“We have been bastard children”: Ibid., p. 210.
   Few people have suffered so terrible”: Heinl, Robert, Victory at High Tide, p. 242.
   “a callous indifference to casualties”: Ibid., p. 294.
   “The public relations brigade”: Goulden, Joseph, Korea, p. 241.
   “invite you to all our landings”: Weintraub, Sidney, MacArthur’s War, p. 204.
   “the greatest conflict of interest”: author interview with Jack Murphy.
   was scarier still: author interview with Jack Murphy.
   its full implications much too late: author interview with Matthew B. Ridgway; Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, pp. 46–62.
   CHAPTER 21
   senior Chinese Nationalist officials had very good intelligence: author interview with Robert Myers.
   consequences of such an encounter: Koen, Ross Y., The China Lobby in American Politics, p. 83.
   “is here in Washington where its lobbyists”: Zi Zhongyun, No Exit?, pp. 243–244.
   “a little more friendly to us”: Ibid., pp. 278–279.
   CHAPTER 22
   “probably more bloodied”: Foot, Rosemary, The Wrong War, p. 103.
   “and the Congressional Medal of Honor”: Halberstam, David, The Best and the Brightest, p. 324.
   “a shift in the balance of power”: Foot, Rosemary, The Wrong War, p. 52.
   “some early affirmative action”: Ibid., p. 43.
   “bigoted influence of the China Lobby,” Kennan, George F., Memoirs 1925–1950, pp. 490–493.
   “in a time of despair”: Ibid., pp. 102–103.
   “the more unsound it would become”: Ibid., p. 488.
   “why should we hesitate?”: Ibid., p. 73.
   “up to a surveyor’s line and stop”: Acheson, Dean, Present at the Creation, p. 445.
   “The Hiss Survivors association”: Foot, Rosemary, The Wrong War, pp. 69–70.
   “had adopted a hawkish stance”: Bradley, Omar, with Blair, Clay, A General’s Life, p. 558.
   “a ratification of actions”: papers of James Webb, Harry S. Truman Library.
   “the neatness of the phrasing”: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan, The Wise Men, p. 532.
   “to take on the entire Joint Chiefs”: author interview with Lucius Battle.
   “a superhuman effort”: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan, The Wise Men, p. 540.
   “There is no stopping MacArthur”: Weintraub, Stanley, MacArthur’s War, p. 163.
   “terrible, terrible defeats”: author interview with Frank Gibney.
   “We love you as the savior of our race”: Spurr, Russell, Enter the Dragon, p. 428.
   “wasting your valuable time”: Weintraub, Stanley, MacArthur’s War, p. 162.
   “without regard to dark hints of possible disaster”: Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, p. 45.
   “someone ready to give it a try”: Ibid., p. 44.
   “old and even pitiable without his hat”: Thompson, Reginald, Cry Korea, p. 87.
   CHAPTER 23
   just to do ordinary shopping: Panikkar, K. M., In Two Chinas, p. 23.
   “deportment of a queen”: Ibid., p. 25.
   “for whose culture she had no great”: Ibid., p. 27.
   “what can atomic bombs do there?”: Ibid., p. 108.
   “MacArthur’s dream has come true”: Ibid., pp. 109–112.
   “mere vaporings of a panicky Panikkar”: Isaacson, Walter, and Thomas, Evan, The Wise Men, p. 533.
   their real problem was that long border: Foot, Rosemary, The Wrong War, p. 81.
   was around 60,000 deaths: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, pp. 153–154.
   “I will respond with my hand grenade”: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, pp. 153–154.
   he knew the population better: author interview with Chen Jian.
   the half person, he said condescendingly: Ibid.
   “a 1,054 page whitewash”: Foot, Rosemary, The Wrong War, p. 44.
   and asked for Chinese: Shen Zhihua, Cold War International History Project, Winter 2003, Spring 2004.
   apparently agreed to: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, p. 161.
   CHAPTER 24
   136 of 199 division commanders: Laquer, Walter, Stalin: The Glasnost Revelations, p. 91.
   “Every crime was possible”: Djilas, Milovan, Conversations with Stalin, p. 190.
   “Revolution is not a dinner party”: Bloodworth, Dellis, The Messiah and the Mandarins, p. 62.
   “not even a fart”: Li Zhisui, Dr., The Private Life of Chairman Mao, p. 117.
   unlikely to invest their military: Djilas, Milovan, Conversations with Stalin, p. 182.
   “Chairman Mao will reconsider”: Goncharov, Sergei, et al., Uncertain Partners, p. 29.
   “he needed no instructions”: Ibid., pp. 29–30.
   “Long live Comrade Stalin!”: Ibid., p. 62.
   “had never read Das Kapital ”: Ibid., p. 88.
   “This is feudalism”: Ibid., p. 105.
   Stalin’s fiftieth birthday: Laquer, Walter, Stalin: The Glasnost Revelations, p. 179.
   “as the starting point of time”: Ibid., p. 183.
   the bodies of potential rivals: Li Zhisui, Dr., The Private Life of Chairman Mao, p. 122.
   “to its original greatness”: Ibid., p. 124.
   “served to order, like food”: Ibid., p. ix.
   “neither is as close as Chairman Mao”: Laquer, Walter, Stalin: The Glasnost Revelations, p. 189.
   “a needle up his ass”: Li Zhisui, Dr., The Private Life of Chairman Mao, p. 261.
   “the head of the Bulgarian party”: Ulam, Adam B., Stalin: The Man and His Era, p. 695.
   Again they refused: Goncharov, Sergei, et al., Uncertain Partners, p. 85.
   “You know that Chinaman”: Talbott, Strobe (editor), Khrushchev Remembers, pp. 239–240.
   “I am here to do more than eat and shit”: author interview with Chen Jian.
   mutual instinct for misunderstanding: Talbott, Strobe (editor), Khrushchev Remembers, p. 239.
   “meat from the mouth of a tiger”: Bloodworth, Dennis, The Messiah and the Mandarins, p. 101.
   “an abiding hatred of the Soviet”: Ulam, Adam B., Stalin: The Man and His Era, p. 695.
   with an urgent request for Chinese troops: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, p. 172.
   the terrible dangers in store: Ibid., pp. 173–175.
   “is nothing to be afraid of”: Li Zhisui, Dr., The Private Life of Chairman Mao, p. 125.
   “how can we stand aside”: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, p. 182.
   “and last, as a leader”: Peng, Dehuai, Memoirs of a Chinese Marshal, p. 7.
   giving his teeth a greenish pallor: Li Zhisui, Dr., The Private Life of Chairman Mao, p. 99.
   “Only our general”: Ibid., p. 383.
   “let alone provide for our parents”: Peng, Dehuai, Memoirs of a Chinese Marshal, p. 161.
   or roughly 130,000 men: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, pp. 195–196.
   “How many bombers”: Ibid., p. 201.
   “may cause great harm”: Ibid., p. 202.
   for the majority of battle commanders: Ibid., p. 207.
   CHAPTER 25
   “God’s right hand man”: Nellie Noland interview, Harry S. Truman Library.
   his staff pressured him to go: Charles Murphy interview, Harry S. Truman Library.
   “king go to the prince”: Matt Connelly interview, Harry S. Truman Library.
   “the attributes of a foreign sovereign”: Acheson, Dean, Present at the Creation, p. 456.
   “he was still fighting”: John Muccio interview, Harry S. Truman Library.
   “all American soldiers regardless”: Walters, Vernon A., Silent Missions, p. 204.
   “the Chinese are about to intervene”: interview with Vernon A. Walters, American Masters, WGBH Television.
   “the Palace Guard”: author interview with Frank Gibney.
   more smoke blown in his face: Toland, John, In Mortal Combat, p. 2
41.
   no commander in history: Ibid., pp. 241–242; Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, pp. 346–349; Spurr, Russell, Enter the Dragon, p. 159.
   “before we get in trouble”: Dean Rusk interview, Harry S. Truman Library.
   “as if they were the heads of different”: Gunther, John, The Riddle of MacArthur, p. 200.
   “a different idea of what it was”: Acheson, Dean, Present at the Creation, p. 455.
   “luster to his dream of victory”: Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, pp. 37–38; Spurr, Russell, Enter the Dragon, p. 158; Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 188.
   “honestly believes he’s a patriot”: New York World-Telegram, April 8, 1964.
   “how completely oblivious”: author interview with Matthew B. Ridgway.
   “obedient, dutiful, childlike, and quick”: Cumings, Bruce, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II, p. 97.
   was the Chinese commander: Weintraub, Stanley, MacArthur’s War, p. 291.
   “some old war horse similar to”: Cumings, Bruce, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II, p. 103.
   fixed, immobile Japanese: Collins, J. Lawton, War in Peacetime, p. 215.
   “know your enemy”: Mike Lynch interview, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.
   to events he did not like: Perret, Geoffrey, Old Soldiers Never Die, p. 551.
   for his official file explaining: Morris, Carol Petillo, Douglas MacArthur: The Philippine Years, pp. 204–213.
   “An arrogant enemy,” he added: Chen Jian, China’s Road to the Korean War, p. 148.
   “nothing again should ever hurt him”: Lee, Clark, and Henschel, Richard, Douglas MacArthur, p. 166.
   “You have a court”: Acheson, Dean, Present at the Creation, p. 424.
   “sycophancy was what tripped him up”: Weintraub, Stanley, MacArthur’s War, p. 161.
   “the dreamworld of self worship”: Stueck, William, Rethinking the Korean War, p. 113.
   and arrogant was he: author interview with Carleton West.
   “too much of a Prussian accent?”: D. Clayton James interview with Roger Egeberg, MacArthur Memorial Library.
   “all ideology”: author interview with Frank Wisner, Jr.
   “give England to the Germans”: Naval Historical Center Colloquium on Contemporary History, June 20, 1990.
   “a friend of the United States”: Kluckhohn, Frank, the Reporter, August 19, 1952.
   “than the people at the Dai Ichi”: author interview with Frank Gibney.
   “and headed towards Washington”: Ibid.
   “the faceless mob driven by”: Cumings, Bruce, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II, p. 106.
   “of Communism would trump mine”: author interview with Joseph Fromm.
   “that headquarters to deal with reality”: Ibid.
   “subjugation of the Western world”: Cumings, Bruce, The Origins of the Korean War, Vol. II, p. 112.
   eventually passed on to McCarthy: Ibid.
   “had been so outspoken about him”: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.
   “Willoughby falsified the intelligence”: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 377.
   “where it would have to be acted on”: author interview with Bill Train.
   had not been so deadly serious: author interview with Carleton Swift.
   “that he had made up his mind on”: Ibid.
   anyone higher up about the intelligence: author interview with Robert Myers.
   “the enormous power that Willoughby had”: author interview with Bill Train.
   “to a low point of effectiveness”: Heefner, Wilson, Patton’s Bulldog, p. 264.
   indicate a serious Chinese presence: Ibid., p. 272.
   “was very much under his shadow”: author interview with Bill Train.
   “was unduly influenced by Willoughby”: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 379.
   “but not the full armies themselves”: Heefner, Wilson, Patton’s Bulldog, p. 272.
   “moving into that awful goddamn trap”: author interview with Bill Train.
   “a lot of Mexicans in Los Angeles”: Tom Lambert interview, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.
   CHAPTER 26
   “know Karl Marx from Groucho Marx”: Bayley, Edwin, Joe McCarthy and the Press, p. 68.
   “you’ve got to be a Communist”: Ibid., p. 73.
   “pig in a minefield”: author interview with Murray Kempton for The Fifties.
   “only a mucker can muck”: Oshinsky, David, A Conspiracy So Immense, p. 174.
   “should proceed with another”: Patterson, James, Mr. Republican, p. 455.
   “the most nefarious campaign”: Oshinsky, David, A Conspiracy So Immense, pp. 168–169.
   “how things had changed”: Ibid., p. 178.
   “without gaining that of the Chinese”: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 400.
   his virtual disobedience: Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, p. 65.
   “they will get Christmas dinner at home”: Toland, John, In Mortal Combat, p. 281.
   he simply said, “Bullshit”: Ibid., p. 282.
   “the first time he smells Chinese chow”: Ibid., Heefner, Wilson, Patton’s Bulldog, pp. 281–282; author interview with Layton Tyner; Tyner interviews with Toland, Toland papers, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library.
   “hit the jackpot”: Weintraub, Stanley, MacArthur’s War, p. 221.
   “like Custer at the Little Big Horn”: Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, p. 63.
   “the most fitting conclusion”: Perret, Geoffrey, Old Soldiers Never Die, p. 548.
   CHAPTER 27
   a friendly little tank-shove: author interview with Jim Hinton.
   “to be disappearing into the vast”: Ibid.
   from the very face of the earth: author interview with Paul O’Dowd.
   “less able to support us each day”: author interview with John Carley.
   “couldn’t get anyone to act on it”: author interview with Malcolm MacDonald.
   the time was not quite right to attack: author interview with Sam Mace.
   no one seemed very interested: author interviews with John Eisenhower and Dick Gruenther.
   “a phantom which cast no shadow”: Marshall, S. L. A., The River and the Gauntlet, p. 1.
   The next day the Chinese hit: author interview with John Eisenhower.
   CHAPTER 28
   bandaged up and wrapped in blankets: author interview with Sherman Pratt; Pratt, Sherman, Decisive Battles of the Korean War, pp. 15–20.
   “From here I just don’t see a solution”: letters of Paul Freeman courtesy of Anne Sewell Freeman McLeod and Roy McLeod.
   CHAPTER 29
   beyond their comprehension: author interview with Alan Jones.
   disgrace the Takahashi name: author interview with Gene Takahashi.
   could dry their clothes: Ibid.
   retreating to a higher point on the mountain: author interview with Dick Raybould.
   in a moment of total cowardice: author interview with Bruce Ritter.
   and got both Smith and White out: author interviews with John Ritter, Billie Tinkle, and John Yates.
   a huge pile of enemy bodies: author interview with Sam Mace.
   “knowing a Chinaman when I see one”: author interview with Charley Heath.
   the fear in the air: author interview with Sam Mace.
   in conversation, the Big Ego: Ibid.; Spurr, Russell, Enter the Dragon, p. 193.
   CHAPTER 30
   just as endangered: Paul Freeman oral history, U.S. Army War College Library.
   “because we were set up to fail”: author interview with Dick Raybould.
   “MacArthur could do no wrong”: Appleman, Roy, Escaping the Trap, p. 47.
   “Ned was aggressive”: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 32.
   “can those things float?”: Victor Krulak oral history, U.S. Marine Corps History Division.
   “always lengthy shitlist”: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 17.
   “enough to form an additional regiment”: Hoffman, Jon T., Chest
y, pp. 370–371.
   the Congressional Medal of Honor: author interview with James Lawrence.
   “if only he would put on a little weight”: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 186.
   “It might take only two”: Sloan, Bill, Brotherhood of Heroes, p. 58.
   the ten thousand Japanese soldiers: Ibid., p. 310.
   “may have saved the Marine Division”: Alpha Bowser oral history, U.S. Marine Corps History Division.
   had mounted in Europe: Ibid.
   “Even Genghis Khan wouldn’t”: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 64.
   “he got away with it at Inchon”: D. Clayton James interview with Oliver P. Smith, MacArthur Memorial Library.
   or the last time he would use it: Hoffman, Jon T., Chesty, p. 378.
   not part of any massive Chinese: author interview with Bill McCaffrey.
   and received the Navy Cross: author interview with James Lawrence.
   “selected dumps along the way”: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 52.
   Chinese forces on the eastern front: Lawrence, James, paper on the Chosin fighting he prepared for U.S. Marine Corps Symposium; author interview with James Lawrence.
   “still far from our preselected killing zones”: Simmons, Edwin, Frozen Chosin, U.S. Marine Corps Korean War Commemorative Series, 2002, p. 34.
   in case the Chinese struck: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 71.
   “of sick and wounded” Ibid., p. 72.
   “we took 4500 casualties out”: Frank, Benis, The Epic of Chosin, U.S. Marine Corps History Division.
   “and a chasm on the other”: Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War, p. 65.
   “with much the same scenario”: author interview with James Lawrence. Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 82.
   “on where you wanted to measure”: Russ, Martin, Breakout, p. 82.
   “and that’s what we started to do”: Simmons, Edwin, Frozen Chosin, p. 49.
   “an insane plan”: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 456.
   “the most ill-advised and unfortunate”: Ibid.
   “was the Tenth Corps commander”: author interview with James Lawrence.
   would have tragic consequences: Blair, Clay, The Forgotten War, p. 418.
   “What did the general say?”: Gugeler, Russell, Combat Operations in Korea, p. 62.
   
 
 The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War Page 92