Battle of Chipyong-ni

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Battle of Chipyong-ni
Part of the Korean War

Map of the Battle of Chipyong-ni on the night of 13–14 February 1951
Date13–15 February 1951
Location37°28′30″N 127°38′13″E / 37.475°N 127.637°E / 37.475; 127.637
Result United Nations victory[1]
Belligerents

 United Nations

 China
Commanders and leaders

United States Paul L. Freeman Jr.

France Raoul Magrin-Vernerey
China Xu Guofu
Units involved

23rd Regimental Combat Team[2]

United States 2nd Infantry Division

China People's Volunteer Army
Strength
4,500[3] US sources:
25,000[4]
Casualties and losses
US sources:
51 killed
250 wounded
42 missing [5]: ii 
US sources:
2,000 killed
3,000 wounded
79 captured[5]: 4 

The Battle of Chipyong-ni (French: Bataille de Chipyong-ni), also known as the Battle of Dipingli (Chinese: 砥平里战斗; pinyin: Dǐ Pīng Lǐ Zhàn Dòu), was a decisive battle of the Korean War that took place from 13 to 15 February 1951 between US and French units of the US 23rd Infantry Regiment and various units of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) around the village of Chipyong-ni. The result was a United Nations Command victory. The battle, along with the Third Battle of Wonju, has been called "the Gettysburg of the Korean War".[6][7][8]

Background[edit]

After Chinese forces entered Korea in November 1950, UN forces, uncertain about the intentions and combat capabilities of the Chinese, drew back behind the 38th parallel and waited to see what the Chinese would do. Plans were even made for complete withdrawal from the peninsula.[9] In this climate of general uncertainty, Lt. General Matthew B. Ridgway decided to make a stand at Chipyong-ni and also at Wonju.[3] He recognized that Chinese forces had overstretched their supply lines and would not be able to keep up their advance much longer. Ridgway intended to use the 23rd RCT to blunt the Chinese attack so that the Eighth Army could carry out a counterattack before the Chinese had a chance to consolidate their forces.[1]

Prelude[edit]

Following the Battle of the Twin Tunnels on 1 February 1951, the 23rd Regimental Combat Team under the command of Paul L. Freeman Jr. reached the important crossroads town of Chipyong-ni on 3 February and immediately set up a perimeter defense.[4] Over the next few days, the 23rd RCT dug in and was reinforced by artillery, tank, and engineer elements. By 13 February, their strength consisted of three infantry battalions; the French Infantry Battalion and First Ranger Company, both attached to the regiment; the 37th Field Artillery Battalion; Battery B, 82nd Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion; Battery B, 503rd Field Artillery Battalion; Company B, 2nd Engineer Battalion (Combat); elements of the 2nd Signal Co. (attached); and a platoon from the 2nd Medical Battalion. In all, Freeman had 4,500 men under his command, including 2,500 front-line infantrymen.[3][2]

On 11 February, the Chinese attacked X Corps at Hoengsong as part of their Fourth Phase Offensive, driving back two divisions and leaving the 23rd Regiment at Chipyong-ni behind enemy lines and exposed to a Chinese attack.

The Chinese then sent the entirety of the 39th Army, and divisions of the 40th and 42nd armies to encircle and destroy Chipyong-ni.[5]: 254 

On the morning of the 13th, after a patrol revealed a significant Chinese presence on Route 24 to the north of the town, Lt. General Edward Almond, commander of X Corps, ordered the 23rd Regiment to withdraw to the Yoju area, 15 miles (24 km) to the south, due to concerns that it would be encircled by Chinese forces. However, later on the same day, Ridgway reversed this decision after meeting with his superior, Douglas MacArthur. Ridgway insisted on attempting to hold Chipyong-ni, and directed Almond to attack north to relieve the regiment if it was cut off.[10]

Informed of this, Freeman began to bulk up his defenses, and requested resupply by air and airstrikes for 14 February. He deployed his 1st Battalion to the northern part of the perimeter, the 2nd to the south, and the 3rd on the east, with the French on the western side. The 1st Battalion's Company B and the Rangers were kept in reserve behind the 1st Battalion line.[4]

Battle[edit]

Day 1[edit]

Throughout the day, Freeman kept advancing Chinese forces at bay with artillery fire and air attacks.[2] During the afternoon, the Chinese forces took up positions around the 23rd's perimeter, though their attempts to advance were stopped by artillery. The U.S. forces observed heavy flare activity throughout the afternoon.[11] Early in the evening, Freeman gathered his unit commanders and told them to expect an attack during the night.[3]

Between 22:00 and 23:00 hours, the Chinese directed small arms and mortar fire at the Americans from the northwest, north, and southeast. C Company, positioned near Route 24 on the northern perimeter, was hit hardest. Slightly after 23:00, Chinese infantrymen moved down hill 397, attacking E and G Companies. They were driven off, but shortly before 24:00 hours, an intense mortar and artillery barrage hit C Company.[11]

After this, the defenders heard bugles, whistles, and bells, followed by a concerted infantry attack all along the perimeter. By midnight, only 3rd Battalion in the east was not engaged. The attack was fierce but brief, intended to probe the US defenses, ending in most places soon after midnight. Freeman's tight defensive formation prevented the Chinese attackers from outflanking his positions.[11]

At 0200 a Chinese platoon attacked French Battalion. They closed to within one to two hundred yards of the French positions before launching their attack but it was repulsed when the French defended themselves with grenades.[3]

G Company was attacked at 02:30 and 04:00. During the 04:00 attack, it was in danger of being overwhelmed, so a regimental tank was dispatched for support.[11]

The Chinese attacked 23rd Regiment at 0630 and French battalion at 0730. Both offensives ended in failure and the Chinese withdrew into the mountains around Chipyong-ni.[11]

A US Army artist's illustration of the battle

Day 2[edit]

By dawn on 14 February, Freeman had sustained about 100 casualties and personally been hit in the leg by mortar fire. He retained his command despite the injury. Air support kept the Chinese away during the daylight hours of the 14th, but the Americans were running dangerously low on ammunition.[11]

At dusk, artillery fire began to come down on the perimeter, followed soon after by infantry assaults. The 3rd Battalion was hit hard, and mortar fire rained down on the regimental command post for an hour. At midnight, the main assault began, with a Chinese wave attack striking A Company, then veering over towards C Company and the French.[3]

By 01:30, K Company in the east had been assaulted twice, and everywhere the ammunition shortage was critical. Though Air Force planes airdropped ammunition, many soldiers were shot as they tried to reach it. Throughout the night, C-47 Skytrain transports dropped flares to provide illumination.[3]

At 02:30, I Company's perimeter was penetrated, the first successful penetration of the battle. Units of I Company, however, supported by L Company and the machine-gunners of M Company, counterattacked and restored the perimeter.[3]

Fighting was fiercest, however, in the south, where at around 03:15, Chinese forces broke through the perimeter and forced the defenders out of their positions, a serious threat to the beleaguered regiment. At daybreak on 15 February, Freeman ordered the Ranger company, a platoon from F Company, and 14 men from G Company to counterattack, but they were driven back at 06:15 after sustaining heavy casualties in hand-to-hand fighting. At noon on the 15th, B Company, in full view of the Chinese and across open ground, attacked once more but was pinned down by Chinese machine guns. By 12:30, it was still 9,000 yards from what remained of the earlier counterattack.[3]

About this time, at 15:45, units of the 5th Cavalry Regiment (Task Force Crombez) moved out from a town to the south to support the men at Chipyong-ni.[12]

At 14:00, the Chinese retreated from their position inside the perimeter under pressure from an Air Force napalm bombardment and attack by B Company, in which they lost 50% of their men. When B Company took the position at 16:30, its soldiers could see Task Force Crombez in the distance; the task force arrived at 17:25 with nearly 20 tanks. The Chinese withdrew.[12]

The Chinese perspective[edit]

Prior to the battle, eight Chinese infantry regiments (around 8,000 men) were deployed in the region: the 343rd and 344th Regiments (both from the 115th Division, 39th Army), 356th and 357th Regiments (both from the 119th Division, 40th Army), 359th Regiment (120th Division, 40th Army), 375th Regiment (125th Division, 42nd Army), and 376th and 377th Regiments (both from the 126th Division, 42nd Army).[13]

According to the memoirs of Xu Guofu, commander of the 119th Division and also field commander of the Chinese forces at Chipyong-ni, five Chinese infantry regiments were deployed to attack the UN troops in this area by Deng Hua, third commander and commissar of the Chinese People Volunteer Army.[14] However, two regiments (the 343rd and 376th) lost their way in the dark and wound up in the wrong place.[15] Due to poor communications, only three regiments (356th, 357th, and 359th) numbering around 3,000 soldiers, were actually committed to the attack on Chipyong-ni.

After a bloody fight overnight, on the morning of 15 February, Xu's troops broke through the perimeter and expected to launch another attack when night fell again. But Xu received an order from Wen Yucheng, commander of the 40th Army, to withdraw as the Chinese discovered that there were over 6,000 UN troops in Chipyong-ni instead of the initial estimate of 1,000 men. In the aftermath of the battle, Xu insisted that the West overestimated Chinese casualties. According to him, the three Chinese regiments committed to the attack suffered a little over 900 casualties, one third of which were killed (Xu does not give figures for non-combat casualties or prisoners).[16]

Aftermath[edit]

French veterans of the Battle of Chipyong-ni receive flags from South Korean soldiers during a victory ceremony in 2012.

UN casualties during the battle numbered 51 killed, 250 wounded, and 42 missing. The Chinese lost approximately 2,000 killed and 3,000 wounded.[5]

The battle offered a boost to the morale of Eighth Army, which had until then seen the Chinese as an invincible juggernaut. Soon afterwards, Operation Killer was launched, followed by Operation Ripper. The Chinese, who had hopes of driving the UN forces to the sea, were themselves driven back. Eventually, this led to the start of peace negotiations in July 1951.

General Ridgway spoke at a joint session of the US Congress on 22 May 1952:[17]

I wish I could pay proper tribute to the magnificent conduct of the United Nations troops throughout these operations. It is difficult to single out any one unit or the forces of any one nation, but to illustrate I shall speak briefly about the Twenty-third United States Infantry Regiment, Col. Paul L. Freeman commanding, with the French battalion and the normal components of artillery, engineer and medical personnel from the United States Second Infantry Division.

These troops in early February of 1951, sustained two of the severest attacks experienced during the entire Korean campaign. Twice isolated far in advance of the general battle line, twice completely surrounded in near zero weather, they repelled repeated assaults by day and night by vastly superior numbers of Chinese infantry. They were finally relieved by a armored column from the United States First Cavalry Division in as daring and dramatic an operation as the war provided.

Ridgway continued by saying:[17]

I personally visited these magnificent men during both operations and personally directed the attack of the relieving armored column which finally broke through and contributed to the utter and final rout of the enemy forces. I want to record here my conviction that these American fighting men and their French comrades in arms measured up in every way to the battle conduct of the finest troops America or France has produced throughout their national existence.

The headquarters of the Chinese XIX Army Group, in a critique of the battle which was later captured and translated, described the shock of the armored spearhead which battered its way into Chipyong-Ni:[5]: 251 

At 1600 more than 20 enemy tanks coming to reinforce CHIPYONG-NI from the direction of KOKSU-RI, surprised us; by being almost at the door of the Regimental CP [Command Post] before they were discovered, seriously threatening the flanks and rear of the 2d Battalion.

and continued[5]: 252–253 

In the conduct of the entire campaign, or the battle command, we have underestimated the enemy. In view of their past characteristics in battle, we expected them to flee at CHIPYONG-NI after the enemy at HOENGSON was annihilated ... We have been taught a lesson at the expense of bloodshed.

Now short of supplies, their roadblocks penetrated, and their casualties mounting, the attacking Chinese withdrew to the north.

Awards[edit]

On 20 February, Sergeant First Class William S. Sitman, a machine gun section leader in M Company,[18] was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for bravery during the battle after he threw himself on a grenade to save five of his comrades.[19]

After the battle, the 23rd RCT and all attached units were awarded the United States Army Distinguished Unit Citation.[5]: 4 

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Appleman, Roy (1990). Ridgway duels for Korea. Texas A and M University Press. ISBN 0890964327.
  2. ^ a b c Mossman 1990, p. 285.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gugeler, Russel A. "Chapter 8: Chipyong-ni". Combat Operations in Korea. US Army. Archived from the original on 1 November 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Ansil L.Walker Recalls the Battle of Chipyong-ni During the Korean War". HistoryNet.com. 21 August 2006. Archived from the original on 15 November 2009. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Ryan, Thomas M. (1990). "Battle of Chipyong-ni Feb 1951 Staff Ride Packet" (PDF). koreanwar-educator.com. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  6. ^ Barron, Leo (2015). High Tide in the Korean War. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. pp. 109–113. ISBN 9780811715614.
  7. ^ Pobre, Cesar P. Filipinos in the Korean War. Department of National Defense, Philippine Veterans Affairs Office. p. 82. ISBN 9789719541813.
  8. ^ Chong-dae, Choe. "French General Monclar in the Battle of Chipyong-ni". The Korea Times.
  9. ^ "Battle of Chip'yong-ni February 1951" (PDF). 2nd Infantry Division. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 November 2009. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  10. ^ Mossman, Bill C. "Ebb and Flow November 1950–July 1951: Chapter 15: Defending the Wonju Line". Archived from the original on 15 November 2009. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Mossman 1990, p. 287.
  12. ^ a b Gugeler, Russel A. "Chapter 9: Task Force Crombez". Combat Operations in Korea. US Army. Archived from the original on 1 November 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  13. ^ Cleaver, Thomas McKelvey (2019). Holding the Line: The Naval Air Campaign In Korea. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 164.
  14. ^ "砥平里之战伤亡真相 徐国夫少将大声疾呼军史误人 – 新闻 – 加拿大华人网 – 加拿大华人门户网站". www.sinoca.com.
  15. ^ "南京军区原副司令员:砥平里战斗的得与失【2】". People's Daily. 26 January 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2014.
  16. ^ "砥平里之战伤亡真相 徐国夫少将大声疾呼军史误人 – 新闻 – 加拿大华人网 – 加拿大华人门户网站". www.sinoca.com.
  17. ^ a b "Text of Gen. Ridgway's Report to Congress on Korea and Japan". The New York Times. 23 May 1952. p. 3. ProQuest 112381414. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  18. ^ Center of Military History. "The Korean War: Restoring the Balance". US Army. Archived from the original on 15 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  19. ^ "'William S. Sitman' entry". Medal of Honor Recipients: Korean War. CMH, U.S. Army. 20 February 1950. Archived from the original on 26 November 2009. Retrieved 26 November 2009.

References[edit]

  • Appleman, Roy (1990). Ridgway duels for Korea. College Station, Texas: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 0-89096-432-7.
  • Hamburger, Kenneth Earl (2003). Leadership in the Crucible: The Korean War Battles of Twin Tunnels and Chipyong-ni. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-58544-232-4.
  • Mossman, Bill C. (1990). Ebb and Flow November 1950-July 1951. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States Army. ISBN 978-1944961350.
  • Summers, Harry G. Jr. (1999). Korean War Almanac. Replica Books. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-0-7351-0209-5.

External links[edit]

News[edit]