Author
Bevin Alexander
bevinalexander.com
Bevin Alexander is an American military historian and author. He served as an officer during the Korean War as part of the 5th Historical Detachment. His book Korea: The First War We Lost was largely influenced by his experiences during the war.Wikipedia
Born: United States of America
Praise for Korea: The First War We Lost
"This.fast-moving study is the first to be written by a professional army historian.superb.capably challenges many of the traditional interpretations." -Library Journal
"The best overview of the Korean conflict since Fehrenbach's This Kind of War...a balanced, perceptive accounting..." -Kirkus Review "A desirable acquisition for most military collections." -ALA Booklist
"Bevin Alexander...argues in this well-researched and readable book that the United States fought two wars in Korea, winning one against North Korea and losing the other to Communist China." -The New York Times
Quote from the book
"Great efforts to conquer North Korea ended in failure."
“The United States spends nearly two decades after signing the armistice in deep animosity to Red China. The conflict ends only in February 1972 when Richard Nixon goes to China and reaches a settlement.”
Something hardly talked about in West Media
"The Battle of Triangle Hill (上甘岭战役) was the biggest and bloodiest contest of 1952.[13] After 42 days of heavy fighting, the Eighth Army had failed to gain the two hill masses that were its original goal."
"After suffering over 4,000 casualties in ten days, the failure of the last attack ended the 45th Division's role as the only combatant on the Chinese side.[58]"
"Although the Chinese had suffered 11,500 casualties with many units decimated during the battle, its ability to sustain such losses had slowly exhausted the US Eighth Army over two months of attrition.Meanwhile, the high UN casualties forced Clark to suspend any upcoming offensive operations involving more than one battalion, effectively preventing any major UN offensives for the rest of the war.[89][90] Clark and US President Harry S. Truman later confided that the battle was a serious blow to the UN morale."
"Despite its impact and scale, the Battle of Triangle Hill is one of the least known episodes of the Korean War within the Western media.[87]"
source: Battle of Triangle Hill - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The battle for Hill 598 in the Triangle Hill area was as severe. The UNC was defeated and lost 9,000 casualties in 42 days."
"The last two months of the war was one of its most bloody periods. It cost 53,000 UN and 105,000 communist casualties, the majority inflicted by artillery. In this same period over 700,000 communist artillery rounds hit UNC positions and 4,900,000 UNC artillery rounds were fired in response."
source: Trench warfare | Stalemate, the War in 1952–1953 | Australia's involvement in the Korean War