Truman, MacArthur, and the Korean WarBloomsbury Academic, 1999年9月30日 - 186 頁 A general history of the critical first year of the Korean War, this study deals primarily with relations between General Douglas MacArthur and President Harry S. Truman from June 1950 to April 1951, a period that defined the war's direction until General Mark Clark, the final U.N. Commander, signed the Armistice two years later. Although the ever-changing military situation is outlined, the main focus is on policymaking and the developing friction between Truman and MacArthur. Wainstock contradicts the common view that MacArthur and Truman were constantly at odds on the basic aims of the war. In the matter of carrying the fight to Communist China, MacArthur and the Joint Chiefs differed only on timing, not on the need for such action. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 16 筆
... Withdrawals On September 19 , 1948 , the Soviet Union informed the United States that it would withdraw all of its ... withdrawal of American forces from South Korea.22 True to its word , the Soviet Union withdrew all of its forces ...
... withdrawal of the Chinese and North Korean troops , a three - week lull in the fighting ensued . On numerous ... withdrawing from the peninsula . They leaned toward the second , since the first would require additional troops , and the ...
... withdrawal , " the Eighth Army and X Corps both would have been annihilated . " But according to Montross and Canzona , the Eighth Army's withdrawal had made the X Corps's disengagement from northeast Korea necessary . 81 80 The 1st ...
內容
Background to the Korean War | 1 |
Invasion and Response | 15 |
The North Korean Steamroller | 31 |
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