Web Special - Korean War 60th Anniversary
THE TURKS IN
CREATING A MYTH

October 2010
We
often hear about the Turkish population
of 80 million and
The myth’s start about the modern Turkish Armed Forces is identified during their first engagement with the enemy in the last 60 years. It took place during the Korean War, where it is totally revealed, that an almost useless military formation, achieved beyond its own will to create a whole legend about a supposed Turkish “art of war”.
In a
typical book of a summary presentation
of the Korean War, such as “The Korean War 1950-
This paragraph includes as we will see all the parameters of the legend about the almost “superhuman” Turkish soldier who is good in every aspect, even when defeated and being captive.
The
Greek reader is having a similar picture,
reading the pages of “The military power of
The
obvious question that comes in mind,
concerns the significant fluctuation in the Turkish battle-worthiness
in the 20
years separating

THE
TURKS IN
The
Turkish Brigade arrived at the
When
the Turks arrived at
It is
astonishing to observe that, the
Turkish myth, starts as soon as the Turks arrived in
James Stokesbury, obviously influenced, describes: “Among the most prominent contributors, the Turks sent a much-respected infantry brigade, whose men were evidently uninterested in higher tactics or sophisticated military skills, but possessed much rugged courage and willingness to endure”.(3) There are also historical reports that generate specific questions concerning their subjective dimension and also the degree of altering and overestimating the meaning of simple everyday ethos or procedures of an army: “Turks were admired a lot for their unlimited toughness and resistance to the Chinese. The only traitor was silently murdered by his compatriots. When one of their men was sick, two of his colleagues were responsible for his survival”.(4)
A
more realistic account of the truth, is
given by the description of the Turkish image by Clay
Blair: “The Turks,
commanded
by Brigadier General Tahsin Yazici, had arrived in
Mike
Michaelis, CO of
the
The
problem that the Allies would face with
the Turks was easily understood having them arriving in

CRASHING
IN THE FIRST
Arriving
in
Among
the actions that the leadership
decided to perform, was the assignment of the operational zone of the
South
Korean II Army Corps to the US IX Army Corps in order to ensure the
integrity
of the right flank of the Eight Army and decelerate the
enemy’s charge. At this
point the Turkish Brigade was ordered to attack to the east towards the
town of
Brigadier
Yazici ordered one of his
battalions to move towards the town, but while it was on the way, there
were
information according to which large enemy forces were moving towards
Tokcon.
The IX Army Corps CO Lieutenant General John Coulter ordered the
Turkish
battalion to stop at a road near the
Even
so, this first miserable Turkish action
was promoted and positively commented worldwide. Robert
Leckie clarifies in a straight manner the purpose for which
that Turkish “victory” was treated with so much
publicity: “The Turks moved out,
and then, after reaching the village of Wawon
about seven miles east, were brought to the battle which American
newsmen,
eager for a victory to report (especially, it seems, if it could be
about those
“Terrible Turks” of whom Americans knew so little),
proclaimed around the
globe. No small fight ever won more impressive headlines around the
world. The
word was flashed that the Turks, meeting the Chinese for the first
time, had
dealt them a bloody repulse at bayonet point; it was the first stirring
bit of
news from the November battle. But what precisely happened in the first
few
hours at Wawon is still an open question. The brigade also boasted the
capture
of several hundred enemy prisoners from among these first
“Chinese” waves. The
word gave a lift to the neighbors. Lt. Sukio Oji, a Nisei interpreter,
was sent
by the 2nd Division to interview the prisoners.
Instead of Chinese,
he found 200 forlorn ROKs who had blundered into the Turkish column
while
beating their way back from the fight at Tokcon”.(7)
In
the official Hellenic Army General Staff
History “The Hellenic Expeditionary Force in Korea 1950-
Raymond
Cartier is more
caustic, describing the facts with
an undisguised ironical manner: “For
the
Turks is their first appearance they make in
The first contact of the Turkish Brigade with the face of war proved to be disastrous. Those first incidents with the Turks, revealed that further on the cooperation with them would prove to be extremely difficult and for this reason a stronger contact and a stricter control had to be established. Nevertheless this did not take place right away, due to the fact that the myth had already been created and would follow the Turks ever since. No one seemed to take seriously into account these first signs of incompetence. Clay Blair notes with clarity: “Like the war correspondents, Coulter apparently was mesmerized by the Turks and continued to regard them as superhuman fighters rather than the poorly led green troops that they were. Coulter’s misplaced confidence in the Turks led to disastrous consequences”.(10)
The Allied forces had to retreat fighting hard. The Turkish Brigade had taken defense positions at Wawon closing the gap between sections of the 2nd Infantry Brigade and other formations. This gap was of vital importance, because if the enemy burst the defense at that point, the 2nd Brigade would be cut-off at Kounou-ri. Soon enough the Turks underwent a fierce attack and the unit commanders ordered their men to fix bayonets and counterattack. This determined reaction, maybe was based on the effort to find a way to rinse the shame that the Turks probably felt, from the so far bad presence in the battlefield. But even this action did not prove to be effective. Essentially the famous Turkish Brigade dissolved once more.
For one more time, even this new disaster was surrounded with a heroically overcoat, the so beloved for the American reporters, up to the point to be known as an example to follow! According to the new fairytale, the Turks were reported to have killed up to 200 enemy soldiers! Even so truth can not be hidden in history. Clay Blair reports: “But the truth was that these overrated, poorly led green troops broke and bugged out, again leaving the entire right flank of Eight Army exposed”.(11)
For the same battle incidents, Paul Freeman was later commenting, in a clearly sarcastic way, that the Turks “look at the situation, and they had no stomach for it, and they were running in all directions”.(12)
The
chaotic situation at the right flank of
the Eight Army, caused a new retreat, while the 24th
Brigade was
ordered to hurry in order to reinforce the 2nd
Brigade. The
sensitive maneuvers required were performed in a cool and effective way
and the
Eight Army continued its retreat. The Turkish Brigade along with the
South
Korean 3rd Regiment and the
The 9th
and 23rd Regiments
of the
The
Turkish Brigade undertook the night
task to move to the north, which was performed in a sense of
uncertainty and
without having knowledge for what was happening around. Parts of the
Turkish
Brigade were engaged in fights and were soon disorganized and in the
North
Korean and Chinese lines a rumor was spread talking about the captivity
of
prisoners that did not speak English. Around 07.35, in the morning of
30
November, Turkish forces coming from Sountchon, were ambushed
Lacking a translator, the Turks that survived could not provide a clear picture of the size of the Chinese threat. Teams of the US Military Police sent to check it out, never returned back. Later on a reconnaissance tank company of M4 Shermans passed by the position of the destroyed convoy, without receiving fire, but not lost time to check for Turkish survivors. Nevertheless the description given by Russell Spurr for this disaster, could not avoid the heroic tone: “The Turkish Brigade fought magnificently. Officers threw their caps on the ground and swore to stand or die. But the Turks were engulfed by the advancing Chinese. Their brigade ceased to exist as a fighting force. A few units managed to back their way out and escape across the hills”.(13) Official history accounts report the assignments given to each unit, in an effort to clear the road to Sountchon. The Turkish Brigade did not show up at all which means that during the dramatic night of 29/30 November the core of its manpower had been dismantled.
While
the 9th Regiment using its
2nd and 3rd Battalions
would lead the attack to the
blocks set up by the Chinese on the road, only two Turkish companies
were
provided to the 3rd Battalion as a
reinforcement. In the beginning
the South Korean 3rd Regiment undertook the
mopping up of the hills
overlooking the road, in order to unblock the retreating route of the 2nd
Division. The 9th Regiment’s CO
underestimated the Chinese
resistance and having the 2nd Regiment leading
(the two Turkish
companies were following along with the 3rd
Battalion followed by
the 1st Battalion) moved on the road, using
every available weapon
to return the Chinese fire. At the location of the destroyed Turkish
convoy,
the
Until 2 December, the retreat of the Eight Army had been completed. The 2nd Division does not exist anymore and the Turkish Brigade lies completely disorganized, having lost 1/5 of its manpower, approximately 1,000 men, of whom more than 400 KIAs! After facing reorganization, the Brigade was attached to the 25th Division, which along with three other Brigades undertook the defense of Line B, in the area of Imjin river.
The
enemy had limited its activity since
the middle of December, when the Eight Army had withdrawn south of the
38th
Parallel. Nevertheless it is outraging the fact that despite the
totally negative
performance of the Turks, not only the war correspondents but also the
military
chain of command, continued to have the impression that these Asians
were just
bad in defense but good in attack! Having been tested in both cases,
everyone
should have understood that the Turks were not good in any kind of
fighting. This
did not stop the
On
the New Year’s day of 1951, the Chinese
performed their third large scale attack, trying to pass the 38th
Parallel. At
the west sector of the Allied defense line, the enemy did not attack
heavily,
since the defense there was strong. But generally in the central
sector, the
South Korean resistance was overcomed and the Allies were forced to a
general
withdrawal towards the beachhead of
On
the left flank of the west sector, the
Turkish Brigade along with the 25th Division
headed to
In
order to push the enemy to the north and
make him suffer as much casualties as possible, the Eight Army
undertook by the
end of January a counterattack codenamed THUNDERBOLT. On the left, the
I Army
Corps would march towards the south bank of Han river opposite
The attack was launched on 25 January showing slow progress, not because of enemy resistance since the main volume of the enemy forces had withdrawn, but due to the method with which the attacking forces were moving. The Turkish Brigade attacked in two columns, towards Kumyangjang and for the first time managed to stand in the battlefield. After extensive use of direct support artillery in which the Turkish Artillery Battalion participated, the Turks captured a hill north of Sougouon. Using fixed bayonets, they moved and captured the enemy positions.
This limited in scale, but in any way first, Turkish success, immediately received extraordinary dimensions. Everyone showed that have found the heroes they were looking for in order to raise the moral. Rumors said that the Turks killed 400 soldiers, most of them using bayonet! Right afterwards an investigation showed that on the hill there were only 154 bodies, the big majority of which were slaughtered by the artillery fire, that preceded.
This case, shows once more the extraordinary dimensions that the Americans tended to give every success of the Allied forces and especially to those caused by the action of “foreign” units. Let us not forget that many of the Allies had not fought for decades (like the Turks) while for others the not so flattering actions during World War II (French, Belgians, Dutch) were still recent. Despite all these, the influence from the rumors created for this heroic attack and the “slaughtering” of the enemy by the Turkish bayonet, was such that shows that if the rumors intended to psychologically influence the soldiers morale, then it proved absolutely successful. This was due to the fact that the new Eight Army CO General Matthew B. Ridgway, got full knowledge for the real facts and the excessive publicity that the Turkish attack underwent, he was smart enough to get impressed by the big impact that the created rumors caused. He decided to get full advantage of this, in order to strengthen the moral of his men. So he issued an order according to which all men in the Eight Army should fight onwards on fixed bayonets. According to a historian, “The command greatly needed something to symbolize the birth of a new spirit. Restoration of the bayonet, and a dramatizing of the action, was at one with the simple message given to the troops: “The job is to kill Chinese”. Once men could be persuaded that those in others units were deliberately seeking the hand-to-hand contest with the enemy, they would begin to feel themselves equal to the overall task. There can be no question about the efficacy of this magic in the particular situation: IT WORKED!”(14)
Therefore the truth could be totally hidden and everyone could be misled, by a short paragraph like the one of Harry Summers, concerning exactly that incident: “The brigade’s bayonet charge against Chinese positions in January 1951 led then EUSA Commander General Matthew B. Ridgway to order all infantry units on the line to fix bayonets on their rifles”.(15)
In the mean time, while the Allied attack was progressing slowly, the enemy concentrated stronger forces, showing increasing resistance and performing periodically stronger counterattacks. The Eight Army was ordered to continue the attack.
In
“The Korean War 1950-
The
Turkish Brigade was ordered to attack
and occupy in coordination with the
On 3 February, Ridgway ordered to stop the direct attack and forced to attack on the flanks. Indeed, the next two days the Turks and the 35th Regiment acted according to the new order, always under heavy artillery support and captured the hill. Having the enemy exhausted from the continuous fight and the losses due to the artillery fire, US units continued the attack, leaving the Turkish Brigade to follow behind. The units were reinforced with tanks, distributed into platoons and moved facing resistance but there are no reports showing that the Turks undertook any noticeable action in these particular battles. The more likely, they had done everything to their power and now the initiative was totally in the hands of the Americans.
Despite
the fierce resistance, the Chinese
were forced to a general retreat in the mid of March and
In
the sector of the US I Army Corps, on
the line of contact there was the Porto Rican 65th
Regiment,
reinforced with a Philippines Battalion and on the right, the Turkish
Brigade,
a total force of 10,000 men, from which more than 5,000 Turks. At that
point
more than 50,000 Chinese attacked having as a result a chaotic
battlefield. The
Turks were not late to confirm their real reputation. At the moment
when their
CO was on leave to
The
Chinese attack broke into the night,
along the whole Turkish front and until 09.00 am, the Turkish 5th,
7th
and 9th Companies had been surrounded. The 1st
Company
that was in reserve
In
order to close the gap that the Turks
had left behind, the
Until the end of the hostilities, the Turkish Brigade did not participated in any major operation, acting only as a reserve force.
Around the end of May 1953, the Chinese initiated a series of attacks forming their last attack which lasted until the signing of the final cease fire agreement. The first attack broke out in the zone of the IX Army Corps, which held its positions causing significant losses to the enemy. The Chinese tried again in the operational zone of the I Army Corps and more specifically in five outposts of the Turkish Brigade, which now lied under the command of theThis
successful resistance of the Turks,
could be explained in many ways. First of all it was the third in the
row
brigade arriving in
In general, everyone and especially the Americans, were always overestimating the Turks as soldiers in the Korean War and many times they were presenting examples with which they tried to excuse the reputation of the “tough” Turk, that were funny and could easily be overturned.
Such a completely unfortunate example, is the indirect but obviously flattering comment for the Turks, made by Max Hastings: “When 21 Americans had been successfully Communist indoctrinated, not a single Turkish prisoner of war had succumbed”.(18) It is a totally superficial consideration which concludes to the derivation of a gross and arbitrary conclusion. This is because it ignores the biggest problem the Turks faced with their allies. While the Americans themselves could not communicate with the Turks, how was it possible for the Chinese to communicate with them and also to submit them to a methodical program of communistic propaganda? The whole case sounds hilarious.
There
is also the description of an
American that found himself in the same concentration camp with Turkish
prisoners. Describing his impression form a Turkish soldier named Nafi,
he
mentions: “…a private
soldier who had
been such a powerful influence amongst his compatriots in the Turkish
soldier’s
company at Pyoktong, that the Chinese had believed him to be an
officer.
Fortunately, they were still not sure about his rank; they had no
efficient
Turkish interpreter in

COMPARISON
WITH THE GREEKS IN
From
what has already been mentioned, one
can easily conclude what is often lost in the depth of history. That
behind big
words and official statements, lies the political expediency and the
support of
an aim. So even in
From all these, someone could suppose that in the same way, that the positive comments attributed to the Hellenic Expeditionary Force (HEF) to Korea, was no more as in the case of the Turkish Brigade than “exaggerations”. Such a thought, is wrong. This is because while the Greek participation was 1/5 the size of the Turkish one, the HEF detached an overwhelming majority of appraisals and distinctions in comparison with the Turks. It is only that a brigade is naturally more easily “distinguished” than a battalion. The positive comments for the Hellenic presence in the battlefield were genuine, since it corresponded to the truth. This is due to the fact that the Hellenic Army was already fighting for a decade, the officers were excellent leaders and there was a more recent experience during the Greek Civil War (1946-1949), in full contradiction with the “smokeless” for decades Turks.
The HEF, basically a reinforced battalion, never suffered such a hit that would excuse the need for retreat form the front-line, neither suffered the humiliating defeats of the Turkish Brigade. Even smaller in size in comparison, someone could claim that the HEF’s contribution to the allied fight, was much bigger than the impact of the Turkish Brigade, a formation that was mostly kept as a reserve of the divisional formation to which it was assigned.
The Greek Battalion, was distinguished from the first moment in the battlefield. Its first engagement in a battle, in January 1951 for the defense of Hill 381, was revealing since the Greeks contained much bigger Chinese forces, fighting exemplary and without any irregularity. It is also a fact that many times the American command to which the Greek Battalion was assigned, having appreciated the Hellenic superior level, was assigning to them the most difficult tasks of an attack attempt or the defense of the most vital sector of the defense line.
It is finally characteristic that the reputation of the Greek soldiers was known even to the enemy, up to the point that in June 1953 to abort a large scale Chinese attack for the continuation of the effort to recapture the vital Out Post Harry, whose defense was assigned at the last stage to the Greek Battalion. Also, it is totally revealing the fact that in the last phase of war in July 1953, just a few hours before the application of the ceasing fire agreement, the Chinese in an act of revenge, bombed with great artillery impetus the defense positions of the Greek Battalion!
The
Greek soldiers in
Despite
this we see that the influence of
the Turkish myth created at that time, still exists mostly in
Americans. Such a
typical example, lies in Admiral William
J. Crowe that served in the period 1980-1983 as Commander in
Chief, Allied
Forces Southern Europe (CINCSOUTH) of NATO. From this position, the
Admiral had
the opportunity to meet both the Hellenic and the Turkish Staff, but as
every
American officer assumptioning of such duties, his thoughts and
considerations
were in a large portion clearly political. Therefore, as an excellent
candidate
“victim” of the Turkish myth, he could not do
otherwise but repeating the same baseless
stories in his memoirs, indicating usual and completely unimportant
facts, that
in reality do not mean anything: “The
Turks have a distinguished military background. In the early Ottoman
days they
were the terror of the world. They not only won the great battles of
history.
As soldiers they were awe-inspiring. That was when they were at the
peak of
their power, of course, but the modern Turkish Army has inherited the
tradition
and is intensely proud of it. Every officer knows the
nation’s military record
in detail, right down to the Korean War, where they also had an
outstanding
record. General Necdet Oztorun, the deputy chief of staff, who served
in
As a
NATO commander I might not have been able to get the Turks to cooperate
with
Greeks, but at least I knew I could count on their discipline and
bravery. In
battle, they would do what they were told to. The other side of the
coin was
that Turkish military thinking was highly stylized. Initiative did not
extend
down the ranks.
But
there was never a question that they would fight tenaciously. The Turks
have
never hesitated to take casualties. It is embedded in their souls and
in their
history. On the Gallipoli peninsula in World War One they rushed the
Allied
trenches time and again. They lost hundreds of thousands of men, but
they kept
coming. My instincts tell me that in the open field in this day of
tanks and
maneuver they would be strenuously tested. But if they were able to
take a
stand, they would be very difficult to uproot.
I am
persuaded that the Greeks too would fight extremely well. It is a small
military organization but with considerable punch for its size.
Moreover, Greek
troops are canny and natural scrappers. I never had any doubts about
their
staunchness, and I was convinced that if we ever had been confronted
with
Soviet and
Having
examined the conditions under which
the Turkish myth was created during the Korean War, the poor war
achievements
there, their action in
Notes:
1) Thomas Nigel/ Abbott Peter/ Mike Chappel, The Korean War 1950-53, Osprey 1986, p. 21.
2) Ntokos Thanos/ Protonotarios Nikos, The Turkish military power. A challenge for the Hellenic National security, Konstantinos Tourikis Publications 1994, p. 49.
3) Stokesbury James, A short history of the Korean War, 1988, p. 238.
4) Stokesbury James, A short history of the Korean War, 1988, p. 299.
5) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
6) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
7) Robert Leckie, Conflict: The
history of the Korean War 1950-
8) Hellenic Army General Staff/
Military History Directorate, The Hellenic Expeditionary Force in
9) Raymond Cartier, The Afterwar World History, Volume A 1945-1953, Papyrus/Parismatch 1970.
10) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
11) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
12) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
13) Russel Spurr, Enter the Dragon:
14) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
15) Harry G. Summers, Colonel
16) Thomas Nigel/ Abbott Peter/ Mike Chappel, The Korean War 1950-53, Osprey 1986, p. 21.
17) Clay Blair, The forgotten war.
18) Max Hastings, The Korean War,
Pan
19) Anthony Farrar, The edge of the sword, 1954, p. 246.
20) Admiral William J. Crowe, Jr, The line of fire, Simon & Schuster-1993, p. 91, 92.
Bibliography
· Antony Farrar, The edge of the sword, 1954.
· Robert Leckie, Conflict: The history of the Korean War 1950-1953, GP Putham’s Sons 1962.
· Raymond Cartier, The Afterwar World History, Volume A 1945-1953, Papyrus/Parismatch 1970.
· Hellenic Army General Staff /
Military History Directorate, The
Hellenic Expeditionary Force in
· Nigel Thomas, Peter Abbott, Mike Chappell, The Korean War 1950-53, Osprey 1986.
· Clay Blair, The
forgotten war.
· Russel Spurr, Enter
the Dragon:
· James L. Stokesbury, A short history of the Korean War, 1988.
· Admiral William J. Crowe, Jr, The line of fire, Simon & Schuster 1993.
· Thanos Ntokos & Nikos Protonotarios, The Turkish military power. A challenge for the Hellenic National security, Konstantinos Tourikis Publications 1994.