Camp PendletonCamp Pendleton — On Wednesday at Camp Pendleton, Marine veterans of the Korean War marked the 66th anniversary of the Inchon Landing, the risky amphibious invasion on Sept. 15, 1950, ...
It was characterized as too risky, too dangerous, too out-of-the-question — but ultimately, that didn't deter the United States of America or Gen. Douglas MacArthur, for that matter. Just months after ...
Editor’s note: This is part of an occasional series marking the anniversary of the start of the Korean War. On Sept.15, 1950, history’s last large-scale amphibious landing occurred at Inchon, South ...
Cemeteries are the keepers of our memories. When others have forgotten, they remember — in stone, in monument, in a chiseled line here or there, a carved symbol, a record of past deeds, who we were ...
SEOUL, South Korea -- Inchon, South Korea, took on a movie-set quality today as U.S. Marines and their South Korean and U.N. counterparts re-enacted the massive amphibious landing 60 years ago that ...
In June 1950, President Harry Truman ordered a naval blockade of the Korean coast and authorized Gen. Douglas MacArthur to send U.S. ground troops into Korea. During the three-year war, history would ...
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! RAND Corporation senior international/defense researcher Bruce Bennett talked about competition between the United States and the Soviet Union in the ...
Memorial and celebration ceremonies mark the 60th anniversary of the Incheon Landing, Sept. 15. 2010. Credit: SSG Nicholas Salcido The success of the Incheon landing of September 15, 1950, had ...
Cemeteries are the keepers of our memories. When others have forgotten, they remember — in stone, in monument, in a chiseled line here or there, a carved symbol, a record of past deeds, who we were ...
SEOUL, South Korea -- Inchon, South Korea, took on a movie-set quality today as U.S. Marines and their South Korean and U.N. counterparts re-enacted the massive amphibious landing 60 years ago that ...