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A Concise History of the US Air Force - Air Force Historical Studies ...

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MacArthur advised Congress that “<strong>the</strong>re was no substitute for victory,”<br />

and contradicted national policy. On April 11, 1951, President Truman<br />

fired MacArthur, replaced him with Mat<strong>the</strong>w Ridgway, and in <strong>the</strong> process<br />

changed <strong>the</strong> nature <strong>of</strong> air warfare in Korea. The <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Force</strong> would still<br />

interdict <strong>the</strong> flow <strong>of</strong> supplies to Chinese units along <strong>the</strong> 38th Parallel and<br />

provide close air support to U.N. forces opposing <strong>the</strong>m, but it would now<br />

also pressure <strong>the</strong> enemy into a settlement by inflicting maximum losses<br />

<strong>of</strong> men and materiel. The “police action” had become a war <strong>of</strong> attrition.<br />

The Fifth <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Force</strong>’s new commander, Lieutenant General Frank<br />

Everest, believed that interdiction was key to reducing <strong>the</strong> impact <strong>of</strong><br />

Chinese <strong>of</strong>fensives and U.N. ground losses. MiG-I 5s outnumbered F-86<br />

Sabres over North Korea by five-to-one in 1951. Thus <strong>the</strong> <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Force</strong>’s<br />

losses climbed as B-29s operated mainly at night. Complicating its air<br />

superiority campaign were air bases which <strong>the</strong> Chinese tried to build in<br />

North Korea to support <strong>the</strong>ir own forces and which FEW was compelled<br />

to target. F-86s engaged MiGs in air-to-air combat and B-29s cratered<br />

<strong>the</strong> air bases’ runways, forcing Communist jets to continue flying out <strong>of</strong><br />

China and limiting <strong>the</strong>ir ability to challenge because <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir short range.<br />

However, any bomb damage was quickly repaired by enemy labor units<br />

and necessitated continuous return missions. Interdiction, although cost-<br />

ly, racked up long lists <strong>of</strong> destroyed trucks, trains, rail lines, and bridges,<br />

including <strong>the</strong> heavily-defended Yalu crossings. None<strong>the</strong>less, supplies still<br />

reached Communist front lines in quantity by night. Medal <strong>of</strong> Honor<br />

recipient Captain John Walmsley, Jr., <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 8th Bombardment Squadron<br />

gave his life using his searchlight-equipped B-26 as a beacon to direct<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r B-26s while <strong>the</strong>y bombed an enemy supply train on September 14,<br />

1951. As it had in Operation STRANGLE in Italy during World War 11,<br />

<strong>the</strong> <strong>Air</strong> <strong>Force</strong> learned that no air campaign was tougher than interdiction.<br />

By <strong>the</strong> spring <strong>of</strong> 1952 <strong>the</strong> Chinese had won <strong>the</strong> battle <strong>of</strong> interdic-<br />

tion and <strong>the</strong> Americans had failed in <strong>the</strong>ir attrition strategy along <strong>the</strong> 38th<br />

Parallel. Communist representatives, first at Kaesong and <strong>the</strong>n at Pan-<br />

munjon, stalled peace talks and demanded mandatory repatriation for<br />

prisoners-<strong>of</strong>-war. General Weyland proposed to break <strong>the</strong> impasse by<br />

expanding <strong>the</strong> air war against North Korea. As U.N. casualties climbed<br />

and negotiations dragged on, <strong>the</strong> new American commander in Korea,<br />

General Mark Clark, accepted Weyland’s proposal. In June 1952 he<br />

ordered <strong>the</strong> bombing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Suiho Hydroelectric Complex, previously<br />

“<strong>of</strong>f limits” and one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> largest facilities <strong>of</strong> its type in <strong>the</strong> world. It was<br />

a major exporter <strong>of</strong> electricity to Chinese industries across <strong>the</strong> border. A<br />

four-day onslaught over Suiho and o<strong>the</strong>r hydroelectric plants cost North<br />

Korea 90 percent <strong>of</strong> its power system. Through <strong>the</strong> remainder <strong>of</strong> 1952, <strong>the</strong><br />

49

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