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Author Young, Charles S. (Charles Steuart), 1959-

Title Name, rank, and serial number : exploiting Korean War POWs at home and abroad / Charles S. Young.

Publication Info. Oxford, England : Oxford University Press, USA, 2014.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (ix, 241 pages) : illustrations
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Summary "Vietnam POWs came home heroes, but twenty years earlier their predecessors returned from Korea to shame and suspicion. In the Korean War (1950-1953) American prisoners were used in propaganda twice, first during the conflict, then at home. While in Chinese custody in North Korea, they were pressured to praise their treatment and criticize the war. When they came back, the Department of the Army and cooperative pundits said too many were weaklings who did not resist communist indoctrination or "brainwashing." Ex-prisoners were featured in a publicity campaign scolding the nation to raise tougher sons for the Cold War. This propaganda was based on feverish exaggerations that ignored the convoluted circumstances POWs were put in, which decisions in Washington helped create. POWs became pivotal to the Korean War after peace talks began in summer 1951. Since fighting had stalemated, both sides raced to win propaganda victories. The Chinese publicized American airmen who confessed to alleged germ warfare atrocities. American commanders worked to discredit communism by encouraging thousands of North Korean and Chinese prisoners to defect. Clandestine agents and a fraternity of anticommunist prisoners launched a violent campaign to inflate the number of POWs refusing repatriation after the war. Armistice negotiations floundered while China and North Korea demanded their soldiers back. United States delegates held out for what they called "voluntary repatriation," but in reality, thousands of prisoners were terrorized into renouncing their right of return. American POWs remained captive for eighteen more months of fighting over the terms of a compromised prisoner exchange. In the United States, details of the voluntary repatriation policy were suppressed. Name, Rank, and Serial Number explains how this provides new insight into why Korea became "the forgotten war.""-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Machine generated contents note: -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I: Over There -- 1. Limited War Sets the Stage for the POW Odyssey -- 2. The Middle Passage: Life-Changing Horrors in the First Year of Captivity -- 3. Andersonville East: Communist Prisoners are Pressured to Defect -- 4. Welcome, Fellow Peasant: The Chinese Seek Converts -- 5. POWL: Prisoners of Limited War Languish as Propaganda Becomes a Substitute for Victory -- 6. The Failure of Chinese Indoctrination -- 7. The United Nations Command Withholds POWs -- Part II: Over Here -- 8. Home to Cheers and Jeers -- 9. The Brainwashing Dilemma: Atrocity Reports Undermine Punishment -- 10. Prosecutions Rile the Nation -- 11. Target Mom: Disciplining "Misplaced Sympathy" -- 12. Missing Action: Hollywood Films Try and Fail to Fix Captivity -- 13. The Hidden Reason for Forgetting Korea -- Conclusion: Two Wars, the Visible and the Cloaked -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Korean War, 1950-1953 -- Prisoners and prisons.
Korean War (1950-1953)
Prisoners of war -- United States.
Prisoners of war.
United States.
Prisoners of war -- Korea (North)
Korea (North)
Korean War, 1950-1953 -- United States -- Public opinion.
Public opinion -- United States.
HISTORY -- Military -- Korean War.
HISTORY -- United States -- 20th Century.
Public opinion.
HISTORY -- Asia -- China.
Chronological Term 1950-1953
Added Title Exploiting Korean War POWs at home and abroad
Other Form: Print version: Young, Charles S. (Charles Steuart), 1959- Name, rank, and serial number 9780195183481 (DLC) 2013040056 (OCoLC)866251959
ISBN 9780199720262 (electronic book)
0199720266 (electronic book)
9780195183481
0195183487