Full text
In case you need a reminder that war is not just evil and destructive, but can also be just plain stupid, study this map. It shows how much territory changed hands after the Korean War, which lasted from 1950 to 1953 and claimed between 2.5 and 4 million lives.
Result: The border between North and South Korea changed from the straight red line to the squiggly white one. North Korea gained 3,900 km 2 (1,500 sq. mi) in the west, but lost 4,300 km 2 (1,660 sq mi) in the east. Thatโs a net win for South Korea of 400 km 2 (160 sq mi), an area about the size of Seattle or one-fourth of Greater London.
53 lives for each football field
Despite great initial advances, first by the North and then by the South, the front line settled near the original border between the two Koreas. Four million lives for 400 km 2 works out to one life per 100m 2 gained by South Korea. To translate that to American: 53 lives were lost for each area the size of a football field.
September 1, 1951, near the 38th parallel in Korea: U.S. Army medics move a wounded soldier into a tent at the 8225th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital. Such moveable operating theaters close to the frontline were an innovation of the Korean War. ( Credit : Stewart/U.S. Army/PhotoQuest/Getty Images)
The squiggly white line is now known as the DMZ, short for โDemilitarized Zone.โ It was originally meant to run along the 38th parallel, although that hasnโt been the case since the war retraced the border.
That initially straight border was first drawn on the night of August 10, 1945, when two young U.S. Army colonels were handed a National Geographic map of Korea and told to find a dividing line that would separate Soviet and American occupation zones. All they had was that map, 30 minutes, and a ruler. The officers โ one of them, Dean Rusk, would later serve as Secretary of State under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson โ chose the 38th parallel because it roughly split the peninsula in half and kept Seoul in the American zone.
Like their counterparts in post-war Germany, Koreaโs communist and capitalist zones of occupation hardened into two separate and ideologically antagonistic states. Unlike the brawling between East and West Germany, the friction between North and South Korea lit the fuse of the Cold Warโs first hot conflict.
MacArthur reverses the Southโs flagging fortunes
Things came to a head in June 1950, when North Korean troops poured south across the 38th parallel. They advanced fast. By August, they had kettled the lightly armed South Koreans and a hastily assembled U.S.-led auxiliary force of the United Nations into a tiny perimeter around the southern port of Pusan. Under the brilliant leadership of U.S. General Douglas MacArthur, the UN forces managed an equally swift reversal of fortune, crossing the 38th parallel in pursuit of the retreating Northerners by October.
By November, MacArthur had reached the Yalu River on the border with China, which triggered a counterattack by hundreds of thousands of Chinese โvolunteersโ. UN forces once again retreated south, Seoul once again fell to the North, until the pendulum swung the other way once more. The UN pushed north again. By July 1951, the frontline eventually settled close to the current DMZ. Armistice negotiations took two years, during which time tens of thousands more lives were lost to intermittent fighting.
Month-by-month overview of the rapidly changing frontline in the Korean War. Top row: June to December 1950. In that first year, both parties came close to total defeat and total victory. Bottom row: January to July 1951. By that month, the frontline had stabilized to its present course, but armistice negotiations would carry on for another two years before hostilities were concluded. (Credit: Leomonaci98, CC BY-SA 3.0)
The bloody cost of taking, losing, and retaking terrain in Korea still distantly echoes in such half-remembered names as Heartbreak Ridge, Bloody Ridge, and Pork Chop Hill. As a bloody, pointless conflict essentially fought to a stalemate, the Korean War has been easily overshadowed by the Second World War, in which the U.S. was victorious. It would later be almost entirely erased from public memory by the ignominy of the Vietnam War, Americaโs most traumatic defeat.
The forgotten, never-ending war
Korea is the โForgotten War,โ which is darkly ironic because there was no formal peace treaty. Officially, it hasnโt ended yet.
If the Korean War has left an imprint on American culture, it is through M*A*S*H , Robert Altmanโs 1970 film. Set in a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War, the film was obviously, transparently, unmistakably a commentary on the Vietnam War. It later spawned a popular TV show that ran from 1972 to 1983, lasting eight years longer than the war it depicted. The series finale was watched by 106 million Americans, the largest audience for a scripted TV event in U.S. history. (The most-watched TV event overall was the Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969, with over 125 million viewers.)
Today, Korea itself remains divided by a zone that may be demilitarized, but only to separate two massive war machines. With the war technically still on, hair-trigger protocols mean incidents remain possible and vigilance necessary.
On June 30, 2019, during his summit with North Korean strongman Kim Jong Un (pictured left), Donald Trump briefly stepped over the low kerb at Panmunjom in the DMZ that separates both Koreas, becoming the first U.S. President to visit North Korea, a country with which America technically is still at war. ( Credit : public domain)
Serendipitously, the DMZ โ a four-km (2.5-mi) wide strip of land untouched by either side for 70-plus years โ has become one of the most biodiverse habitats in the world, home to an estimated 6,000 species, including more than 100 protected ones, such as the red-crowned crane, the Asiatic black bear, and the Amur leopard.
For nature, an unexpected sanctuary; for people, an unbridgeable chasm. The twice-accidental border (drawn and re-drawn haphazardly) separates a people that share a history, a language, a cuisine, and a genome into two societies that couldnโt be more different and are drifting ever further apart.
North Koreans are shorter and weigh less
North Korea is a totalitarian hereditary monarchy masquerading as a socialist republic, simultaneously operating a famine economy and a nuclear arsenal. South Korea is a liberal democracy that has risen from war-induced poverty to become the worldโs 12th-largest economy and a global pop-cultural powerhouse. Due to differences in nutrition, the average North Korean adult is now about 7 cm (2.8 in) shorter and 9 kg (20 lb) lighter than their southern counterpart.
The DMZ is a reminder that borders are not a fact of nature; they are the result of force. It is also a stark reminder that the Korean War settled nothing. The peninsula is still divided. The war is not over. American soldiers are still stationed in the South, the North has gone nuclear, and the two sides still occasionally exchange fire.
War is stupid, but thatโs a lesson that even 4 million dead, over just 400 km 2 of territory, struggle to get across.
With the surprise amphibious landing at Inchon on 15 September 1950, far from the Pusan Perimeter, began the fightback of the UN and South Korean forces that would quickly drive the North Koreans back across the 38th parallel, and far beyond. Mastermind of the operation, codenamed Operation Chromite, was U.S. General Douglas MacArthur, commander of the UN and South Korean forces. ( Credit : U.S. Navy โ public domain; colorization by Ruland Kolen)
Strange Maps #12XX
Got a strange map? Let me know at strangemaps@gmail.com .
Follow Strange Maps on X and Facebook .
This article A brief reminder of the folly of war (Korea edition) is featured on Big Think .
Comments
No comments yet โ be the first to weigh in ๐
No comments yet. Be the first!