Telegram from Ambassador William Sebald to Secretary of State Dean Acheson
Images (2)
Document
| id |
id
503332088
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 213
INCOMING TELEGRAM
Department of State
NATIONAL
ARCHIVES RECORDS AND
SERVICE"
b.g
COMPANY
TELEGRAPH BRANCH
PLAIN
A
Action
Control: 11784
Rec'd: March 24, 1951
FROM: Tokyo
5:48 a.m.
TO: Secretary of State
C
E
NO:
1704, March 24
P
SAM
EUR
Following text statement "on military situation in Korea"
UNA
issued by General MacArthur prior departure March 24 for
OLI
Korean battlefront:
CIA
IE
"Operations continue according to schedule and plan. We
PA
have now substantially cleared South Korea of organized
DCR
Communist forces. It is becoming increasingly evident
that the heavy destruction along the enemy's lines of
supply, caused by our round-the-clock massive air and
naval bombardment, has left his troops in the forward
battle area deficient in requirements to sustain his opera-
tions. This weakness is being brilliantly exploited by our
ground forces. The enemy's human wave tactics have definite-
ly failed him as our own forces have become seasoned to this
form of warfare; his tactics of infiltration are but contribu-
ting to his piecemeal losses, and he is showing less stamina
than our own troops under the rigors of climate, terrain and
battle
"of even greater significence than our tactical successes
has been the clear revelation that this new enemy, Red China,
of such exaggerated and vaunted military power, lacks the
industrial capacity to provide adequately many critical items
essential to the conduct of modern war. He lacks the manu-
facturing base and those raw materials needed to produce,
maintain and operate even moderate air and naval power, and
NA
he cannot provide the essentials for successful ground opera-
tions, such as tanks, heavy artillery and other refinements
science has introduced into the conduct of military campaigns
Formerly his great numerical potential might well have filled
this gap but with the development of existing methods of mass
destruction, numbers alone do not offsetthe vulnerability
inherent in such deficiencies. Control of the sea and the
4
air, which in turn means control over supplies, communications
and transportation, are no less essential and decisive now than
in the past. When this control exists as in our case, and is
CPE
coupled with andinferi or of ground fire power as in the
enemy's case,
sult issa ty uc that it cannot
be overcome by
Cabate 1, of the most gross
indifference to human loss.
Meseage Cente"These
PLAIN
REPRODUCTION OF THIS
MESSAGE IS PROHIBITED
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to