Picture of the Day: Remembering the Battle of Osan
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Participants pay respects to the U.S. soldiers killed in the Battle of Osan during the 1950-53 Korean War, in an annual memorial ceremony held by the Osan city to honor the fallen soldiers, in this photo provided by the Ministry of Patriots and Veterans Affairs on July 5, 2020. (Yonhap)
The actual battle plan called for a Regimental Combat Team with armor, artillery, and air support. Instead, they sent half a battalion of improperly trained and under-equipped infantry with an under-equipped battery of 105mm howitzers with only 6 HEAT rounds.
The terrible thing is that was what they thought they could deliver by air; but the rest of the Division got to Pusan just as fast. And Bloody Mac send them in piecemeal anyway…
Given how little the troops had trained in Japan, it might be assumed that the generals thought that using them as “ablative material” instead of giving them a ghost of a chance to survive was the right way to delay the norks; but it might as easily have been gross incompetence, dereliction of duty, and/or a false belief that these green kids were the same troops who stormed Tarawa, Peleliu, Iwo Jima, Saipan, and Okinawa. They were not. And neither were most of their NCOs or junior officers. And the norks heading south in ’50 were better trained and equipped than most of the Japanese holding islands in ’44 and ’45.
From Wikipedia: