How O.P. Smith Saved 15000 Marines

Thomas Ricks’ candidate for the most underrated general in American history is Gen. O.P. Smith, who commanded the Marines at the Battle of Chosin Reservoir in North Korea, a decisive battle in the Korean War. Ricks is an author, reporter and senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security. [6/2011] [Show ID: 21094]
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Пікірлер: 380

  • @bonniebradley429
    @bonniebradley4292 жыл бұрын

    Louis Katz passed August 8, 2021, one of the last surviving members of the Chosin Reservoir. Rest in peace Marine.

  • @dennistate5953

    @dennistate5953

    3 ай бұрын

    My grandpa was 26 they called him Pops. 1st Marines will never forget. Ooh rah!❤❤❤

  • @brianhuss9184
    @brianhuss91848 жыл бұрын

    The 31st Infantry Regiment may be the most hard-luck regiment in the US Army. 1919-1920 they fought in Siberia, 1941-42 they were in the Philippines and wound up in the Bataan Death March, and here they were at Chosin Reservoir. Poor bastards!

  • @Brecconable

    @Brecconable

    8 жыл бұрын

    Poor bastards indeed. RIP!

  • @bernardmiller2998

    @bernardmiller2998

    7 жыл бұрын

    Brecconable nj

  • @ExiledSpiritunderground

    @ExiledSpiritunderground

    5 жыл бұрын

    Jesus,. Talk about some luck. Makes you wonder whose had the generational curse on em can't imagine what future history would have ìN store for the 31st,. But GøD BLeSs everyone of them may they ALL LIVE FØREVER! Incredible bravery unparalleled ìN all histories of the world.

  • @getsomev35

    @getsomev35

    5 жыл бұрын

    Brian Huss The 1st Marine Corps Division wiped out 6 of the 8 Chinese Divisions in hand to hand fighting. The Army sacrifice was in vain and not necessary. Chesty Puller saved the Marines, every Marine knows that and that’s why this ROTC requiring film is not allowed on the Marines website.

  • @alanstone139

    @alanstone139

    4 жыл бұрын

    Me realizng I'm in the same Regiment 4-31 Polar Bears 🤙🇺🇸🤯

  • @SammyLeeTheMan
    @SammyLeeTheMan10 жыл бұрын

    Today is Christmas Eve and a best time to know more about O.P. Smith. Just want to give my warmest thanks to all American GIs who sacrificed in Hungman and Korea during the Korean War. American troops also saved/evacuated almost 100,000 civilians from Hung Nam. Merry Christmas to all!

  • @vanwahlgren8451

    @vanwahlgren8451

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sammy You owe thanks to LTG Ned Almond for forcing the evacuation of these civilians to Pusan. He made it happen on the Miracle Ship.

  • @vanwahlgren8451
    @vanwahlgren8451 Жыл бұрын

    The Chosin Campaign was very brutal. From all accounts, the 1st marine division sustained nearly as many casualties as the 31st RCT. The Cold weather saved the 10th Corps. Gen Almond helped thousands of Korean civilians escape their fate in N Korea at the final withdrawal. Tom Ricks apparently has access to the mind of General Almond to make the marines vulnerable, and of course, the mind of Gen Smith was to disobey the orders of Gen Almond. Ricks obviously knew that Gen Almond was a "Jerk" after hearing the marine version of the battle. He forgot to tell how Gen Smith failed to help the 31st RCT during their retreat.

  • @alcuinsimon520
    @alcuinsimon52011 жыл бұрын

    I was priviledged to work with his son, Brian Dana Smith, while in the U.S. Navy during the 1970s. It was an honor to know of his Dad through him, and a great joy to work with Brian.

  • @mkat740
    @mkat74011 жыл бұрын

    He should have been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for this. He would not cave to ALmond's pressure to rush up that road and stockpiled supplies because he saw it coming. He saved the Corp from its greatest defeat in history.

  • @richmaker2480
    @richmaker24807 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your sacrifice from S Korea

  • @charlesinglin
    @charlesinglin7 жыл бұрын

    Excellent presentation. Thank you.

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    Ricks does not mention that the 31st RCT stopped a muti division Chinese force from advancing down the East side of the Chosin Reservoir. This is from Roy Appleman's escaping the trap. The Chinese were very inflexible. They could not change plans to adjust for circumstances. They were unaware that the 5th Marines had been moved to the West side of Chosin. The plan called for one Chinese force to hit the 7th Marines on the West Side of Chosin and another to hit the Marines on the East side of Chosin. That force hit the 31st RCT. Army strength on the East Side of Chosin was actually less than regimental, two infantry battalions, and artillery battalion, and two anti aircraft batteris. The third battalion never got to the East side of Chosin. Ricks talks about 5th and 7th Marines fighting two Chinese Divisions for 4 days and 3 nights. The understrength 31st RCT fought elements of three Chinese divisions for 5 days and 4 nights.

  • @shannonpinion5729
    @shannonpinion57293 жыл бұрын

    Pfc. Hector Cafferata of Venice, Fla. won the Medal of Honor. He will tell you he was no hero; he was just saving his backside when he killed over 100 enemy soldiers in the battle for “Fox Hill” during the early months of the Korean War. Pvt. Hector Cafferata was a 20-year-old green Marine replacement. He joined Fox Company’s 2nd Platoon a few days before the first wave of Chinese troops attacked his listening post at the Toktong Pass during the early months of the Korean War that cold November night half a century ago. Six hours later, the hulking 6-foot-3-inch Marine was a seasoned “Jarhead” who had survived a number of human wave assaults by the enemy. When daylight came more than 125 Chinese soldiers lay dead in front of his position. He was officially credited with killing 15 of the enemy and wounding many more because they didn’t think those considering him for a commendation would belive one Marine had killed that many Chinamen, according to his company commander. Cafferata would receive the Medal of Honor from President Harry S. Truman. The young private played a key role in stopping the Chinese attack on his company’s defensive position atop a hill overlooking the pass that controlled the winding dirt road leading south to the coast and freedom. Fox Company was surrounded by at least an enemy regiment. Even so, its job was to hold Tokfong Pass and the road that wound through it. If it didn’t, parts of two Marine regiments at Yudam-ni, further to the north up the road near Manchuria and the Yalu River, could be cut off. If that happened 8,000 Marines might be annihilated by the enemy hordes flooding across the North Korean border from China. When the 246 men of Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 7th Regiment arrived on what would become known as “Fox Hill,” the temperature was well below zero. Despite the freezing temperatures, there was talk in the ranks of the war ending and the troops being home by Christmas 1950. The 1st Marine Division-which included the 1st, 5th and 7th Regiments- more than 20,000 strong-was ordered by Gen. Douglas MacArthur, NATO’s supreme commander in Korea, to march to the Yalu River and back. The distance from Hugnam, along the Sea of Japan, to Chosin was 76 miles. The general’s idea: Run the Communist troops out of Korea and unify the entire country as a democracy. Before the march was over, the 1st Marine Division would be confronted by 21 enemy divisions, more than 200,000 soldiers. They would kill and wound 37,000 of the enemy. An additional 30,000 Chinese soldiers suffered frostbite. The Marines would lose 6,000 killed and wounded, and 6,000 more sustained frostbite. “It must have been around 1:30 a.m. I was zipped up in my sleeping bag lying out on the frozen ground behind some rocks and pine trees we’d cut and put up as a wind break. My buddy, Kenny Benson, was next to me in his sleeping bag. We heard some rifle fire and a machine gun open up. I realized this was for real,” said Cafferata, who now lives in Venice, Fla. “I unzipped my bag and grabbed my M-1 rifle. There were Chinese all around us. I shot five or six right in front of me immediately. “I said to Benson, ‘What are you doing?” “’Putting on my boots,’ he replied. “’Forget the boots. Start shooting,’ I said.” He grabbed his Browning Automatic Rifle, but it was frozen. It was 20 degrees below zero and nothing made of steel operated well in such severe temperatures. “There were Chinese all around us, so I knew we had to get the hell out of there. Benson and I started crawling back toward our lines. I wasn’t sure where we were.” All Cafferata knew for certain was that the enemy was shooting at them and they were shooting back. “Then this grenade plopped down right in front of Benson. I threw myself off to the left to get as far away from it as I could. Benson picked up the grenade and threw it just as it exploded. The explosion broke his glasses and burned his face. He couldn’t see worth a damn and he was all shook up. “I told Benson, ‘Hang on to my foot. We’re going to crawl.’ We crawled up to a wash, where rainwater cut a shallow trench into the side of the hill. I told him, ‘This is where we’re going to stay.’” They found three members of their squad badly injured hiding in the same gully. Cafferata took the three injured Marines’ M-1s from them. “By the time we looked up, the Chinese were right there on top of us again. Since Benson couldn’t see, because his glasses were broken, he loaded rifles and passed them to me,” Cafferata said. “For the rest of the night I was batting hand grenades away with my entrenching tool while firing my rifle at them. I must have whacked a dozen grenades that night with my tool. And you know what? I was the world’s worst baseball player. I couldn’t hit a bull in the ass with a baseball bat, but I didn’t miss many that night.”

  • @codyhilton1750
    @codyhilton17505 ай бұрын

    Thank You for your lecture on my favorite Marine General, O.P. Smith. General Smith should have been awarded the Metal of Honor for his leadership at the Chosin Reservior. You mentioned later in your questions and answers, two things of interest to me. Bowser was the CG of Recruit Training at MCRD San Diego in 58 when I was a boot. Later my CO was an Staff NCO, now a Captain, under Puller at Chosin Reservior. When they reached the beach, they went to an Army Mess Tent. Asked where was their mess gear, he replied, "where is your trash for a tin can and place the pancakes right here on my hand." Harbord in WWI was an Army General in charge of the Marine Brigades.

  • @itloads
    @itloads8 жыл бұрын

    One of the greatest presentations on KZread.

  • @syjiang
    @syjiang5 жыл бұрын

    Hi everyone in the comments. Scrolling down I am quite a bit surprised by some people's animosity towards Mr. Ricks' talk. I gather some has personal stake and perhaps the title of his talk was a tinge provocative. Still some discussion are devolving into personal attacks that seemed unnecessary. I have read Rick's book and this specific chapter. Nowhere in his writing did he ever question the bravery or sacrifices of the army soldiers that suffered those staggering losses. His book focused less on minutiae of specific battles but rather on the history of American generalship, their decision making process in combat and their consequences. He was putting forth an argument here that had O.P. Smith not made certain key decisions at the generalship level, the marines would have equally suffered staggering casualties. Rick's writing focused his criticism on general Almond's decisions as X corp commander that placed Faith and his men out on a limb. Perhaps the title of the talk can be upsetting to some as it appears to diminish the sacrifice of the army. There is no doubt that Task Force Faith had mightily contributed to the survival of the marine. But Ricks was just trying to emphasize the point that poor leadership at the highest level costs a lot of lives.

  • @dangankk
    @dangankk11 жыл бұрын

    I joined the Corps in 1957. The veterans worshipped Chesty, but attributed their lives to O.P.

  • @williamreymond2669
    @williamreymond26698 жыл бұрын

    Well, from the Army point of view Regimental Combat Team 31 is generally remembered for holding the eastern side of the reservoir long enough that there was a Hagaru-ri for the Marines to consolidate to. And, like O.P. Smith, apparently, aren't remembered by name by the Marines or their historians.

  • @williamreymond2669

    @williamreymond2669

    8 жыл бұрын

    +bndoc Aside Rick's myopia as a historian [or maybe hystorian] in this particular case, I'm very interested in his analysis of the failures of American generalship since WWII as. I'm not sure yet how accurate an assessment of his theories are - but they are compelling enough to delve into. Any alternative points of view you are aware of? What's interesting for me personally is my path to the US military began with reading about the Chosin battle as a teenager. At that point I assumed I would wind up a Marine. As it turned out I wound up a Ranger - back before Rangers were cool, were two independent battalions, and still wore black berets.

  • @williamreymond2669

    @williamreymond2669

    8 жыл бұрын

    +bndoc Thanks for the recommend.

  • @TheRbrooks502

    @TheRbrooks502

    8 жыл бұрын

    William Reymond. If you are truly interested in a different perspective. Look up Ray Vallowe's book "What History forgot to Record. You can talk to him directly on facebook at "Chosin Reservoir"

  • @vidpie

    @vidpie

    7 жыл бұрын

    "Dear General Cates: I sincerely regret the unfortunate choice of language which I used in my letter of August 29 to Congressman McDonough concerning the Marine Corps. ...in amending (the National Security Act of 1947) in 1949, the Congress considered the question of Marine Corps representation on the Joint Chiefs of Staff and did not provide for it. It is my feeling that many of the renewed pleas for such representation are the result of propaganda inspired by individuals who may not be aware of the best interests of our Defense Establishment as a whole, and it was this feeling which I was expressing to Mr. McDonough. I am certain that the Marine Corps itself does not indulge in such propaganda. I am profoundly aware of the magnificent history of the United States Marine Corps, and of the many heroic deeds of the Marines since the Corps was established in 1775. I personally learned of the splendid combat spirit of the Marines when the Fourth Marine Brigade of the Second Infantry Division fought in France in 1918. ...The Corps' ability to carry out whatever task may be assigned to it has been splendidly demonstrated many times in our history. It has again been shown by the immediate response of the Marine Corps to a call for duty in Korea. Since Marine ground and air forces have arrived in Korea I have received a daily report of their actions. The country may feel sure that the record of the Marines now fighting there will add new laurels to the already illustrious record of the Marine Corps. Sincerely yours, HARRY S. TRUMAN"

  • @TheRbrooks502

    @TheRbrooks502

    7 жыл бұрын

    I really could use your source on this letter. Can you provide it for me.

  • @MrKfq269
    @MrKfq2693 жыл бұрын

    I just Googled maps north korea. That airstrip at Changjin (Chosun Reservoir) is still there. It's now a north korean air force base.

  • @gbujarhead6440
    @gbujarhead64406 жыл бұрын

    "The Last Stand of Fox Company." I have one regret: that I did not know about Gen Raymond G. Davis's when I shook his hand. I do now. Semper Fidelis.

  • @donnastackhouse1357
    @donnastackhouse13577 жыл бұрын

    Appall and Salute Gen OP Smith an unsung Hero of US history.

  • @dba7dba
    @dba7dba10 жыл бұрын

    Entry of Chinese army into Korean war was not a surprise. There were ample warning signs picked up by local units of UN but the high command in Tokyo simply ignored them. In the middle of reading The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War by David Halberstam. Gen Almond was in 'command' of an army group in Korea only because he kissed up to Gen. McArthur like there was no tomorrow. There were 2 Separate groups of UN force in the Korean war because Gen McArthur wanted his pet, Gen Almond, to be able to command an army. I can honestly say Gen Almod was one big reason N Korea still exists today.

  • @msglamour143
    @msglamour1438 жыл бұрын

    CORRECTION: Lt. Chew En Lee (not Col. Ray Davis) was the hero who lead Baker Company as they rescued Fox Company out of the Chosin Reservoir.

  • @vandalnonesuch8274

    @vandalnonesuch8274

    4 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely correct, Jennifer! If Lee and the Company he led hadn't succeeded in relieving Fox Company, the Chinese would most likely have taken their positions, had the high ground, cut the one road out and trapped the 1st Marines and the survivors of the 7th Infantry. The Marines that served with and under Lee felt he should have gotten the Medal of Honor! Lees' race, perhaps?

  • @rodvikvr
    @rodvikvr2 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was Army and fought in Korea. He explained that their retreat was every man in their own for survival. Peeling each other off vehicles while in retreat. Utter failure and chaos. Army's generals didn't expect a hard fight from the Chinese.

  • @Direrain72
    @Direrain727 жыл бұрын

    James Harbord commanded the Marine Brigade in the fighting at Chateau-Thierry and Belleau Wood during WWI. "We dig no trenches, The Marines will fight where they stand."

  • @peterjodonovan2025
    @peterjodonovan2025 Жыл бұрын

    Superb history, so well told

  • @wpatrickw2012
    @wpatrickw20127 жыл бұрын

    Really interesting lecture.

  • @thenandnowart
    @thenandnowart7 жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU

  • @johnwellings3225
    @johnwellings32254 жыл бұрын

    Thank God for men like o p smith

  • @andymoody8363
    @andymoody83639 жыл бұрын

    Great lecture from an excellent author and historian. Read 'Fiasco' if you haven't already. I particularly loved the slap down of the last question from an obvious jerk.

  • @michaelsutton9030
    @michaelsutton90309 жыл бұрын

    The last question was painful. I always hate it at these talks when someone gives another mini-lecture before asking a question. The answer is Peyton March. There was no Army Chief of Staff named James D. Hardboard.

  • @1010Huey

    @1010Huey

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree. That blowhard who asked that question had all his information wrong. Ugh.

  • @hacksaw8214
    @hacksaw82149 жыл бұрын

    O.P. SMITH "WE ARE COMEING OUT, WITH OUR HONOR!"

  • @williamfraser5593
    @williamfraser55939 жыл бұрын

    History of the RCT Chapter 5 "Had the RCT been under Marine Division control it doubtless would have followed Colonel Murray’s advice, advice General Smith also passed on, and not advanced beyond Hill 1221 at least until the entire unit was assembled. The outcome of the battle would have been drastically different."

  • @gbujarhead6440
    @gbujarhead64408 жыл бұрын

    When I shook hands with Raymond G. Davis, my eyes were drawn to his chest showing that he had been awarded the Medal of Honor. At that time I did not know the circumstances regarding his MOH. Now I do, thanks to the book "The Last Stand of Fox Company". I deeply regret not knowing Gen Davis' history when I shook his hand.

  • @ex-pfcwintergreen417

    @ex-pfcwintergreen417

    7 жыл бұрын

    General Davis was an American hero and a Marine Corps hero. He should also have received the Medal of Honor at Peleliu when he was a major commanding "Chesty" Puller's 1st Battalion, 1st Marines! His unit suffered the worst casualties in Marine Corps history. None of that was because Davis failed as a leader, but because his regimental commander and 1MarDiv commanding general kept throwing the First Marines at the Umurbrogal Heights, aka "Bloody Nose Ridge". The regimental commander NEVER saw the terrain he was ordering his men to attack. By the battle of Changjin Reservoir; Davis was a Lieutenant Colonel, and his old regimental commander was still a Colonel, six years AFTER Peleliu. One of Davis' company commanders was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions at Peleliu. This award was approved by all channels EXCEPT by his regimental commander, who tried to quash the award for this LEADER. His actions in brutal hand-to-hand combat, and his opinion of his regimental commander should be taught to every Marine Corps Second Lieutenant at The Basic School.

  • @TheRbrooks502

    @TheRbrooks502

    7 жыл бұрын

    Can you say the same of Col. Don Faith and his actions with RCT31? That Faith didn't fail as a leader but was left to make the best of his situation with what he was left alone to deal with?

  • @patrickhows1482

    @patrickhows1482

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ex-pfcwintergreen417 General Davis also strongly supported the belated award of the Presidential Unit Citation to RCT31 for Chosin in 1999.

  • @hexapuma12
    @hexapuma125 жыл бұрын

    It's disappointing to see people like exarmydoc basically ignore all the poor decisions Almond and MacArthur made but is happy to go after Smith. Almond put all of the units in the position they were in Marines included. Almond a noted racist, who's poor WWII showing as a General should have prevented him from commanding X Corps. Luckily for him, MacArthur, who was a marginal general himself, loved people who told him what he wanted to hear. Despite repeated attempts by Smith, Faith, and other Commanders Almond refused to slow the advance to consolidate even after Chinese forces were encountered. Faith also ignored advice from the CO of the 5th Marines and moved forward.

  • @vanwahlgren8451

    @vanwahlgren8451

    2 жыл бұрын

    You've been brainwashed, o p Smith, didn't keep his Supply Road open in the Chinese blocked it

  • @michaelwilliams7907
    @michaelwilliams79072 жыл бұрын

    THIS WAS EXCELLENT. HE COVERED EVERYTHING IN AN HOUR. MY UNCLE MIKE SERVICE IN FIR MAR DIV AT CHOSEN HE ALWAYS CALLED IT FROZEN HELL ON EARTH. GOD BLESS GEN SMITH AND THE USMC. SEMPER FIDELIS. ALWAYS. SHALOM

  • @bigsteve6200
    @bigsteve62005 жыл бұрын

    Every Clime and Place !. The World's Finest US Marines . Semper Fi

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    Ricks also states that a Marine Officer went up to the site where the Army units were massacred to recover casualties. According to OP Smith's biography, The Gentle Warrior: Oliver Prince Smith, OP Smith made a very desultory attempt to break through to the 31st RCT, which failed.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    But you have to give Smith credit for feeding, and taking care of the weaponless, leaderless groups of soldiers who straggled in on foot to the Amrine lines. I'm just looking at the maps Doc and they show multiple Chinese Divisions attacking the Marines. I don't see anything near that on the east. The Chinese were all across the Marines rear all the way out, and multiple Chinese units enveloped them from the west as well. Look at the map. So, thanks for the opinion and the new take on history. But the historians say the RCT was unprepared and not cohesive enough to withstand the same types of attacks the Marines had to fight through . If you think otherwise, why don't you write a book instead of posting these ridiculous claims. Seriously.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser You indicate again you have disregarded the history of the 31st RCT on the East side of the Chosin Reservoir. Roy Appleman's sources include Chinese military documents made accessible after the war. There was a multi division Chinese force on the East side of Chosin tasked with advancing down the East side of Chosin to Hagaru Ri. They did not get there because the 31st RCT blocked them. 2500 US soldiers faced between 15,000 and 20,000 Chinese soldiers from six different regiments, fought them, inflicted between 7,000 and 10,000 casualties. The Chinese never got to Chosin. see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Task_Force_Faith Meanwhile, the 5th and 7th Marine Regiments were on the West side of Chosin fighting a numerically superior Chinese force. The 1st Marine Regiment was not conccentrated, strung out on the MSR from Hagaru Ri south to the coast. 1st Marine Division had nothing to fight the Chinese force East of Chosin. I say again, had the 31st RCT not fought, there would have been two, possibly 3 Chinese divisions advancing unopposed down the East side of the Chosin Reservoir on Hagaru ri, ist Marine Division would have been destroyed, and OP Smith would have ended up a Chinese POW. You haven't read all there is to read about Chosin. Otherwise you would be aware of what happened East of Chosin. I am not surprised you have never seen maps showing Chinese activity East of Chosin. A lot of Marine Histories, like Thomas Ricks, ignore the East side of Chosin.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    exarmydoc OP SMith was a lt GEn in the US Marine Corps. In your wildest dreams will you EVER have his credibility honesty or courage.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser "OP SMith was a lt GEn in the US Marine Corps." So? He was not the only Marine Corps General named Smith who lied about Army Troops. I would not say he was in "good" company. HM Smith was a worse charlie fox trot and liar than he was. "In your wildest dreams will you EVER have his credibility honesty or courage." What honesty? What courage? If he had true honesty and courage he would not have lied about the 31st RCT.

  • @dba7dba
    @dba7dba10 жыл бұрын

    16:58 Almond lying about the airstrips? Incompetent and liar. And put in charge. Great...

  • @livingadreamlife1428

    @livingadreamlife1428

    3 жыл бұрын

    The world is full of Almonds.

  • @jbomb69

    @jbomb69

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@livingadreamlife1428 hahaha sad but true, unfortunately.

  • @miketaylor5212

    @miketaylor5212

    2 жыл бұрын

    almond was macarthurs yes man

  • @456swagger
    @456swagger6 жыл бұрын

    I believe that this is actually Vincent D'Onofrio playing the part of Thomas Ricks. What an actor! He certainly nailed it.

  • @derekcroft2055
    @derekcroft20552 жыл бұрын

    After Korea, Chesty Puller was asked by a interview what hard lessons the Marines learned......he spat it out in a Second, NEVER SERVE UNDER X CORPS !! He was RIGHT ON !! Semper Fi. 💯👍💪

  • @steveinthemountains8264
    @steveinthemountains82644 жыл бұрын

    Caesar's Roman Legions would have been in awe of the US Marines @ Chosin.

  • @charlestuma2336
    @charlestuma23364 жыл бұрын

    Enjoyed watching the speaker drinking the glass of water

  • @danielpushman8967
    @danielpushman89675 жыл бұрын

    When China sent their troops to Korea, we were warned. The Chinese had no representation at the UN, but they relayed thru the Indian UN Ambassador that they would intervene if UN forces crossed the 38th parallel. Mac ignored this warning. The Eighth Army was devastated on the west coast of Korea. The Second Infantry Division still remembers the ass kicking it took at the Chongchon River. X Corps fared better on the East Coast because OP Smith knew Chinese troops were around and prepared his units for the clusterf*** that followed. His Corps Commander, who was an incompetent division commander in WW2, but a FANTASTIC MacArthur syncophant post-war, tried to get Smith's 1st Marine Division to abandon prudence, as he succeeded in doing to the 31st RCT, but Smith wasn't having any of it. Marines understand small unit warfare, even if Army generals don't. The ass kicking the 31st RCT took east of the reservoir was X Corps Commanders fault, NOT OP Smith's. End of story.

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    Ricks mentioned the gap between 8th Army and 1st Marine Division. That gap was terrain impassable to military units. According to other histories, OP Smith's left flank was not open.

  • @alstahl8574
    @alstahl85743 жыл бұрын

    Exactly Semper Fi

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    OP Smith did not save the 1st Marine Division from annihilation. What saved the 1st Marine DIvision was that the Army's 31st RCT on the east side of Chosin prevented two Chinese DIvisions from getting to Hagaru-ri before 5th and 7th Marines could consolidate there. OP Smith claimed the soldiers ran and did not fight. if he Soldiers had not fought two Chinese infantry divisions would have been able to advance down the East side of CHosin unopposed.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    Doc, thanks for sharing........... The talk is accurate.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser Thomas Ricks' talk is not accurate, especially with regard to LTC Don C. Faith.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    exarmydoc what a tremendous chapter in military history. The Marines made their mark at Chosin and at Inchon during the Korean War. So proud of what they did.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser Check out www.shsu.edu/~his_ncp/USMCKor.html "The Fleet Marine Force, cut drastically from a WWII high of 300,000, had only 27, 656 men. General Clifton B. Cates, Commandant of the Marine Corps, was ordered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff to deploy the 1st Marine Division to Korea by mid-September. However, short of equipment and with only 8,000 men, Cates requested President Truman to mobilize all reserve elements of the Marine Corps and attached Navy medical personnel to bring the division to wartime strength of 22,000." In 1950 the Marine Corps was seriously understrength and unprepared. When the North Koreans came south in June of 1950, the top priority was to put boots on the ground. The USMC was not capable of putting boots on the ground. The Army was. Army troops were, admittedly poorly trained and poorly prepared. However, Army troops went in first and fought the North Koreans effectively enough to form the Pusan Perimeter. They fought and bled and died to buy time for the USMC to get ready. The first Marine ground unit, the 5th Marine Regimental Combat Team, did not get there until AFTER the perimeter was formed. By that time the US Army had 4 Divisions on te ground including the 2nd Infantry Division which deployed from the US before 1st Marine Division could be reconstituted. Had the Army not gone in first, the USMC would have never gotten to Korea. Had the USMC been charged with the defense of Korea in 1950, there would have been no defense of Korea.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    +William Fraser More about Inchon. The final battle for the Pusan perimeer was fought and won AFTER the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade was withdrawn. One reason the Marines were successful at Inchon was that the North Korean Army was all down at Pusan trying to crack the perimeter. You'll never hear people like Ricks mention that.

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    Ricks quotes General Almond telling LTC Don Faith not to let a bunch of Chinese Laundrymen stop his attack towards the Yalu. General Almond said that to Colonel Allan McLean, original commander of the 31st RCT BEFORE the Chinese attack began.

  • @dave3749
    @dave3749Ай бұрын

    I am reminded of a quote by Chesty Puller that went something like "The main difference between the Chinese Army and the American Army is that he could always depend on the Chinese being where they were supposed to be."

  • @BillPrueter
    @BillPrueter10 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting. I have read the Marine history on this matter and know that the tactics used by Smith were very similar to those used by Xenophon in the Anabasis (Anabasis means march up country- Xenophon eventually became more or less the commander). It would be interesting to know how much Smith knew of that campaign. Particularly since it appears that Smith was an avid reader. The terrain Xenophon faced was very similar to that faced by the Marines.

  • @rockymntdan1
    @rockymntdan14 жыл бұрын

    No mention of Hell Fire Valley? I guess this was a high level discussion, but what a battle to totally leave out and not even mention.

  • @jaimelaureano6649
    @jaimelaureano66492 жыл бұрын

    ... To all interested in this subject -> A must: David Halberstam's "The Coldest Winter"

  • @johnnyweng1164
    @johnnyweng11642 жыл бұрын

    There is a Chinese saying, a horse that can run 1000 miles a day is easier to be found that the man who can find that horse. So this lecturer did the almost same important thing as Smith did.

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    2 жыл бұрын

    I like and appreciate the thought. Nevertheless Mr. Ricks is not alone. The Marine Corps itself and our culture (me having been a Marine Infantry officer) might be largely to blame. We are very resistant to making heros out of Marine commanders. Our ethos is to win battles...as Marines. While some exceptions exist they are few, and it does not always go well to be the exception. The most famous Marine himself was one of General Smith's regimental Commanding Officers, Lewis "Chesty" Puller. His role it seems gets no special attention in the history books, unless it's a book about him specifically. That's just how it goes. Idk if that's right or wrong tbh, but I'm grateful for the work Mr. Ricks has done to give credit where credit is due.

  • @fastmandan88
    @fastmandan888 жыл бұрын

    RIP Task Force Faith, aka Regimental Combat Team 31. Those "Army cowards" saved the Marines' asses. IF RCT-31 didn't hold out to the last man on the eastern flank there would have been no successful retreat by the Marines.

  • @TheChosin50

    @TheChosin50

    7 жыл бұрын

    31st RCT was overrun by the Chinese while most of them were still aboard trucks trying to take over position from the 5th Marin regiment which was order to go to the Northwest to reinforce Yudamni. If they had been on foot in a tactical formation, they might have survived. There were a few who escaped across the ice the Marine positions but the bulk of the unit could not engage while still in the 6 bys that carried them past Hagaru.

  • @TheChosin50

    @TheChosin50

    7 жыл бұрын

    I was at Chosin- were you? Don't try to tell me what you domn't know from personal experience in the area.

  • @fastmandan88

    @fastmandan88

    7 жыл бұрын

    WRONG! give us evidence you were there, keyboard warrior

  • @leonardshort7127

    @leonardshort7127

    7 жыл бұрын

    Jean White, you are mis-informed. The serious wounded were in the trucks. The walking wounded were deployed alongside to defend the trucks as infantrymen assaulted the Chinese position above them. They were on a single lane road with steep hills on one side and the Reservoir on the other side. At least know the fact before insulting the men of that Army RCT.

  • @leonardshort7127

    @leonardshort7127

    7 жыл бұрын

    You were at Chosin? Were you with the 31 RCT? If not then your opinion is worthless. Personal experience is limited to one's immediate area which is limited to how far one can see.

  • @herringt3
    @herringt38 жыл бұрын

    The Chosin Few.

  • @williamfraser5593
    @williamfraser55939 жыл бұрын

    SLA MARSHALL wrote a history report on the Chosin operation. OP Smith praised the report. MARSHALL's report was highly CRITICAL of the leadership of the 7th and 3rd Divisions and the RCT as well.

  • @dth999
    @dth999 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant . . . ask everyone but the man in charge what happened ?

  • @bthorn5035
    @bthorn50353 жыл бұрын

    The problem with govt bureaucracies like the military is that good combat officers and ncos are often expected to benefit those higher in rank, not lower.

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    2 жыл бұрын

    As a Marine Mustang who was privileged to lead many fine young Marines, I never bought into that careerist mindset. Maybe that's why I didn't really have one, and thus left with 15 years of service. I can relate to an old German saying: Past glories are poor feeding.

  • @gameking50P
    @gameking50P8 жыл бұрын

    I wouldnt call the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir decisive but WHAT a rearguard action

  • @condorc72

    @condorc72

    4 жыл бұрын

    Its called cowardice

  • @vandalnonesuch8274

    @vandalnonesuch8274

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@condorc72 What should they have done: fight to the last man, like the Spartans? They were grossly outnumbered. Dying in place wouldn't have stopped the Chinese from sending more troops - there were other Chinese units formed up in Manchuria ready to come in if necessary!

  • @joncheskin
    @joncheskin5 жыл бұрын

    People do not remember OP Smith because ultimately the battle was a defeat akin to the evacuation of Dunkirk--basically escape from utter disaster. This does no justice to the soldiers or Smith, but is often the way history is rendered.

  • @grjoe4412

    @grjoe4412

    Жыл бұрын

    Wrong. The marine retreated in complete form. The Chinese suffered 4 times more casualties despite four to five times superior in numbers. After this battle the Chinese could not mount another attack due to casualties until several months later.

  • @Amoore-vv9wx

    @Amoore-vv9wx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grjoe4412 the marines lost the land lol. Korea was a battle for territory as much as enemy body count.

  • @sagecreekwitt3301
    @sagecreekwitt330111 жыл бұрын

    True badass hero!

  • @williamfraser5593
    @williamfraser55939 жыл бұрын

    Lt Gen William McCaffery United States Army and a veteran of the Chosin Campaign said the following about RCT 31 "“.I suggest the unraveling of the 31st RCT was a reflection of incompetence and misconduct on the part of Gens Barr and Hodes,(ARMY) a lesser degree of incompetence on the part of the field grade officers, who, nevertheless, in general, died or were overwhelmed by the cold, the enemy and the enormity of the problems that cascaded over them. In three days the chain of command ceased to function and leaderless men faced death from the enemy and the cold with no guidance and only whatever desperate courage could be summoned up from their innermost sources of their being.” Unravelled.......RCT 31

  • @Tapajara
    @Tapajara11 жыл бұрын

    "Stacked like cordwood" is just poetry. Most people like poetry more than the truth. Thanks for the insight.

  • @TheRbrooks502
    @TheRbrooks5027 жыл бұрын

    Ray Davis made two trips to Turkey Hill to relieve Marines there (3.5 miles away by jeep) before he took after Fox Hill. The marines started moving on the day that 31RCT was destroyed due to O.P. Smiths orders. He removed the tanks of the 2bn 31st and Cp back to Hagaru before 31RCT could reach them. Marines had warming tents, Brandy, and 24 hour breaks off the front lines. RCT31 did not. They (the Marines) had a caravan that was miles long marching into Hagaru dealing with long range rifle fire. Almonds quotes to Col. Faith were intended to motivate. Not anything else. If Almond was not good, then why did General Ridgeway state, that he preferred Almond over O.P. Smith. Smith who was quickly replaced shortly after Ridgeway took command because O.P. Smith was again asking for concessions as he did so many times with Almond. Smith, Almond, and MacArthur should have faced a tribunal or board of inquiry following the battle of the Chosin IMHO. Had that been done, Ricks speech would never have taken place. How does one get to be a Gentleman Warrior as O.P. Smith is accredited and considered a Good General. Lawful Orders are Lawful Orders. O.P. Smith was not invited by to speak on the Chosin because he would have been embarrassed and brought to task. Ricks book will not change the history, but god knows he is trying. Sadly IMHO

  • @moss8448
    @moss84487 жыл бұрын

    He made all the right moves and had his head into it. Makes you wonder what in the world the other guys were thinking...if at all. Really seems like politics played a hand in things rather than smarts and deeds. I was in the `Nam fiasco and things hadn't changed much between those two times just the field..Iraq wasn't a smart move either...the more it changes the more it stays the same. O.P. probably got back and called `em all a bunch of idiots and as we all know you can't do that with the powers to be `cuz it's never THEIR fault.

  • @leegilley221

    @leegilley221

    2 жыл бұрын

    Milley prime example .

  • @charlestuma2336
    @charlestuma23364 жыл бұрын

    Great lesson on how to slowly drink a glass of water over 50 minutes.

  • @archstanton3022
    @archstanton30227 жыл бұрын

    Chinese frostbite saved these troops' lives. Hiking, attacking, and camping in -30 degree weather in the hills and mountains killed and injured the Chinese advance. The lesson I take from this is to move mostly out of the cold mountains during winter fighting and then move back into them as soon as the thaw breaks and things warm up. Let your enemies "battle the weather" and freeze unnecessarily. The Chinese attack might have succeeded better had they attacked in warmer weather. Also, retreat to better areas when dangerously under-supplied, otherwise the fighting moral eventually drops to zero.

  • @liljgoneman9765

    @liljgoneman9765

    6 жыл бұрын

    Napoleon learned that lesson, Paulus learned that lesson, it seems easily forgotten every hundred years or so.

  • @rogerdavies6226
    @rogerdavies62265 жыл бұрын

    it is 2018, just before the November mid-term elections. I wonder if this series is still being offered?

  • @stuartfitzsimons2786
    @stuartfitzsimons27867 жыл бұрын

    How the US Army and OP Smith saved 15,000 Marines.

  • @paulrevere2379
    @paulrevere23793 жыл бұрын

    Seems evident to me that General Smith just wasn't part of the good ol' boy network. And I think it's important to mention that a good Marine can be fully dedicated to the Corps and not be part of that club. I know of one such good Marine Officer - I see him every time I look in the mirror.

  • @MrKfq269
    @MrKfq2692 жыл бұрын

    That microphone works a little too good.

  • @bluskies1000
    @bluskies10004 жыл бұрын

    There were many excellent documentaries on youtube about this battle, all removed now that PBS made their own documentary , with the same material, which you have to buy, sigh

  • @Dimythios
    @Dimythios2 жыл бұрын

    @36:30 in the video the person commented about a person not being fired upon by the Chinese. IMHO on speaking to many of the Vets and information gathered it was probably due to the fact that the Chinese were woefully under maintained and under supplied. Though they had the numbers, they did not have enough equipment/ammunition to finish the job. I think the Chinese by that time were just trying to stay alive as well as using their ammo sparingly. Though the US were taken by surprise the Chinese were taken by surprise on the sheer stubbornness of the Marine's defensive withdraw. As the fighting continued The Chinese army had less and less ammunition to continue the ferocity of the fight as they had in their initial attack. The US units were battered but well armed and amply supplied. Far better than their Chinese counter parts. This is a perfect example of losing such an important battle because of logistics and support. Which the PLA did not have. Just think if the PLA had adequate supplies through out this battle. It would not been the famous retreat at the Chosin Reservoir. It may have been the greatest victory over the US during the Korean War.

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's the weakest of all military arguments, although a common one, to say, well if this or that side just had more stuff... It works both ways. Did you know that the Chinese had superior cold weather lubricants for their small arms compared with what the Marines had? It was a constant issue which undoubtedly cost many Marines their lives. How would it have been if that one detail was reversed?

  • @williamprice2677
    @williamprice26774 жыл бұрын

    What separates the Marine Corps from all the others is psychological. Marine Corps boot camp is an indoctrination on abject suffering. Expect the worst and you'll never be disappointed. Semper FI

  • @TurboGC8
    @TurboGC813 жыл бұрын

    RIP Jose Guerena

  • @verilyheld
    @verilyheld9 жыл бұрын

    "That greatest of all Marine institutions, the Drill Instructor." I feel great pity for the USMC now. How sorrowful, to have DIs as their greatest institution!

  • @jonathansievers8507

    @jonathansievers8507

    8 жыл бұрын

    +verilyheld The Marine Corps would not exist without the Drill Instructors and certainly not as an elite fighting organization.Your comment suggests that you were not a Marine.

  • @verilyheld

    @verilyheld

    8 жыл бұрын

    Jonathan Sievers No, but I've seen Full Metal Jacket!

  • @numkie

    @numkie

    8 жыл бұрын

    +verilyheld lol....

  • @spikarooni6391
    @spikarooni63917 жыл бұрын

    Non-commercial, unless you want to post it on KZread and monetise it

  • @ronstrickland1915
    @ronstrickland19157 жыл бұрын

    Page 323 of Appleman's “East of Chosin” states: "Withdrawing these forces (31st Tank Co and 31st Rear) from Hudong-ni had the effect of signing the death warrant for Task Force Faith and its wounded. What commander in his right mind could order such a move...". If you are to cheap or lazy to buy the book, contact me and I will send you a copy.

  • @TheRbrooks502
    @TheRbrooks5027 жыл бұрын

    We will be posting a add on to the Facebook page "Chosin Reservoir" shortly after tonights airing of "American Experience" The battle of Chosin. See PBS stations for times. This posting will show the breakdowns and holes that have been persisted through the decades regarding the Chosin Reservoir campaign. The author, Ray Vallowe, challenges most of what Ricks has stated in this video, and his validated research will bear that out. Watch the Show. Check the website. Decide for yourself. Vallowe monitors this page will be happy to discuss his findings vs accepted history through out the decades. It is my humble opinion that Ricks only perpetuates some of the hype and myths of this General, and the campaign itself. But come see for yourself.

  • @SuperAdam1313
    @SuperAdam13134 жыл бұрын

    we are not retreating, we are just fighting in another direction.

  • @kikyybabe7803
    @kikyybabe780311 жыл бұрын

    the troops received presidential citation in 2012

  • @grokman86
    @grokman863 жыл бұрын

    this lecturer insinuated that D. MacArthur was not brave. His bravery was well documented especially during WW!.

  • @RKarmaKill

    @RKarmaKill

    2 жыл бұрын

    MacArthur was a peacock 🦚

  • @davidrodgersNJ
    @davidrodgersNJ7 жыл бұрын

    I'm using this for commercial purposes! Ah hah! Hah hah hah hah!

  • @williamfraser5593
    @williamfraser55939 жыл бұрын

    Four casualties were helicoptered out of RCT 31 before its disintegration. Two battalion commanders and two others....WTF? Why the battalion commanders? What kind of leadership is that?

  • @andrelebaron
    @andrelebaron8 жыл бұрын

    this guy should move away from the mic when he takes a drink.

  • @leonardshort7127
    @leonardshort71277 жыл бұрын

    Rick's is incorrect on a number of points. "With the assistance of Marine Corps air support - expertly coordinated by Capt. Stamford and without which the task force would have been overwhelmed - RCT 31 fought off heavy assaults by the PLA 80th and 81st divisions for another two days, inflicting severe losses on the communist forces who left hundreds of bodies in the snow around the army position. During the day Stamford directed 38 sorties, making this the major effort of the 1st Marine Air Wing for the day. From 0645 until 1830 Marine planes attacked the Chinese, dropping 21 napalm tanks, 16 500-lb bombs, 21 fragmentation bombs, and firing 190 rockets. All attacks on the perimeter were repulsed. The Americans were running low on ammunition, and over half their number had been killed or wounded, including a high proportion of key leaders. Faith, realizing he was surrounded and greatly outnumbered, decided to attempt a breakout to the south, toward Marine lines. The situation was so desperate that only a minimum of equipment and sufficient vehicles to carry the wounded were taken, freeing more soldiers to fight as infantry. The rest of the equipment was destroyed in place, including the artillery's howitzers after they fired their last rounds." The above passage is supported by the bulk of the available information available from the DoD.

  • @Tapajara
    @Tapajara11 жыл бұрын

    The USA should have stopped their advance at the narrowest point of the peninsula north of Pyonyang and dug in there. If they had done that, the Chinese would not have attacked and Pyongyang would now be part of South Korea. North Korea, on the other hand, would be a small mountain-bound country. Seole would be a lot farther from its northern border and we would not be having the trouble with the fat boy. Its all MacArthur's fault.

  • @leonardshort7127
    @leonardshort71277 жыл бұрын

    My objection is at around 34:58. Mr. Ricks (although he said Almond) is clearly speaking of Lt. Don Carlos Faith and Mr Ricks is wrong in his assessment. Lt. Col. Faith knew his job, he knew what he was facing, and he didn't take his artillery pieces with him on the retreat because all of the ammunition for the artillery had been used.

  • @ex-pfcwintergreen417

    @ex-pfcwintergreen417

    7 жыл бұрын

    disagree. faith would have rather staffed 32nd INF with fresh jump school airborne officers than have combat veteran leg officers. He was brave, determined, and unprepared to command a battalion or regiment in combat. General Ridgway's Dog robber doesn't make a battalion commander.

  • @leonardshort7127

    @leonardshort7127

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ex-PFC Wintergreen, your argument is flawed. The Army has routinely rotated officers between staff and field positions. In 1940-41 the US Army was ranked 17th in the world. There is a 22-year gap between the ending of WW1 and the beginning of WW2. Upon our entry into WW2, only a handful of officers had any combat experience or experience as a troop leader and that experience derived from WW1 which utilized a different set of tactics. In 1940 the US Army had 9 Infantry Divisions, 1 Cavalry Division, 1 Mechanized Brigand. In 1944-45 in the European Theater of Operations, the US Army consisted of 43 Infantry Divisions, 24 Armor Divisions, 4 Airborne (light infantry) Divisions. The vast majority of all officers, from General down to 2nd Lieutenant, had no combat experience prior to going into battle. Yet during Operation Torch, Operation Overlord, etc., these "inexperienced" officers, by and large, performed well and some were exceptional. This was a reflection of the quality of their training not of their experience commanding field units for very few had that experience. By all existing accounts, MacLean performed well while in command RCT-31 and Faith was exceptional. Experience as a troop leader does not always translate into command ability. Any officer can tell you that. Also, the majority of combat experienced battalion or regiment officers were discharged at the end of WW2 or did not remain in the army when it reduced to peacetime levels.

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc10 жыл бұрын

    First mistake Ricks makes is that OP Smith insisted he be allowed to consolidate his regiments. He had 5th Marine on the East side of Chosin, 7th Marines on the west side and the 1st Marines strung out to the South along the MSR. General Almond put the 31st RCT on the East side of Chosin, which allowed OP Smith to put 5th Marines and 7th Marines on the West side. My source is Roy Appleman's Escaping the Trap, available as a Kindle download from Amazon.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    Smith made so many mistakes he brought his entire Division out of Chosin . My source is every single history book written about Chosin reservoir. It must really annoy you to have to read the history books. Semper Fidelis

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser There have been multiple history books written about Chosin including East of Chosin and Escaping the Trap by Roy Appleman which document what the31st RCT did on the East side of the Chosin Reservoir. It nust really gall you to read that an Army Unit fought to the death saving the First Marine Division. You have obviously never read those books, or if you did you are in denial.

  • @sudaev

    @sudaev

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser What in hell do you think RCT 31 was doing while they were there? Jumping rope? Good thing the Marines didn't consult with armchair historian "William Fraser" regarding the PUC indorsement since you've got it all figured out. The other thing I wanted to point out is that the TACP officer with them (a Marine) has stated that most of the army officers and many of the NCO's were well trained and good leaders. I say this because you mentioned leadership...

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    What were they doing. Well lets look at the record. Unprepared, the first night many were bayoneted in their sleeping bags. The performance of RCT 31 is not anything you need to be bragging about. And if you had read anything about what happened to them, you'd know that. Next, I don't argue with imbeciles. Casual observers might not be able to tell us apart. So long soup and sandwich.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser You are dodging the rel situation. There was a multi divisin chinese force on the East side of Chosin. Their objective was Hagaru-Ri(See Roy Appeman's Escaping the Trap). The only troops between them and Hagaru_-Ri were the 31st RCT. They never got to Hagaru-Ri. It wasn't because of the Marines that those Chinese never got to their objective.

  • @FIREBRAND38
    @FIREBRAND382 жыл бұрын

    56:47 That kid shouldn't smoke dope while he's doing "research". Attending VMI isn't anything like ROTC and he got the answer wrong to his own question. What a buffoon.

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    2 жыл бұрын

    The fact that he still didn't get a clue about the difference when he was corrected is telling. The difference between VMI and the USMA being negligible as far as military quality makes comparing either to ROTC just a joke, especially in the years when they were masculine institutions.

  • @TheRbrooks502
    @TheRbrooks5027 жыл бұрын

    IF Litzenberg had taken Yudam ni by Nov. 14th as Ordered, they would have been able to prevent the Chinese from incircling the forces and changed the entire scope of the battles in North Korea or at least change the situation to a different outcome. But alas he dragged his feet for 11 days to get there. Sheppard knew Almond probably better than he knew O.P. Smith because they were fellow students at VMI. After Smith whined to the higher ups, Sheppard basically told him to get in line. A general has the right and the priviledge to address his orders from the higher up, but he does not have the righto disregard a Valid Order. O.P. Smith was told by Almond to make Litzeberg to take Yudam-ni. For Ricks to not believe him is his choice, but the reality was, it happened. O.P. Smiths orders caused the death of 31RCT TF MacLean/Faith. That is pretty cut and dry on November 29th. Smith did nothing to help the Army on the East of Chosin who was ordered to take out the previous assignments of the Marines as verified by Divisional order OpO 7 and Regimental order by MacLean of 31RCT, OpO 25. Ricks is so far off base I am offended.

  • @MrKfq269

    @MrKfq269

    2 жыл бұрын

    There was an additional 500,000 Chinese soldiers in reserve just over the border in Manchuria. The marines played their hand well.

  • @vx7020
    @vx70202 жыл бұрын

    He built a airport otherwise it's hard to escape

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not the way a Marine thinks. You prepare that which is needed to support the fighting man to win the battle.

  • @Buck123four
    @Buck123four8 жыл бұрын

    The destruction of Task Force Faith is something the Army seldom mentions. The 7th ID was spread all over N. Korea; the USMC 1st Div. kept their Regiments fairly close...a wise decision. Had they scattered their regiments - as the 7th ID did - they likely would have never made it to the coast. TF Faith - comprised of both US & Koreans, was not a very cohesive force - ya just can't throw people together & "call" them a regiment. Applemans book - East of Chosin - should be mandatory reading by every 2LT before commissioning. TF Faith did what they were ordered to, but if the Principles of War are ignored, the consequences are predictable. LTC Faith is now buried at Arlington...his remains were returned ~2012...what was left of them. (I have a personal interest in this - my uncle (RIP) was in N. Korea w/ the 7th ID in 1950...he never talked about it. It wasn't his first time in combat; he had served on the USS California in WWII, in the last battleship on battleship battle the world will likely see.)

  • @TheRbrooks502

    @TheRbrooks502

    8 жыл бұрын

    Buck123four, there is much more information regarding RCT31. I would offer that if you have read Ebb and Flow, East of Chosin, Breakout, then it is time to read The Chosin Chronology by Col Rasula. But if you really want to get to the brass tax I would offer that you read, Ray Vallowe's "What History Forgot to Record." Access to these are on the net. Vallowe's book is available for free at the TheKoreanWarEducator on the net. He is has joined to the group page on Facebook. "Chosin Reservoir". You can direct your questions to one of the best historians on the subject directly yourself. I think you will discover many issue in Appleman's book, Russman's book, ect.

  • @TheRbrooks502

    @TheRbrooks502

    7 жыл бұрын

    The 7th ID was not spread out over Korea as you stated. In fact they were just hours away from taking over the entire Marine objectives that O.P. Smith failed to accomplish under OpO 6, and OpO 7 for that matter. The bigger question to ask, is Why? the 7th ID was even in the Marine Corps Area of Operation in the first place. The east side of the Chosin was clearly assigned to Murrays 5RCT 5th Marines. Why was Faith and the 31 RCT sent to Chosin? See maps at "Chosin Reservoir" Facebook for that answer. One could argue that the destruction of TF MacLean/Faith of 31RCT was due large and in part by the inaction of Gen. O.P. Smith/LItzenberg, and Murray.

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    6 жыл бұрын

    1st Marine Division was able to concentrate because the 31st RCT was deployed on the East side of the Chosin Reservoir. Prior to that, 5th Marines were on the East side of Chosin, the 7th Marines were on the West side and 1st Marines were strung out from Hagaru ri south along the MSR.

  • @kikyybabe7803
    @kikyybabe780311 жыл бұрын

    the best marine!RCT 31 would of need someone like him too..Maclean comander of the rtc made a few mistakes in organizsing defense altough they didn know that such an amount of chinese is coming ..also many soldiers meeting the first blocks just runaway and deserted the convoy..and records show 1500 alive fro 2500 , many wonden and with frost bit

  • @ThatUJohnWayne
    @ThatUJohnWayne11 жыл бұрын

    I do.

  • @Kentm0300
    @Kentm03009 жыл бұрын

    If he'd been Roman, the troops would have given him the Grass Crown. That's the highest and rarest award a Roman soldier could get and the only way to earn it was by saving a legion or an entire army.

  • @matthiasguenther6576
    @matthiasguenther65766 жыл бұрын

    I predict, if one day someone (a regular mortal) might save the world, his name will be SMITH. Just based on probability. ;-)

  • @montanabulldog9687
    @montanabulldog96872 жыл бұрын

    It was one of the "Reasons", for his ACTUAL NAME ( to "Us" MARINES anyway . . . ) . . . "Howling Mad" SMITH !.

  • @williamfraser5593
    @williamfraser55939 жыл бұрын

    History of RCT 31 Chapter 5 "The two wounded battalion commanders who made up half of the only four be evacuated by helicopter may very well have been the most seriously wounded, or, in terms of triage, the ones who could most benefit from air evacuation and prompt treatment. Still, it is hard explain when there were so many other wounded."

  • @DidivsIvlianvs
    @DidivsIvlianvs10 жыл бұрын

    54:33 - Must teach the midshipmen the difference between the Chief of Staff UNDER Pershing (Harbord) and the Army Chief of Staff OVER Pershing (March) :-)

  • @condorc72
    @condorc729 жыл бұрын

    Yeah he cleaned up Chesty Puller's debacle

  • @hacksaw8214

    @hacksaw8214

    9 жыл бұрын

    evans johnny AH JOHNNY BOY YOU'RE STILL AN IDIOT!

  • @TheChosin50

    @TheChosin50

    7 жыл бұрын

    I agree. Chest had no debacle to be cleaned up

  • @marktercsak9728

    @marktercsak9728

    5 жыл бұрын

    CHESTY HELD THE LINE AND FOUGHT THE REAR GUARD ACTION.

  • @condorc72

    @condorc72

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@marktercsak9728 u are so stupid and disillusioned....pullers bravado got his men surrounded and they had to retreat rearward....that's not a rearguard action..its running to save your sorry butt

  • @scottgriggs2596
    @scottgriggs25965 жыл бұрын

    One thing I don’t understand about this battle is why the US didn’t carpet bomb the Chinese positions surrounding the Marines and soldiers at Chosin reservoir with B29’s or some other heavy bomber? Were the Chinese simply too close to the Americans to risk hitting friendlies?

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think you're at least in part correct. There was also fear that this could escalate into WWIII. idk how much that factored in. Tactically, it also might have done more harm than good, if Air force resupply drops (which went to the enemy too much of the time) is any measure. Naval aviation (especially USMC) was far more accurate and the helicopters were especially useful* except there were just too few. *Resupply and medevac, which, btw, were ideas pioneered by Marines as far back as the Banana Wars with fixed wing aircraft.

  • @paulrevere2379

    @paulrevere2379

    3 жыл бұрын

    More artillery, heavier artillery (esp. for range) and lots more arty rounds would have also been a big help. On the west side of the peninsula where the Army had a much larger force than X Corps (Chosin) they abandoned a huge number of artillery pieces. For all we know, those tubes might still be in use by N. Korea today.

  • @exarmydoc
    @exarmydoc9 жыл бұрын

    OP Smith did not save 15,000 Marines. In spite of Thomas Ricks, it was the 31st RCT which covered 1st Marine Division's exposed Eastern flank. Mr.Ricks doesn't even try to explain why the 27th Chinese Army failed in its mission to take Hagaru ri.

  • @williamfraser5593

    @williamfraser5593

    9 жыл бұрын

    exarmydoc another stupid post, as usual

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    9 жыл бұрын

    William Fraser "+exarmydoc another stupid post, as usual" Yes your last post was.

  • @samwhitmore73

    @samwhitmore73

    8 жыл бұрын

    +exarmydoc , You will never hear a Marine say "I could have been in the Army". :-)

  • @exarmydoc

    @exarmydoc

    8 жыл бұрын

    Sam Whitmore Maybe so. Nevertheless, you have the Marine Corps trying to credit itself with what the Army accomplished, e.g. being the first to fight, fighting in the Battles of trenton and princeton, taking Chapultepec in the Mexican war, defending the Philippines. The Army never tries to credit itself with Marine accomplishments

  • @samwhitmore73

    @samwhitmore73

    8 жыл бұрын

    Hello exarmydoc, if that information is correct I would have no problem with bringing the truth to the light. However, according to what I learned in bootcamp, the 1st Marine Division was surrounded by over 100,000 enemy troops and managed to fight it's way back to the sea. Yes, the army was there, but it was Chesty Puller and the use of close air support that was instrumental in saving our US forces.