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This is a list of the twenty-two United Nations soldiers and POWs (one Briton and 21 Americans) who declined repatriation to the United States after the Korean War, and their subsequent fates. United Nations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
Geneva Convention definition A prisoner of war (POW) is a soldier, sailor, airman, or marine who is imprisoned by an enemy power during or immediately after an armed conflict. ...
Combatants Western Allied/UN combatants: South Korea, United States, United Kingdom Communist combatants: North Korea, Peoples Republic of China, Soviet Union Commanders Douglas MacArthur Kim Il-sung, (Peng Dehuai de facto) Strength Note: All figures may vary according to source. ...
Background
Prisoner repatriation was one of the greatest stumbling blocks in the long cease-fire negotiations between the forces of the United Nations and those of China and North Korea. The warring factions finally agreed on an exchange of sick and wounded prisoners, Operation Little Switch, which was carried out in April and May of 1953. That June, the two sides agreed that no prisoner who did not wish to be repatriated would be forced to do so (this had long been a sticking point in negotiations, with the Chinese and North Koreans wanting all prisoners returned to their home countries). Prisoners that did not wish to go back to their home countries would be given 90 days in neutral territory to reconsider before being allowed to stay in enemy territory. Following the armistice that was signed on June 27, 1953, effectively ending the Korean War (South Korea never signed), the main prisoner exchange was free to proceed. United Nations - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
Operation Little Switch was an exchange of sick and wounded prisoners during the Korean War in April and May 1953. ...
A white flag is traditionally used to represent a truce. ...
Operation Big Switch, the exchange of remaining prisoners of war, commenced in early August 1953, and lasted into December. 75,823 Communist fighters (70,183 North Koreans, 5,640 Chinese) were returned to their homelands. 12,773 U.N. soldiers (7,862 South Koreans, 3,597 Americans, and 946 British) were sent back south across the armistice line. Over 22,000 Communist soldiers, most of whom had fought for Chiang Kai-shek against the Communists in the Chinese Civil War, refused repatriation. But, much to the shock and surprise of the Western nations, 1 British and 23 American soldiers (along with 327 South Koreans) also refused to be returned to their homelands. Two, Corporal Claude Batchelor and Corporal Edward Dickenson, changed their minds before the 90-day window expired. Both were court-martialed and sentenced to prison terms, with Batchelor serving 4 1/2 years and Dickenson 3 1/2. Operation Big Switch was the repatriation of all remaining prisoners of the Korean War 75,823 Communist prisoners and 12,773 UN prisoners were returned. ...
This article is about communism as a form of society and as a political movement. ...
Chiang Kai-shek (October 31, 1887âApril 5, 1975) was a Chinese military and political leader who assumed the leadership of the Kuomintang (KMT) after the 1925 death of Sun Yat-sen. ...
Combatants Chinese Nationalist Party Chinese Communist Party Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Mao Zedong Strength 3,600,000 circa June 1948 2,800,000 circa June 1948 The Chinese Civil War (Traditional Chinese: åå
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æ; Pinyin: guógòng neìzhà n; literally Nationalist-Communist Civil War) was a conflict in...
A court-martial (plural courts-martial) is a military court that determines punishments for members of the military subject to military law. ...
Shortly before the deadline was about to expire, Americans south of the DMZ broadcast a message to the defectors in Panmunjeom, saying "We believe that there are some of you who desire repatriation." Defector Richard Corden (see below) shouted "Do any Americans want to go home?", and his fellow detainees answered "No!". Panmunjeom (PanmunjÅm) in Gyeonggi province is a village on the de facto border between North and South Korea, where the 1953 armistice that halted the Korean War was signed. ...
That left 22 U.N. soldiers who voluntarily stayed behind with the Communists after the final exchange of prisoners. The 21 Americans were all given dishonorable discharges. This had the unintended consequence of rendering them immune to court-martial when they finally returned to the United States, because they were no longer active-duty military.
The 22 who stayed - Cpl. Clarence Adams was a black soldier from Memphis, Tennessee. Adams cited racial discrimination in the USA as the reason he refused repatriation. He would marry a Chinese woman and live in China until the increasingly anti-Western atmosphere of the Cultural Revolution led him to return to the United States in 1966. Clarence Adams died in 1999.
- Sgt. Howard Adams worked in a factory in China. He refused all media requests for interviews.
- Sgt. Albert Belhomme was a native of Belgium who immigrated to the United States as a teenager. He lived in China for ten years, working in a paper factory, before returning to Belgium.
- Cpl. Otho Bell was sent to a collective farm with William Cowart and Lewis Griggs (see below). Bell described himself, Cowart and Griggs as "the dummy bunch", saying they were sent to the farm because they could not learn Chinese. They returned to the United States together in 1955, were arrested, but were released when it was found that the military no longer had jurisdiction over the defectors after they were dishonorably discharged. Bell died in 2003.
- Andrew Condron, a Scotsman of the 41st Royal Marines, was the only Briton to decline repatriation. He returned to Britain in 1960, and faced no disciplinary action.
- Sgt. Richard Corden continued to favor communism even after returning to the United States in 1958. His fate is unknown.
- Cpl. William Cowart returned with Bell and Griggs. Later the three soldiers sued for their back pay. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court, which held that Bell, Cowart and Griggs were entitled to their back pay from the time they were captured to the time they were dishonorably discharged.
- Sgt. Rufus Douglas died in China a few months after arrival in 1954. The manner of his death is not certain but is believed to be from natural causes.
- Cpl. John Dunn married a Czechoslovakian woman while in China and settled in Czechoslovakia in the 1960s.
- Andrew Fortuna won two Bronze Stars before he was captured. He returned to the United States in 1957 and died in 1984.
- Lewis Griggs returned with Bell and Cowart in 1955. He was listed as a senior majoring in sociology at Stephen F. Austin State University in 1959. He died in 1984.
- Pfc. Samuel Hawkins returned to the United States in 1957, and successfully petitioned the government to change his discharge from dishonorable to other than honorable. He raised a family, and has given interviews to the press on the condition that his location not be disclosed.
- Cpl. Arlie Pate worked in a paper mill before returning with Aaron Wilson (see below) in 1956. He died in 1999.
- Sgt. Scott Rush married in China. After living in China ten years, he and his wife moved back to the United States and settled in the Midwest.
- Cpl. Lowell Skinner married in China, but left his tubercular wife behind when he came back to America in 1963. Later he would have problems with alcohol and spend six months in a psychiactric hospital. He died in 1995.
- LaRance Sullivan came home in 1958 and died in 2001.
- Pfc. Richard Tenneson came home in 1955. He went to Louisiana a few months later to welcome home fellow defector Aaron Wilson (see below). He settled in Utah before dying in 2001.
- Pvt. James Veneris stayed in China and became a dedicated communist, taking the Chinese name 'Lao Wen'. He worked in a steel mill, participated in the Great Leap Forward, hung posters during the Cultural Revolution, married three times, and had children. He visited the United States in 1976 but returned to China to live.
- Sgt. Harold Webb married a Polish woman in China and moved to Poland in 1960. In 1988, he was given permission to settle in the United States.
- Cpl. William White married and got a bachelor's degree in international law while in China. He returned to the United States in 1965.
- Cpl. Morris Wills played basketball for Peking University and got married in China. He came back to America in 1965 and got a job in the Asian Studies Department at Harvard University.
- Cpl. Aaron Wilson came home in 1956, married an American girl, and worked in his Louisiana hometown's mill.
Memphis was the wife of Epaphus, the founder of Memphis, Egypt in Greek mythology. ...
Official language(s) English Capital Nashville Largest city Memphis Area - Total - Width - Length - % water - Latitude - Longitude Ranked 36th 109,247 km² 195 km 710 km 2. ...
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The supreme court in some countries, provinces, and states, functions as a court of last resort whose rulings cannot be challenged. ...
Stephen F. Austin State University (known to students as SFA) is a higher education institution that was founded as a teachers college in 1921. ...
In chemistry, an alcohol is any organic compound in which a hydroxyl group (-OH) is bound to a carbon atom of an alkyl or substituted alkyl group. ...
Propaganda poster of the Great Leap Forward. ...
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Harvard University campus (old map) Harvard University (incorporated as The President and Fellows of Harvard College) is an accredited private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. ...
Official language(s) English and French Capital Baton Rouge Largest city New Orleans at last census; probably Baton Rouge since Hurricane Katrina Area Ranked 31st - Total 51,885 sq mi (134,382 km²) - Width 130 miles (210 km) - Length 379 miles (610 km) - % water 16 - Latitude 29°N to 33...
Quotes - "This is the greatest country in the world, and maybe when I was 17 years old I didn't know it, but I do now."--Aaron Wilson
- "Traitor, yeah, they called me a traitor. But I wasn't really."--Sam Hawkins
- "It is impossible to fight for peace in the United States. Anyone who tries to fight for peace will be prosecuted and even put to death."--Arlie Pate, after refusing repatriation
- "Each and every one of these ingrates should receive a dishonorable discharge, and thereby be forever barred from any consideration for war veterans' benefits."--U.S. Rep. William C. Cole, in 1954
- "If I had to do it all over again, I'd do it in the wink of an eyelash."--James Veneris
Film They Chose China (2005), a 52-minute documentary film, directed by Shui-Bo Wang.
References - Turncoat: An American's 12 Years in Communist China, by Morris Wills and J. Robert Moskin.
- 21 Stayed: The Story of the American GIs Who Chose Communist China, by Virginia Pasley.
- The Korean War, by Max Hastings. See Chapter 16, "The Prisoners".
Sir Max Hastings is a British journalist, editor, historian and author. ...
See also Charles Robert Jenkins, an American soldier who defected across the DMZ to North Korea in 1965 and turned himself in 39 years later. Image:Myron Williams. ...
In military terms, a demilitarized zone (DMZ) is an area, usually the frontier or boundary between two or more groups, where military activity is not permitted, usually by treaty or other agreement. ...
External links - Operations Big and Little Switch
- Essay on the GIs by Adam Zwieback
- Interview with James Veneris
- Transcript of 1963 TIME Magazine article with quotes from Albert Belhomme
- 2002 AP feature with quotes from several of the repatriated GIs
- 2002 Korean War Veterans Association magazine with 'where are they now' profiles of the defectors (PDF format)
- Article on Lowell Skinner
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