| WAR STORIES |
Rear Guard in Korea
This
is what the division's rear guard, 23rd Infantry Regiment had to do to hold the
vital Anju Road Junction while the 2nd Infantry Division ran the
On the morning of the 29th of November he started his
battalion forward on foot to set up a road block on the foothills and on the
north-south road coming out of Kunu-ri. This would position them north of the
vital Anju Road Junction. They marched all day long and arrived well after dark.
The Third Battalion took up positions on the west side of the road the other two
battalion's were on the road and on the east side of the road. There were five
hundred yards of flat rice patties between their position and the
The
They
were a scant six hundred yards away and in plain sight. The Chinese retired to
the village near midnight. The men of the battalion continued to chip away at
the frozen ground until just before dawn. By then most of the holes were only
about one foot deep. They added rocks and dirt to build up the front protection.
The battalion was tied in so tight that Captain Hayne's 95 man King Company had
to set back every other hole to avoid making the position one long trench. K
Company was understrengthed to the extent that there was no 3rd Rifle Platoon.
At dawn the activity
in the battalion's position stopped. Every eye and ear was directed towards the
village. They appeared just after full light. The Chinese were in single file
spaced a few feet apart. They were walking unhurried. They crossed the bridge
and turned west on the near river bank and began to pass in front of the
battalion's position. The defenders then knew that the Chinese had not seen
them. Platoon Sergeant George Chamberlain, of King Company's first platoon
passed the word down the line to hold the fire until the machine-gun on the left
flank opened up. The enemy line finally turned south and started towards the
west end of the battalion's position. They still did not know the battalion was
there, waiting for them.
The silence was
finally shattered when the machine-gun began to rattle on the left flank. The
entire line then opened up with everything they had. The Chinese line broke.
Some of them hit the ground, never to get up. Many of them tried to run back to
the bridge. A few made it, most did not. The incoming fire was light and
sporadic.
By mid-morning the
column was no more. At about that time some Air Force B-26 Bombers came over and
dropped bombs and napalm on the village and reduced it to a smoldering ruin. The
jet fighters followed a few minutes later. A few survivors had reached the
bridge and were standing under it. One of the jets made a run on the bridge and
cleaned it out. The defenders received light sniper fire the remainder of the
day.
At about dusk word was
passed down the line to withdraw. The men quietly slipped off the ridge one by
one into the draw. As the platoons formed they moved east to the main road. They
quickly marched south to where the men and the trucks of the Fifteenth Field
Artillery patiently waited. The battalion's casualties were very light. The
enemy's very heavy. The Division's rear guard action in that area was made up of
many such small unit fights. This action by the Third Battalion of the 23rd
Infantry Regiment was one of the more successful ones.