Pohang Operation

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Date10 January – 11 February 1951
Location
Result UN victory
Pohang Operation
Part of the Korean War
Date10 January – 11 February 1951
Location
Result UN victory
Belligerents

 United Nations

 North Korea
Commanders and leaders
General Oliver P. Smith General Lee Ban Nam
Units involved
United States 1st Marine Division
First Republic of Korea 1st Korean Marine Corps Regiment
10th Division
Casualties and losses
26 killed
10 missing
UN estimate
3,000 casualties

The Pohang Operation was an anti-guerilla operation during the Korean War between United Nations Command (UN) and North Korean forces near Pohang from 10 January to 11 February 1951.

Following their withdrawal from the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir and their evacuation from North Korea in December 1950, the US 1st Marine Division began a period of rest, reorganization and rehabilitation at Masan, South Korea about 200 miles (320 km) south of the UN's Main line of resistance.[1]

When the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) launched their Third Phase Campaign on 31 December 1950, the Korean People's Army (KPA) simultaneously attacked in eastern Korea breaking through the positions held by the Republic of Korea Army. As part of the KPA assault the 10th Division attacked towards Andong. The US Eighth Army alerted the 1st Marine Division to be ready to move 65 miles (105 km) northeast to Pohang, a fishing village about a third of the way up Korea's east coast, in order to protect Eighth Army lines of communication and backstop some shaky ROK divisions. The Pohang area had great strategic importance because it included a significant stretch of the Eighth Army main supply route (National Route 29), housed several key road junctions, included the only protected port on the east coast still in UN hands, and was the site of K-3 one of the few modern airfields in eastern Korea. This mission was confirmed on 8 January, but it had by then been modified to include the entire 1st Marine Division which was not assigned to a corps, but would instead be directly under Eighth Army operational control. The division staff cut orders on 9 January, and the Marines began moving out the next day with the maneuver elements going by truck and the support units by air, rail, and ship.[1]:351

Operation

Aftermath

References

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