- British Commonwealth Forces Korea
British Commonwealth Forces Korea (BCFK) was the formal name, from 1952, of the Commonwealth army, naval and air units serving with the
United Nations (UN) in theKorean War .Australia n, British, Canadian,India n andNew Zealand units were part of BCFK. Some Commonwealth units and personnel served withUnited States and/or other UN formations, which were not part of BCFK. [For example, No. 2 Squadron,South African Air Force was part of the US 18th Fighter-Bomber Wing in Korea, flyingP-51 s andF-86 s.]In 1949, Australian units based with the
British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) inJapan were among the first UN personnel to be deployed inSouth Korea . Prior to 1952, the BCOF commanders inJapan officially controlled all Commonwealth personnel in Korea. When theSan Francisco Treaty took effect in April 1952, the BCOF was superseded by BCFK. The position of BCFK Commander-in-Chief was always held byAustralian Army officers, the first being Lt Gen. SirHorace Robertson . Liaison between the Commonwealth C-in-C and the UN high command was provided by a subordinate headquarters inTokyo .By the time BCFK came into being, the Commonwealth armies had formed the
1st Commonwealth Division (in July, 1951) and British andCanadian Army personnel predominated at the operational level in the Commonwealth land forces. Lt Gen.William Bridgeford took over from Robertson in October 1951, and he was later succeeded by Lt Gen.Rudolph Bierwirth .The
Royal Navy (RN) usually had at least oneaircraft carrier on station during the war. Five British carriers: "Glory", HMS "Ocean", "Theseus", "Triumph" and "Unicorn" (a maintenance and aircraft transport carrier) were involved in the conflict. TheRoyal Australian Navy (RAN) provided the carrier HMAS "Sydney". The RN, RAN andRoyal Canadian Navy also provided many other warships.The RN carriers provided the only British
fighter plane s to take part in the war. On 9 August 1952 a propeller-driven Sea Fury, piloted by LieutenantPeter Carmichael of No. 802 Squadron, based on HMS "Ocean", shot down aMiG-15 jet fighter , becoming one of only a handful of pilots of propeller planes to have shot down a jet.The only front-line unit from a Commonwealth
air force to serve under BCFK wasRoyal Australian Air Force (RAAF) No. 77 Squadron, which initially flewP-51 Mustang fighters and later converted toGloster Meteor jets. British and Canadian aircrews also served with the RAAF. The onlyRoyal Air Force contribution was a wing ofShort Sunderland flying boats based atIwakuni in Japan.Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca/engraph/Vol4/no4/lecture_e.asp Lt Col. John C. Blaxland, 2004, "The Korean War: Reflections on Shared Australian and Canadian Military Experiences"]
* [http://www.forces.ca/hr/dhh/downloads/Official_Histories/Korea1956_e.pdf Historical Section, General Staff, Army Headquarters, 1956, "Canada's Army in Korea: the United Nations Operations, 1950-53, and their Aftermath" ]
* [http://www.remuseum.org.uk/corpshistory/rem_corps_part19.htm#korea Royal Engineers Museum] Royal Engineers and the Cold War (Korean War)
* [http://www.remuseum.org.uk/rem_col_online.htm Royal Engineers Museum] Royal Engineer pictures of the Korean War
* [http://assoc.orange.fr/france-coree/eurokorvet/uk/minewarfare_korea.htm Invasions of Inchon and Wonsan remembered] French and English supported operations. Allies provide a unique perspective of naval operation in the Korean War...
* fr icon [http://assoc.orange.fr/france-coree/eurokorvet/eurokorvet.htm EuroKorVet] European Korean war Veterans website (non-off)
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