Truman Statue Revealed by South Korea on Armistice Anniversary

Truman Statue Revealed by South Korea on Armistice Anniversary


On ⁤the 70th anniversary of ⁣the armistice that halted the Korean War,⁣ one American⁣ received a special honor in ⁣South ⁢Korea: former President Harry S. Truman, in whose memory a ‍new, nearly 14-foot-tall statue was unveiled on Thursday.

Although ⁤not all South Koreans were happy to see another monument for the war or a new edifice to an American leader built on their soil, conservatives wanted ⁤to celebrate⁣ Truman, ‌who perhaps affected the fate of South Korea more than any other U.S. president. When North Korea invaded the South in⁢ 1950, Truman sent American troops and engineered a United Nations resolution to support ⁤the South⁤ with Allied forces.

South Korea celebrates the armistice anniversary as a victory for the free world that helped the nation become‍ one of Asia’s ​richest economies, while‍ North Korea⁤ remains a hunger-stricken, nuclear-armed international pariah.

“The Americans’ choice ⁢to have such‌ a decisive leader as President Truman in the White House when North Korea ⁤invaded saved South Korea and the free world,” said Cho ​Gab-je, a prominent conservative ⁤journalist‍ and‌ publisher who led the campaign to build a Truman statue.

The ⁣statue was dedicated at a‍ government-run memorial park⁣ at Dabu-dong, a famous Korean War battle site near Daegu in southeast South Korea. It⁣ was made ⁤by the sculptor Kim Young-won, best known ‌for making the statue of King Sejong in central Seoul.

The Truman statue was installed as part ⁤of conservative activists’ broader effort to celebrate Washington’s decision to intervene in the Korean War as well as the⁣ resulting alliance between the United States⁤ and South Korea, which ‍still underpins the South’s defense against North Korea even today.

When North Korea launched a surprise attack on South Korea on June 25, 1950, Truman was spending the weekend at home with his family in Independence, Mo.

“Korea is a⁤ small country, ‍thousands of miles away, but what is happening there is important to every American,” he said in a radio and television ⁢address. “We know that ⁣it⁤ will take a hard, tough fight to halt the invasion and to ‍drive the Communists back.”

He ‌would later say that his hardest decision as ⁤president was opting to enter the Korean War. The​ invaders he initially called “a bunch of bandits” swept ​down the Korean Peninsula, pinning American and South Korean ‍forces⁣ into its southeastern corner,‍ known as⁢ the “Pusan Perimeter.” At Dabu-dong, the Allied forces repelled the North Koreans trying to‌ break⁣ through the perimeter.

Then, General ⁤Douglas MacArthur’s troops outflanked them⁢ by storming Incheon, a port city west of Seoul, in an amphibious landing in September 1950 that turned the tide of the war.

The three-year war, which cost the lives of 36,500 American soldiers and millions of Koreans, ended in a​ truce.

Addressing‍ the U.S. Congress in 1954, President Syngman Rhee of South Korea thanked Truman for saving⁣ South Koreans “from being driven into the sea.” ‌When he spoke to⁢ Congress⁤ this April,…

2023-07-27 02:17:23
Link from www.nytimes.com
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