The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War (100 page)

Read The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War Online

Authors: David Halberstam

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

BOOK: The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War
4.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

as Indigo-China
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall
, p. 234; Oshinsky, David,
A Conspiracy So Immense,
p. 36.

to do the Lord’s work
: Melby, John,
The Mandate of Heaven,
p. 135.

“with or without Russian aid”
: Rovere, Richard, and Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.,
The General and the President,
p. 195.

“illiterate, peasant son of a”
: Kahn, E. J.,
The China Hands,
p. 82.

“became the Government’s chief”
: Tuchman, Barbara,
Stilwell and the American Experience in China,
p. 303.

“without money or influence”
: Ibid., p. 316.

“to try and unify China”
: Kahn, E. J.,
The China Hands,
p. 184.

most likely quite ill
: Melby, John,
The Mandate of Heaven,
p. 55.

Marshall quickly answered
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 574.

“how would I extricate them”
: author interview with Walton Butterworth for
The Best and the Brightest.

“of these boobs”
: Melby, John,
The Mandate of Heaven,
p. 97.

“the largest troop movement”
: Zi Zhongyun,
No Exit
?, p. 25.

of some 1.2 million Japanese soldiers
: Ibid., p. 27.

“from disregarding my advice”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 574.

 

CHAPTER
16

 

“we will take it away from them”
: Fairbank, John, and Feuerwerker, Albert,
The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 13,
p. 758.

“Uncle Chump from over the Hump”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 758.

“smell of corruption and decay”
: Melby, John,
The Mandate of Heaven,
p. 44.

“into campaigns of mobile warfare”
: Fairbank, John, and Feuerwerker, Albert,
The Cambridge History of China, Vol. 13,
p. 764.

the wildest of boasts
: Payne, Robert,
Mao,
p. 227.

“of feint and deceit”
: Salisbury, Harrison,
The New Emperors,
p. 6.

“doesn’t he generalize”
: Swanberg, W. A.,
Luce and His Empire,
p. 282.

“whether it is wise to continue to supply his troops”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 634.

“our supply officer”
: Salisbury, Harrison,
The New Emperors,
p. 8.

“more of our equipment than the Nationalists did”
: Rovere, Richard, and Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.,
The General and the President,
pp. 214–215.

“the end is at hand”
: Melby, John,
The Mandate of Heaven,
p. 289.

“almost a fanatical fervor”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 634.

“the Yangtze with broomsticks”
: Rovere, Richard, and Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.,
The General and the President,
p. 214.

so he canceled the dinner
: Zi Zhongyun,
No Exit
?, pp. 101–102.

“No sir, I do not”
: Koen, Ross Y.,
The China Lobby in American Politics,
p. 90.

“greater military power than any ruler”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 673.

 

CHAPTER
17

 

“without even a gesture of assistance”
: Christensen, Thomas,
Useful Adversaries,
p. 70.

the China they knew was dying
: Herzstein, Robert,
Henry Luce and the American Crusade in Asia,
p. 5.

so different and so poor
: Halberstam, David,
The Powers That Be,
pp. 57–58.

“remembered for centuries and centuries”
: Swanberg, W. A.,
Luce and His Empire,
p. 186.

“in the early 1950s in the same way”
: author interview with Professor Alan Brinkley.

“on most issues, isolationists”
: Ibid.

“is traceable to Chiang”
: White, Theodore H.,
In Search of History,
pp. 176–178.

“to guard against”
: Ibid., pp. 205–206.

“couldn’t get a job as dog-catcher”
: Kahn, E. J.,
The China Hands,
p. 10.

“the gigantic task ahead”
: Swanberg, W. A.,
Luce and His Empire,
p. 266.

“he was too intelligent not to”
: Wellington Koo oral history, Columbia University.

“I know the man”
: Cray, Ed,
General of the Army George C. Marshall,
p. 686.

the Atlantic, the Democratic one
: Rovere, Richard, and Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr.,
The General and the President,
p. 230.

for a changed China policy
: Ibid., p. 213.

“Would you send your own sons”
: Zi Zhongyun,
No Exit?,
p. 260.

“quite another thing to plan resultful aid”
: Phillips, Cabell,
The Truman Presidency,
p. 286.

“The animals,” Truman said
: Halberstam, David,
The Fifties,
p. 56.

“pouring money down a rathole”
: papers of Matthew Connelly, Harry S. Truman Library.

“I’ll bet you that a billion dollars”
: Lilienthal, David E.,
The Journals of David E. Lilienthal: Vol. II,
p. 525.

“I spoke American to him”
: Wellington Koo oral history, Columbia University.

such was reality
: Ibid.

“Back to the mainland!”
: Kahn, E. J.
The China Hands,
p. 247.

 

CHAPTER
18

 

able to catch their breath
: Appleman, Roy,
South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu
, p. 289.

got to use it first
: author interview with Charles Hammel.

“bleeding to death”
: Fehrenbach, T. R.,
This Kind of War,
p. 138.

“then you are asking for trouble”
: Goncharov, Sergei, et al.,
Uncertain Partners,
p. 155.

“the forgotten commander of the forgotten war”
: Mike Lynch interview in the Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

“then we’ll stay here until”
: Mike Lynch interview with Clay and Joan Blair, U.S. Army War College Library.

“how many reserves have you dug up”
: Appleman, Roy,
South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu,
p. 335; author interview with Layton Tyner.

that night or the next one
: author interview with George Russell.

or seven football fields
: author interview with Joe Stryker; letter from Master Sergeant Harold Graham to Berry Rhoden, June 29, 1951.

“where the hell anyone else”
: author interview with Erwin Ehler.

“impossible at night”
: Ibid.

“Like millions of ants”
: author interview with Terry McDaniel.

“we were the turkeys”
: author interview with Rusty Davidson.

“to the point of being invisible”
: author interview with George Russell.

to try to get his squad out of there
: author interview with Berry Rhoden.

managed to keep going
: letter from Master Sergeant Harold Graham to Berry Rhoden.

“Best thing I ever tasted”
: Ibid.

“and you’ll be in Charley Company”
: Knox, Donald,
The Korean War, Vol. II,
pp. 62–63; author interview with Joe Stryker.

were simply too much for him
: Mike Lynch interviews in the Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.

“what to do to stop it”
: Ibid.; Heefner, Wilson,
Patton’s Bulldog,
p. 220; author interview with Layton Tyner.

was now extended beyond September 4
: Appleman, Roy,
South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu
, pp. 462–463; Blair, Clay,
The Forgotten War,
pp. 250–251.

“began to get a very shaky feeling”
: author interview with Lee Beahler.

“Yes, sir,” Fry replied instantly
: author interviews with Lee Beahler and Gino Piazza.

“All right, Sergeant, carry on”
: Ibid.; author interview with Charles Hammel.

“I never saw a man so cool”
: Ibid.

If the engineers had not been perfectly
: author interview with Jesse Haskins.

there was no way to save him
: author interview with Vaughn West.

maybe you should cry
: Ibid.

spoke with forked tongues
: author interview with Lee Beahler.

it really was just that bad
: author interview with George Russell.

“he had done everything right”
: author interview with Lieutenant General (Ret.) Harold G. Moore.

the great mass of people
: Paul Freeman oral history at U.S. Army War College Library.

“for his own good”
: Ibid.

as if he were a member of the board
: Ibid.

“do my best as a professional soldier”
: letters of Paul Freeman, courtesy of Anne Sewell Freeman McLeod.

had been able to forget that moment
: author interview with Berry Rhoden.

he had received the Silver Star
: author interview with Jack Murphy.

it seemed like a small miracle
: Ibid.

 

CHAPTER
19

 


when he was a military genius”
: Perret, Geoffrey,
Old Soldiers Never Die,
p. 548.

“scuddle up to the Manchurian”
: Cumings, Bruce,
The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II,
p. 692.

he had ever encountered
: Heinl, Robert,
Victory at High Tide,
p. 30.

“and Inchon had all of them”
: Ibid., p. 24.

“solidifying chocolate fudge”
: Ibid., p. 26.

“an ideal place for mines”
: Ibid., p. 27.

“Bradley is a farmer”
: Ibid., p. 10.

“made aware of the details”
: Ibid., p. 40.

“Barrymore and John Drew could hope”
: White, William Allen,
The Autobiography of William Allen White,
pp. 572–573.

“I studied dramatics under him”
: Lee, Clark, and Henschel, Richard,
Douglas MacArthur,
p. 99.

“So MacArthur went over to the senator”
: Eisenhower, Dwight D.,
At Ease,
p. 214.

“as if he hadn’t seen her for years”
: Allison, John,
Ambassador from the Plains,
p. 168.

“If I were asked, however”
: Heinl, Robert,
Victory at High Tide,
p. 40.

“breed timidity and defeatism”
: MacArthur, Douglas,
Reminiscences,
p. 349.

“I wouldn’t have taken that promise”
: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.

Other books

Born of Defiance by Sherrilyn Kenyon
The Turning by Tim Winton
It's a Crime by Jacqueline Carey
The Cover of War by Travis Stone
Paper Covers Rock by Jenny Hubbard
The Dunwich Romance by Edward Lee
Crooked River by Shelley Pearsall
Hero by Rhonda Byrne
Hero of Hawaii by Graham Salisbury