Korean War #43: Peace Talks, Almost
When Diplomacy Fails Podcast
Zack Twamley
4.8 • 773 Ratings
🗓️ 16 October 2018
⏱️ 50 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Episode 43: Peace Talks, Almost presents the situation on the frontlines as it stood in spring 1951, following some promising offensives by General Ridgeway which effectively crushed the Chinese capacity to launch another great offensive again. This incapacitation of the Chinese by no means meant that the communists were ready to roll over; indeed, the Chinese were still determined to hold on. As the allies crossed the 38th parallel for the second time, indeed, there was no genuine desire to push the envelope either, and to advance once more to the Yalu River. To have done so may well have escalated the situation, and caused the Chinese to declare an open war against the allies. Neither Washington nor its allies wanted this, but what the allies wanted above all was an end to the war after so many difficult months, and Washington was forced to listen to this request.
As certain initiatives were approached, the real star of the peace-making game loomed into view. The Indian delegation in the United Nations held influence among the third world delegations, and had been a convenient go-between with the Chinese and the West in years past. Now, Indian Prime Minister Nehru wished to bring an end to the Korean War through the auspices of the UN, either through its General Assembly or its Security Council, which India held a temporary seat in at this critical time. With high hopes, Nehru’s representatives in New York busied themselves throughout 1951, but it soon became clear that not even the Americans could be counted as reliable, in the strange game which was peace-making. With several twists and turns ahead, the Indians settled down into a long, arduous pressure campaign, just as the soldiers settled into the early phases of military stalemate.
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Music used:
“Alabama Red”, by Sidney Stripling, released in 1941, available: http://www.museumsyndicate.com/item.php?item=82676
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I'm Hello and welcome. History friends, patrons all to the Korean War episode 43. This, this episode right here is a big one. It's an important episode, but it is a very large episode, |
| 0:39.8 | so I hope I'll have your attention for the next several minutes. We're talking about the |
| 0:45.5 | peace treaties today, we're talking about the pieces of the piece that almost came together, |
| 0:50.2 | and we're talking about the pieces of the piece that looked like they were going to come together |
| 0:53.5 | and didn't for various reasons. So in the last episode we brought our analysis of the Truman |
| 0:58.9 | MacArthur controversy to a pretty epic conclusion. I have got some great feedback since you |
| 1:04.4 | guys listened to that episode and the audio analysis I took near the end of it in particular |
| 1:09.3 | has come up for a lot of praise, |
| 1:11.8 | which I really appreciate. I loved being able to bring all that stuff to you guys. I feel like |
| 1:17.2 | the medium of podcasting really shines when you can do things like that. So thanks so much |
| 1:22.3 | for being a part of it. And make sure you tell other people that if they want to hear Arthur go on and on about how great he was and how unfair everything is. |
| 1:31.3 | By all means, listen to episode 42 of the Korean War. |
| 1:34.7 | After concluding that aspect of the Korean War, though, we're now ready to move forward into the Twilight era of this series, |
| 1:40.9 | where we come to one of the most important and certainly the most durable question to come out of the conflict, why did it end, or not quite end, in the fashion that |
| 1:49.4 | it did? To investigate, we need to bring you guys, in a scenic route, of course, to spring |
| 1:54.5 | 1951, and to trace the dialogue, olive branches, and vested interests, which led ever so gradually to the two parties, |
| 2:02.5 | sitting together at KSong. |
| 2:04.9 | In this episode are several fascinating gems, including a rare military anecdote for us, some |
| 2:10.5 | notes on Singman Re's regime, and an examination on an underrated participant in the diplomacy |
| 2:15.9 | of the United Nations and Korean War. |
| 2:18.5 | Without any further ado, then, let's get into it. |
| 2:21.4 | I'll now take you to late April 1951, where MacArthur has left the building, |
... |
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