by Larry Bond
Fortunately there was a solution. One that had worked well during the North’s first try to liberate the South. It was cumbersome, yes, and overly manpower-intensive. But it would work.
He looked at Chyong, still waiting motionless as snow coated the stars on his shoulder tabs. “You were quite correct to bring this situation to my attention, comrade. I’ll take immediate steps to get you the supplies you need.”
Seeing the other man’s raised eyebrow, Cho explained. “From now on, supplies will move only by night or on days like this. And the convoys will avoid routes the enemy has already targeted. We’ll build new bridges and use porters through otherwise impassable terrain if need be. Finally, I shall see to it that our air defenses are strengthened.”
Chyong nodded his understanding. Such measures had enabled the Chinese to supply large armies in the South from 1951 to 1953, despite the overwhelming air superiority enjoyed by the imperialists. As a young officer he’d studied the system thoroughly and come away impressed both by its effectiveness and its extravagant use of raw manpower. And that last element raised a question that needed to be asked.
Cho seemed to read his mind. “You want to know where all the men for this will come from? Not from your command, I assure you. The high command has placed two more rifle divisions — the Twelfth and the Thirty-first — under my authority. We’ll use them as human pack animals instead of combat soldiers. Better that they should serve the Liberation with their backs than add to our other burdens, eh?”
Chyong’s eyes showed his amusement and agreement.
Cho didn’t allow himself to feel any trace of doubt about his decision until after his subordinate was gone. He’d planned to use the two new divisions to strengthen his advancing army’s flanks. Was it wise to sacrifice the additional security they could have provided? He stood uncertainly in the doorway to his trailer, torn by indecision. Perhaps he should cancel those plans and simply rely on improving the army’s existing supply systems.
Then reason returned. There would be no extra security involved in placing additional troops on the line if he couldn’t supply them. He needed combat power, not useless mouths. Cho turned his back on the gloomy skies and entered his trailer. The morning’s first briefing was already long overdue.
JANUARY 9 — ECHO COMPANY, NORTH OF CHOCH’IWON
The dull, coughing sound of twin explosions rolled across the flatlands and echoed off the steep, rocky hill above the highway.
“Good shooting, Private Park!” Kevin laid an approving hand on the shoulder of the South Korean reservist manning 3rd Platoon’s Dragon launcher.
The man smiled shyly and bowed his head in thanks at the compliment.
A thousand meters away, two North Korean T-62 tanks burned in fiery testimony to Park’s skill. His missile had slammed squarely into one and exploded, catching the second T-62 inside the resulting fireball. On either side of the dead tanks, other enemy vehicles hastily dispersed, some behind the dense white puffs thrown by onboard smoke dischargers. APCs disgorged their infantry, who promptly sought cover in roadside ditches.
Kevin studied the apparent confusion in satisfaction. His ambush, as expected, had forced the North Koreans to deploy for battle — a maneuver that wasted precious time and fuel. He watched for a couple of minutes more, making sure, and then let the binoculars fall back onto his chest. It was time to head out.
“Lieutenant Rhee!” Rhee’s head popped up from beside a boulder. “Move your people back to the next position. We’ve done enough here.”
The Korean nodded and started bellowing orders. Kevin stood aside as the files of white-camouflaged soldiers began slipping past him, down the slope toward the valley spreading out below this last hill. He glanced toward the road. Were the North Koreans reacting any faster this time?
Nope, the NK column was still trying to shake itself out into attack order. From the look of things, it would be at least another ten minutes before they could advance against what they assumed was an enemy-held hill. Kevin would have liked to have met their expectations. The terrain was perfect, too steep for tanks and with too little cover for attacking infantry. Even a small number of defenders wouldn’t have had much trouble bloodying a much larger assaulting force.
He sighed. Orders were orders.
Even when they didn’t make any sense.
For the last seven days, they’d been retreating virtually nonstop — halting just long enough to delay the North Koreans, inflict a few casualties, and then hustle on. At first he and his men hadn’t minded. They took fewer casualties of their own in that kind of running fight. But as the retreat went on and on, they’d started to question the sanity of the higher-ups. The UN forces had been abandoning defensive positions that could have been held. Why? And where were the reinforcements promised from the States and from South Korea’s enormous pool of trained reserves?
This latest withdrawal made even less sense than all the others. Once past this range of rugged hills, the North Korean spearheads would again enter flat, open ground — ground perfect for tanks and other armored vehicles. And the next really defensible position lay along the Paekma River, thirty kilometers south and just a few kilometers north of the city of Taejon. Christ, how far did the generals plan to let the NKs go before they did something?
Kevin rubbed a weary hand over his face, glad that the weather had warmed up enough to let him dispense with the makeshift scarf he’d had to wear over his mouth and nose when the last Siberian cold front had roared through — plunging temperatures well below zero. One of his men had frozen to death on guard duty that last hellish night. What was his name? Costello. Try as he might, he couldn’t remember the man’s face. But he’d never forget that pathetic corpse, huddled stiff and blue at the bottom of a one-man foxhole. Not in a million years.
He followed his men down the hill.
JAUNUARY 10 — HIGHWAY 1, NEAR TAEGU
The long convoys of green-painted trucks filled every southbound lane, moving at high speed past groups of refugees forced to the side of the road. Each had its canvas covers tightly closed, for protection against both the weather and prying eyes, but several still bore markings that identified them as belonging to the U.S. 3rd Marine Division.
One of the refugees, a wizened, old farmer, shrugged his pack onto the pavement and stood straight as the trucks roared by. As a young man he had served beside the Marines in the battle for the Pusan perimeter. Mustering the English he’d picked up then, he called out, “Hey, Mac! Where’re you heading?”
A youthful Marine corporal stuck his head out the window of one of the passing trucks and yelled back, “To kick some communist ass!”
Cheers followed the trucks on their way down the road toward Pusan.
JANUARY 11 — NEAR THE EMBARKATION AREA, PUSAN, SOUTH KOREA
Shin Dal-Kon was a realistic man. And as a realistic man, he understood that the odds were greatly against his living to see another day. But Shin was also a dedicated man, and he had a duty to perform. A duty that would surely kill him.
He moistened his lips and stared out again through the window, counting ships and vehicles. Shin’s small gift shop was perfectly placed, within easy walking distance of the Pusan railway station and less than five hundred meters from the harbor’s main docks. During the summer months the store was usually clogged with foreign visitors buying trinkets or postcards — a condition that made other, less ordinary exchanges ludicrously easy.
In fact, his masters in Pyongyang now considered Shin Dal-Kon their top agent in Pusan. Or so they’d always told him, he thought wryly. Certainly he was one of the longest-lived. The short, bald, ordinary-looking man had served the North continuously since 1963.
But now that service was about to come to a sudden end. And all because of Pyongyang’s desperate need for information about what the Americans were up to. His control’s last signal had ordered him to report any significant findings by radio — and without delay.
He wondered, did the desk-sit
ters up North know they’d ordered his death in the same signal? Shin had survived for more than twenty-five years for a single, good reason — he was always careful. No dispatch ever followed the same route or ever went through fewer than three cut-outs before it started north. And Shin had never, never used any of the radios which he’d been issued. South Korea’s radio-direction-finding units were too skilled to toy with. They could pinpoint an illicit radio transmitter in minutes. That was a lesson Shin had learned secondhand and never forgotten. But now he had to ignore it.
Despite tight security, the American effort was too obvious to be missed. Seemingly endless convoys of trucks crowding the dockyard’s roads; warships moored offshore while transports anchored alongside massive cargo cranes; stern-faced security detachments on every street corner, and perhaps most significantly, the complete disappearance of the rowdy American sailors who’d once thronged Pusan’s bars and brothels. They all spelled one thing to the North Korean agent: amphibious invasion. Soon the American armada would depart, and Pyongyang had to be ready for its reappearance at some point along the coast.
And so Shin had to sound the warning. And so Shin would die, as soon as South Korea’s security forces broke down his shop’s door.
He put down the notepad containing his coded signal and went down the stairs and out into his small garden. Carefully he levered frozen soil away at one corner of the garden, knelt, and gingerly lifted a heavy earthenware pot of the kind used to ferment kimchee. Shin hefted the pot and brought it back inside before lifting its top to reveal the ultramodern shortwave radio concealed inside.
Working quickly, partly from fear and partly from an impatient desire to see the thing done, he raised the whip-thin aerial, made sure the frequency setting was correct, and began transmitting.
NSP MOBILE MONITORING UNIT 67, NEAR THE EMBARKATION AREA
The traffic-battered minivan looked like any of the thousands of similar vehicles scattered across South Korea’s city streets. But instead of dried fish, cooking oil, or sacks of rice, it contained an array of highly sophisticated radio listening devices.
The senior duty agent for the National Security Planning Agency’s Pusan Station leaned over the operator’s shoulder. “Anything yet?”
The man nodded abruptly as faint beeps emerged from his equipment. “Yes, he’s just started transmitting.”
The agent smiled and keyed his own transmitter. “All units report in and stand by for my signal.”
Acknowledgments flooded through his headphones. Satisfied, the NSP agent moved back to the other man. “Well?”
“He’s still transmitting, sir. This one is either very slow or very unpracticed.”
“The latter, I believe,” the NSP man said. “This man is no ordinary spy. He’s a big fish, and like all big fish he’s swum in the depths for years. I suspect he’s not happy at being this close to the surface.” He stopped, conscious of having been too talkative.
But the equipment operator hadn’t even really been listening. “He’s stopped!”
“You’re certain?”
An emphatic nod.
The NSP agent keyed his transmitter again. “Take him.”
THE GIFT SHOP
The Special Forces captain finished attaching the short-fused plastic explosive, triggered it, and ducked back as the gift shop’s front door blew in. Two men in gas masks and carrying submachine guns rolled in through the opening, right behind the explosion. Others waited outside, covering every other possible exit.
Seconds passed. Then the captain heard a stun grenade go off and followed his men in. A stretcher team came close behind.
Rapid impressions filtered through his mind as he took the stairs to the second floor two at a time. Swirling smoke. Scorched wall hangings. And then a small room crowded with his troopers, a radio, and a body.
The captain lifted his gas mask and caught the faint whiff of almond still lingering in the air. “Report.”
“He’s dead, sir. Took a cyanide capsule before we tossed the stunner in.”
Undoubtedly true. These men were very competent. And completely trustworthy. “Never mind. We’ve got what we wanted.”
THE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE, PYONGYANG, NORTH KOREA
The heaters in the underground command bunker worked far too well, unlike most products of the North Korean workers’ state. And so Kim Jong-Il and the other Military Commission members sweltered in summerlike heat while above them Pyongyang’s streets lay buried under several feet of snow and ice. The sweat streaming down his face did not improve Kim’s temper.
“So, Colonel General Cho reports that his troops have crossed the Paekma River in no fewer than three places. Surely that is good news enough for you.”
“Indeed it is, Dear Leader. But…”
Kim frowned. He’d long suspected the speaker, the secretary of communications, of being a covert member of the party’s Chinese faction. He’d never been able to prove it, though. Not to his father’s satisfaction. Well, the old man was faltering. It wouldn’t be long before all the reins of power were firmly gathered in his hands. “But what? Come, come, Comrade Secretary, don’t be coy with us. What troubles you now?”
“Cho also reports that he has taken heavy casualties from imperialist air strikes, and that his supply lines are stretched to the limit. I question his ability to continue the advance until air superiority can be regained — ”
“That would be extraordinarily foolish!” Kim snapped. “Obviously, as a civilian, you cannot be expected to remember the vital role momentum plays in achieving victory, but I have not forgotten it.” He watched the communications secretary flush at the unjustified gibe. As a teenager the man had fought in the first Fatherland Liberation War — winning several medals for his heroic devotion to duty.
“In any event,” Kim continued, “I have directed our ambassador in Moscow to press our Russian friends for additional combat aircraft and pilots. With them in hand we shall sweep the skies clear of imperialist aircraft.”
Several of the old men around the table looked openly skeptical, and Kim made a mental note to have each of them watched more carefully.
An aide entered and bent low to whisper something in the ear of the Research Department’s director. The director signaled for Kim’s attention. “Dear Leader, I have urgent news from our agent in Pusan. His findings confirm preliminary conclusions our best analysts had already drawn from Soviet satellite photographs. The Americans are preparing an amphibious force for a descent somewhere along our coast. They have assembled enough ships to carry at least thirty-five thousand men.”
Murmurs swept around the table. Many present remembered the catastrophe of Inchon and the subsequent UN drive deep into North Korea. They wanted no repetition of that nightmare.
Kim Jong-Il sat and glared. The panicky old fools! They wavered and fretted at the first sign of difficulty. He turned to the admiral in charge of the Naval Command. “There should be no difficulty in any of this. Assemble your submarines and ambush the Yankees as they steam north. We’ll send their bandit Marines to a watery grave!”
A sudden silence greeted his words, broken at last only by the half-whispered words of the admiral. “I have no submarines left to send, Dear Leader. All the ones in the northern Yellow Sea have been sunk.”
Sunk? Every one of them? Kim grasped for words. “Why wasn’t I informed of this? Why didn’t you report it?”
“I have, Dear Leader.” The older man’s face was unreadable. “My reports on the current naval situation have been delivered to your headquarters daily.”
And probably held there by some underling fearful of his wrath, Kim knew. For the first time in months he felt unsure of his course. Events could be slipping out of his hands and that could be fatal. Most of these men bore him little love. With an effort he regained his composure. “I see. The road we must take is clear. We must acquire the naval forces we need from the Russians. They, at least, have plenty of submarines to spare.”
The olde
st man at the table, a wizened old survivor of the guerrilla war against the Japanese, coughed delicately into a fragile, blue-veined hand. “First aircraft, and now ships as well. What will the Soviets demand of us in return for all these things? Do we risk handing over our Revolution and sovereignty for these pretty toys?”
“These ‘toys,’ Comrade Choi, are necessary to win this war.” Kim controlled his temper, though with great difficulty. Choi was close to his father. “And once we have won this war, we shall rule Korea. Not the Russians. Not the Chinese. Only the Party and its Great Leader!”
No one debated his assertion, but Kim sensed their continued fear and indecision. He closed his folder abruptly. Very well, then. Enough was enough. They wouldn’t accomplish any more this day. “This meeting is adjourned, comrades. We will reconvene tomorrow to review the measures necessary to deal with this seaborne enemy threat.”
He left the room without waiting for their reaction. There were urgent signals to be sent to Moscow.
THE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE — MOSCOW, R.S.F.S.R.
The two men sat close together in the vastness of the high-ceilinged office. Oil paintings depicting various triumphs of Russian arms — Borodino, Stalingrad, Kursk, and others — covered the walls in martial splendor. Thick curtains blocked any view of Moscow’s empty nighttime streets.
An opened bottle of vodka and a half-eaten loaf of black bread sat on a silver tray next to the two men. Both liked to pretend that they were of simple peasant stock. In reality, both had risen to rank through the intertwined workings of favoritism and seniority, carried higher and higher within the Party — the Soviet Union’s version of the Czarist aristocracy.
“Then we are in agreement, comrade?” the minister of defense asked.