- UN Offensive, 1950
The first
United Nations (UN) offensive during theKorean War began onSeptember 15 ,1950 , with the U.S. X Corps, under Army Maj. Gen. Edward M. Almond, making an amphibious assault at Inchon, 150 miles north of the battle front. In the south, theEighth U.S. Army , made up of U.S., ROK, and British forces, counterattacked the next day. The 1st Marine Air Wing provided air support for the landing atInchon while the Fifth Air Force likewise supported the Eighth Army. OnSeptember 16 , as part of a strategic bombing campaign, the FEAF bombedPyongyang , the capital ofNorth Korea , andWonsan , an east coast port 80 miles north of the38th parallel .U.S. Marines attached to X Corps captured
Kimpo Air Base nearSeoul onSeptember 17 . Two days later the first FEAF cargo carrier landed there, inaugurating an around-the-clock airlift of supplies, fuel, and troops. C-54s returned wounded personnel to hospitals in Japan, and C-119s airdropped supplies to front-line forces. Bad weather hindered close air support of the Eighth Army, but on the 26th the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division forged out of the Pusan Perimeter north ofTaegu and within a day thrust northward to link up with 7th Infantry Division forces nearOsan , 25 miles south of Seoul. Air controllers, using tactics similar to those developed in France during World War II, accompanied the advancing tank columns, supported tank commanders with aerial reconnaissance, and called in close air support missions as needed. OnSeptember 26 , GeneralDouglas MacArthur announced the recapture of Seoul, but street fighting continued for several more days.For a time in August and September 1950, before the recapture of Kimpo, all FEAF flying units had to fly from bases in Japan. The only continuously usable tactical base in Korea was Taegu, which the FEAF used as a staging field to refuel and arm tactical aircraft. On
September 28 fighter-bombers returned permanently to Taegu. As US forces swept North Korean troops from South Korea, aviation engineers rebuilt the airfields, beginning with Pohang, on the east coast 50 miles northeast of Taegu. USAF flying units returned onOctober 7 toPohang and to other rebuilt airfields at Kimpo, near Seoul, and atSuwon , 20 miles south of Seoul.Supported by a UN resolution, President
Harry S. Truman directed the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff to authorize pursuit of the retreating North Korean forces, and onOctober 9 the Eighth Army crossed the 38th parallel nearKaesong . American andSouth Korean forces entered the North Korean capital of Pyongyang onOctober 19 . FEAF B-29s and B-26s continued to bomb surface transport lines and military targets in North Korea, while B-26s, F-51s, and F-80s provided close air support to ground troops. FEAF also furnished photographic reconnaissance, airlift, and air medical evacuation. For example, onOctober 20 the air force's troop carriers delivered 2,860 paratroopers and more than 301 tons of equipment and supplies to drop zones near Sukchon and Sunchon, 30 miles northeast of Pyongyang. The airborne troops by-passed strong defenses established by the North Koreans, and taken by surprise, the enemy troops abandoned their positions to retreat further northward.Meantime, on the east coast of Korea, the ROK forces crossed the 38th parallel on
October 1 , and 10 days later capturedWonsan . OnOctober 26 South Korean forces reached theYalu River atChosan , 120 miles north of Pyongyang. Communist forces counterattacked within 2 days along the ROK lines near Chosan, forcing the South Koreans to retreat. ThePeople's Republic of China had entered the conflict against the Eighth U.S. Army in Korea in the west, and the U.S. X Corps in the east. At this point, the war in Korea took on an entirely different character as the tide turned against the UN forces.References
[http://afhra.maxwell.af.mil/korean_war/korean_war_campaigns/un_offensive_091650_110250.html UN Offensive, 1950]
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