The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War (102 page)

Read The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War Online

Authors: David Halberstam

Tags: #History, #Politics, #bought-and-paid-for, #Non-Fiction, #War

BOOK: The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War
2.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 

“God’s right hand man”
: Nellie Noland interview, Harry S. Truman Library.

his staff pressured him to go
: Charles Murphy interview, Harry S. Truman Library.

“king go to the prince”
: Matt Connelly interview, Harry S. Truman Library.

“the attributes of a foreign sovereign”
: Acheson, Dean,
Present at the Creation,
p. 456.

“he was still fighting”
: John Muccio interview, Harry S. Truman Library.

“all American soldiers regardless”
: Walters, Vernon A.,
Silent Missions,
p. 204.

“the Chinese are about to intervene”
: interview with Vernon A. Walters, American Masters, WGBH Television.

“the Palace Guard”
: author interview with Frank Gibney.

more smoke blown in his face
: Toland, John,
In Mortal Combat,
p. 241.

no commander in history
: Ibid., pp. 241–242; Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
pp. 346–349; Spurr, Russell,
Enter the Dragon,
p. 159.

“before we get in trouble”
: Dean Rusk interview, Harry S. Truman Library.

“as if they were the heads of different”
: Gunther, John,
The Riddle of MacArthur,
p. 200.

“a different idea of what it was”
: Acheson, Dean,
Present at the Creation,
p. 455.

“luster to his dream of victory”
: Ridgway, Matthew B.,
The Korean War,
pp. 37–38; Spurr, Russell,
Enter the Dragon,
p. 158; Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 188.

“honestly believes he’s a patriot”
:
New York World-Telegram,
April 8, 1964.

“how completely oblivious”
: author interview with Matthew B. Ridgway.

“obedient, dutiful, childlike, and quick”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 97.

was the Chinese commander
: Weintraub, Stanley,
MacArthur’s War,
p. 291.

“some old war horse similar to”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 103.

fixed, immobile Japanese:
Collins, J. Lawton,
War in Peacetime
, p. 215.

“know your enemy”
: Mike Lynch interview, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

to events he did not like
: Perret, Geoffrey,
Old Soldiers Never Die,
p. 551.

for his official file explaining
: Morris, Carol Petillo,
Douglas MacArthur: The Philippine Years,
pp. 204–213.

“An arrogant enemy,” he added
: Chen Jian,
China’s Road to the Korean War,
p. 148.

“nothing again should ever hurt him”
: Lee, Clark, and Henschel, Richard,
Douglas MacArthur,
p. 166.

“You have a court”
: Acheson, Dean,
Present at the Creation,
p. 424.

“sycophancy was what tripped him up”
: Weintraub, Stanley,
MacArthur’s War,
p. 161.

“the dreamworld of self worship”
: Stueck, William,
Rethinking the Korean War,
p. 113.

and arrogant was he
: author interview with Carleton West.

“too much of a Prussian accent?”
: D. Clayton James interview with Roger Egeberg, MacArthur Memorial Library.

“all ideology”
: author interview with Frank Wisner, Jr.

“give England to the Germans”
: Naval Historical Center Colloquium on Contemporary History, June 20, 1990.

“a friend of the United States”
: Kluckhohn, Frank, the
Reporter
, August 19, 1952.

“than the people at the Dai Ichi”
: author interview with Frank Gibney.

“and headed towards Washington”
: Ibid.

“the faceless mob driven by”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 106.

“of Communism would trump mine”
: author interview with Joseph Fromm.

“that headquarters to deal with reality”
: Ibid.

“subjugation of the Western world”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 112.

eventually passed on to McCarthy
: Ibid.

“had been so outspoken about him”
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.

“Willoughby falsified the intelligence”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 377.

“where it would have to be acted on”
: author interview with Bill Train.

had not been so deadly serious
: author interview with Carleton Swift.

“that he had made up his mind on”
: Ibid.

anyone higher up about the intelligence
: author interview with Robert Myers.

“the enormous power that Willoughby had”
: author interview with Bill Train.

“to a low point of effectiveness”
: Heefner, Wilson,
Patton’s Bulldog,
p. 264.

indicate a serious Chinese presence
: Ibid., p. 272.

“was very much under his shadow”
: author interview with Bill Train.

“was unduly influenced by Willoughby”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 379.

“but not the full armies themselves”
: Heefner, Wilson,
Patton’s Bulldog,
p. 272.

“moving into that awful goddamn trap”
: author interview with Bill Train.

“a lot of Mexicans in Los Angeles”
: Tom Lambert interview, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

 

CHAPTER
26

 

“know Karl Marx from Groucho Marx”
: Bayley, Edwin,
Joe McCarthy and the Press,
p. 68.

“you’ve got to be a Communist”
: Ibid., p. 73.

“pig in a minefield”
: author interview with Murray Kempton for
The Fifties.

“only a mucker can muck”
: Oshinsky, David,
A Conspiracy So Immense,
p. 174.

“should proceed with another”
: Patterson, James,
Mr. Republican,
p. 455.

“the most nefarious campaign”
: Oshinsky, David,
A Conspiracy So Immense,
pp. 168–169.

“how things had changed”
: Ibid., p. 178.

“without gaining that of the Chinese”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 400.

his virtual disobedience
: Ridgway, Matthew B.,
The Korean War,
p. 65.

“they will get Christmas dinner at home”
: Toland, John,
In Mortal Combat,
p. 281.

he simply said, “Bullshit”
: Ibid., p. 282.

“the first time he smells Chinese chow”
: Ibid., Heefner, Wilson,
Patton’s Bulldog,
pp. 281–282; author interview with Layton Tyner; Tyner interviews with Toland, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

“hit the jackpot”
: Weintraub, Stanley,
MacArthur’s War,
p. 221.

“like Custer at the Little Big Horn”
: Ridgway, Matthew B.,
The Korean War,
p. 63.

“the most fitting conclusion”
: Perret, Geoffrey,
Old Soldiers Never Die,
p. 548.

 

CHAPTER
27

 

a friendly little tank-shove
: author interview with Jim Hinton.

“to be disappearing into the vast”
: Ibid.

from the very face of the earth
: author interview with Paul O’Dowd.

“less able to support us each day”
: author interview with John Carley.

“couldn’t get anyone to act on it”
: author interview with Malcolm MacDonald.

the time was not quite right to attack
: author interview with Sam Mace.

no one seemed very interested
: author interviews with John Eisenhower and Dick Gruenther.

“a phantom which cast no shadow”
: Marshall, S. L. A.,
The River and the Gauntlet,
p. 1.

The next day the Chinese hit
: author interview with John Eisenhower.

 

CHAPTER
28

 

bandaged up and wrapped in blankets
: author interview with Sherman Pratt; Pratt, Sherman,
Decisive Battles of the Korean War,
pp. 15–20.

“From here I just don’t see a solution”
: letters of Paul Freeman courtesy of Anne Sewell Freeman McLeod and Roy McLeod.

 

CHAPTER
29

 

beyond their comprehension
: author interview with Alan Jones.

disgrace the Takahashi name
: author interview with Gene Takahashi.

could dry their clothes
: Ibid.

retreating to a higher point on the mountain
: author interview with Dick Raybould.

in a moment of total cowardice
: author interview with Bruce Ritter.

and got both Smith and White out
: author interviews with John Ritter, Billie Tinkle, and John Yates.

a huge pile of enemy bodies
: author interview with Sam Mace.

“knowing a Chinaman when I see one”
: author interview with Charley Heath.

the fear in the air
: author interview with Sam Mace.

in conversation, the Big Ego
: Ibid.; Spurr, Russell,
Enter the Dragon,
p. 193.

 

CHAPTER
30

 

just as endangered
: Paul Freeman oral history, U.S. Army War College Library.

“because we were set up to fail”
: author interview with Dick Raybould.

“MacArthur could do no wrong”
: Appleman, Roy,
Escaping the Trap,
p. 47.

“Ned was aggressive”
: Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
p. 32.

“can those things float?”
: Victor Krulak oral history, U.S. Marine Corps History Division.

“always lengthy shitlist”
: Russ, Martin,
Breakout,
p. 17.

“enough to form an additional regiment”
: Hoffman, Jon T.,
Chesty,
pp. 370–371.

the Congressional Medal of Honor
: author interview with James Lawrence.

“if only he would put on a little weight”
: Russ, Martin,
Breakout,
p. 186.


It might take only two”
: Sloan, Bill,
Brotherhood of Heroes,
p. 58.

the ten thousand Japanese soldiers
: Ibid., p. 310.

“may have saved the Marine Division”
: Alpha Bowser oral history, U.S. Marine Corps History Division.

had mounted in Europe
: Ibid.

“Even Genghis Khan wouldn’t”
: Russ, Martin,
Breakout,
p. 64.


he got away with it at Inchon
”: D. Clayton James interview with Oliver P. Smith, MacArthur Memorial Library.

or the last time he would use it
: Hoffman, Jon T.,
Chesty,
p. 378.

not part of any massive Chinese
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.

Other books

The Amber Room by Berry, Steve
Deliver us from Evil by Tom Holland
The Places in Between by Rory Stewart
Bondmaiden by B.A. Bradbury
The Day of the Nefilim by David L. Major
The Killer Trail by D. B. Carew
Poached Egg on Toast by Frances Itani