first camp commander, had to build dams and store rain water to service the 118,000 natives, 100,000 refugees, and 150,000 prisoners.
      • by the end of the month over 50,000 POW's were moved from the mainland to Koje-do.
    • Four enclosures, each subdivided into eight compounds, were built.
      • Originally intended to hold 700-1,200 men apiece, the compounds were soon jammed to five times their capacity.
      • The space between the compounds soon had to be used to confine the prisoners too, with only barbed wire separating each compound from the next, permitting free communications between all the prisoners.
      • With the number of security personnel limited and usually of inferior caliber, proper control was difficult at the outset and later became impossible.
      • Outbreaks of dissension and open resistance were desultory until the negotiations at Kaesong got under way.
    • September 1951 fifteen prisoners were murdered by a self-appointed people's court. Three more were killed when rioting broke out on the 19th in Compound 78.
      • The camp commander was not permitted by his superiors in Washington to institute effective disciplinary control.
    • December, 1951, rival factions - Communist and anti-Communist - vied for control of the compounds.
      • A large-scale rock fight between compounds on 18 December was followed by riots and demonstrations. Fourteen deaths and twenty-four other casualties resulted.
    • February, 1952, Compound 62 refused UN access for prisoner interrogation (screening).
      • February 18: 3rd Btn 27th Infantry moved in and were attacked by over a thousand prisoners, armed with improvised weapons.
      • The 27th opened fire, killing fifty-five prisoners immediately, 22 more dying at the hospital, with over 140 other casualties. The 27th lost 1 killed and 38 wounded.
    • March 13, 1952. An anti-Communist detail and their ROK guards, while passing a hostile compound, were stoned. Without orders the guards retaliated with gunfire.
      • 12 prisoners were killed and 26 were wounded while 1 ROK civilian and 1 U.S. officer, who tried to stop the shooting, were injured.
    • May 7, 1952. General Dodd, the camp commandant, lured to the unlocked gate of Compound 76 on pretense of discussions to ease camp tensions, was violently set on and captured.
      • Rather than forcing a military solution which would have cost the General's life as well as that of untold numbers of the prisoners, replacement commandant General Colson and the reinforced 38th Infantry Regiment sat and watched as the communists put General Dodd on trial on criminal charges for abuse of prisoners, a farce unequalled in modern military history.
      • May 9, after comic-opera negotiations, with real lives at stake, General Dodd was released.
      • Subsequently, both Generals Dodd and Colson were reduced in rank to Colonel.
      • Brig. Gen. Haydon L. Boatner, assistant division commander of the 2d Division, was appointed new commander of Koje-do.
    • June 4, 1952. 38th Regiment infantry, supported by two tanks, quickly smashed through Compound 85 and Compound 96, rescuing 85 anti-communist POWs, without casualties.
    • June 10, 1952. Paratroopers of the 187th Airborne RCT moved into Compound 76 without firing a shot. Using only concussion grenades, tear gas, bayonets, and fists, they drove or dragged the prisoners out of the trenches they had built within the compound. As a half-dozen Patton tanks rolled in resistance collapsed.
      • Colonel Lee was captured and dragged by the seat of his pants out of the compound.
      • During the two-and-a-half-hour battle, 31 prisoners were killed, many by the Communists themselves, and 139 were wounded.
      • One U.S. Paratrooper was speared to death and 14 were injured.
      • Leaders of Compounds 78 and 77 swiftly agreed to do whatever Boatner wanted.
      • In Compound 77 the bodies of sixteen murdered men were found.
Communist Weapons

Some of the weapons seized in compound 76
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About Vietnam Protesters

A SOLDIER DIED TODAY

He was getting old and paunchy and his hair was falling fast,
And he sat around the Legion, telling stories of the past.
Of a war that he had fought in and the deeds that he had done,
In his exploits with his buddies; they were heroes, every one.

And tho' sometimes, to his neighbors, his tales became a joke,
All his Legion buddies listened, for they knew whereof he spoke.
But we'll hear his tales no longer for old Bill has passed away,
And the world's a little poorer, for a soldier died today.

He will not be mourned by many, just his children and his wife,
For he lived an ordinary and quite uneventful life.
Held a job and raised a family, quietly going his own way,
And the world won't note his passing, though a soldier died today.

When politicians leave this earth, their bodies lie in state,
While thousands note their passing and proclaim that they were great.
Papers tell their whole life stories, from the time that they were young,
But the passing of a soldier goes unnoticed and unsung.

Is the greatest contribution to the welfare of our land
A guy who breaks his promises and cons his fellow man?
Or the ordinary fellow who, in times of war and strife,
Goes off to serve his Country and offers up his life?

A politician's stipend and the style in which he lives
Are sometimes disproportionate to the service that he gives.
While the ordinary soldier, who offered up his all,
Is paid off with a medal and perhaps, a pension small.

It's so easy to forget them for it was so long ago,
That the old Bills of our Country went to battle, but we know
It was not the politicians, with their compromise and ploys,
Who won for us the freedom that our Country now enjoys.

Should you find yourself in danger, with your enemies at hand,
Would you want a politician with his ever-shifting stand?
Or would you prefer a soldier, who has sworn to defend
His home, his kin and Country and would fight until the end?

He was just a common soldier and his ranks are growing thin,
But his presence should remind us we may need his like again.
For when countries are in conflict, then we find the soldier's part
Is to clean up all the troubles that the politicians start.

If we cannot do him honor while he's here to hear the praise,
Then at least let's give him homage at the ending of his days.
Perhaps just a simple headline in a paper that would say,

Our Country is in mourning, for

A SOLDIER DIED TODAY

© 1987 A. Lawrence Vaincourt



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