PREFACE
OLD KOREA HANDS WILL KNOW THAT THERE IS
not now, nor has there ever been, an 18th
Infantry Division in the Eighth Army. The
157th Military Intelligence Battalion as
well as the 29th Meteorological Observation
Group are likewise fictitious, as are the
camps named. And although there are many
such hills in Korea, the one in this story
exists only in the author's mind. The characters
are entirely fictitious as are the incidents
that are related.
What is real is this: Since June 25, 1950, American
soldiers have been fighting in Korea. Even now, the
peace talks at Panmunjom continue and the killing and
maiming continue. This novel will, it is hoped, give the
reader an idea of what it was like to serve on the Korean
DMZ in the latter half of the 1960s.
Few people know how the North Koreans, evidently
heartened and emboldened by the successes of their
friends, the North Vietnamese, began to step up their
attacks on South Korean and American positions along
the DMZ in those years. For years before, they had initiated
few exchanges of fire on the line, and the infiltrators
they had sent across were primarily on intelligence and
reconnaissance missions. Then, quite suddenly, in the
fall of 1966, things got hot fast. Perhaps the primary
cause was the North Koreans' desire to see whether the
United States, in light of its increasing military activity
in Vietnam, was really prepared or determined to defend
both South Korea and South Vietnam at the same time.
For whatever reasons, I saw the situation on the line
get bad in late fall of 1966 and then grow increasingly
worse in 1967. Only years later, long after I returned to
the United States, did I come across an old 1967 United
Nations report on Korean truce violations, and discover
how dramatic the surge had been numerically; the only
measure I had had to go by was the surge in my adrenal
gland secretions. The UN had numbers. In 1966, the UN
report states, there were nineteen exchanges of gunfire
on the line and eleven below it, producing sixty-four U.S.
and South Korean Army casualties. However, from January 1
through October 18 of 1967, there were 212 exchanges of
fire, resulting in 401 UN and South Korean Army casualties.
The UN Report on Truce Violations also lists ROK National
Police and civilian casualties, and goes on to say, "The
North Korean infiltration into the Demilitarized Zone and
the interior of the Republic of Korea, apart from causing
heavy human casualties, has involved in every case
violations of the letter and/or spirit of the Armistice
Agreement of 1953," and specifically cites "North Korea's
failure to respect the integrity of the territory of the
Demilitarized Zone and the interior of the Republic of Korea,"
saying that such behavior "constitutes a violation of
paragraph 7 of the Armistice Agreement." I am certain
that when this report was read into the record at Panmunjom,
the North Korean representative was unimpressed. He probably
made a great show of stifling a yawn, which is more than
the America people back home did.
This book is dedicated to the men of the United States Army who
manned that lonely line, to those who stood and delivered at a
time when no one except the beleaguered people of South Korea cared.
To the men who convinced the North Koreans and the Communist world
that the United States would not write off Korea because of the
events transpiring in Vietnam. This book is dedicated to the widows,
children, parents, and brothers and sisters of those who died there
during the late sixties. Be proud of their unsung sacrifices, because
with no support from their countrymen, with aging equipment, and
with a great deal of courage, they turned back the North Korean
probes decisively, demonstrating that North Korea would pay a
heavy price in any second invasion. Things quieted down quite a
bit in the mid-seventies, although even today sporadic firefights
break out. But over forty million South Koreans live in freedom
today in large part because some brave men from exotic places like Sioux
City, Boston, Milwaukee, Atlanta, Newark, and Albuquerque, made a stand.
Men who fought without counting the cost, who fought because they had
a vision of something bigger than themselves. They were all heroes,
every one.
--William Roskey
August 1985
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CHAPTER ONE
"Home is the sailor, home from sea,
And the hunter home from the hill."
-Robert Louis Stevenson
-I-
The Hill
FOR YEARS, TOO MANY YEARS, I TRIED TO WRITE
about a certain hill in Korea. About what it
was like to go up that hill, what it was like
to come down it, and about what happened in
between. About the high toll it exacted. It's
important to me because, in a very real way,
I've never left the hill. Every shrub and
trench, every sandbag and pebble and foxhole,
every rusted strand of barbed wire is indelibly
etched on my brain as clearly and as crisply as
any image on the finest and most intricate
lithographic plate. I return to the hill still
in nightmares, which have mercifully become
less frequent (if no less vivid) as the years
have gone by. I wake in a start from the sounds
of ghostly gunfire to reach for a rifle that
isn't there. That hasn't been there for a long
time. I wake suddenly to find myself a
middle-aged man in a warm bed in a comfortable
suburban community half a world and many years
away from an unknown hill in a remote
mountainous part of Korea that no one knows
of or cares about
6 William Roskey
You see, I was working on the belief that if
I could somehow capture the experience in words,
the resulting catharsis would produce an inner
peace, and I wouldn't , ever have to return to
the hill again. Not even in my dreams. So I
tried; I tried it from every aspect. I wrote
in the manner of the impersonal, detached
third-person observer. I also spilled out
my guts in an emotional stream of consciousness,
describing the hill in almost hallucinatory
anthropopathic terms as an ancient, evil,
malevolent living Thing, as a hulking, brooding
Presence lusting after blood like a huge,
greedy, and insatiable vampire ~ sponge beneath
my feet.
I wrote about the geology of the hill and its
topography, its shape, elevation, and composition,
about its flora and fauna. I talked about how it
looked under a blistering summer sun, as well as
under a luminous Oriental moon surrounded by
thousands of sparkling stars. I wrote about
what it was like to be on the hill when driving,
seemingly never-ending sheets of monsoon rains
poured out from boiling, ugly pewter skies. I
wrote about how it was in the winter, when ice
and snow were bad, but not half as bad as the
bitter freezing winds that whipped down through
the mountains from Manchuria and from Siberia.
About how the winds howled through the frozen
valleys like crazed banshees come to claim the
spirits of the dead. I wrote countless pages
about how the hill looked and sounded and
smelled, and even about how it felt beneath
my combat boots. And all of that writing was
a waste of time. I threw each page away almost
as soon as I'd finished it. None of it hit the
mark, and I never quite knew why. Now I know,
it has taken me all these years to realize that
the story I've tried to tell is not the story
of a hill at all. It is a story about a group
of men.
It's a story about a group of young men who
subsisted on a diet which consisted chiefly
of black coffee, blacker humor, and adrenalin,
and who grew old very quickly. It's
MUFFLED SHOTS 7
a story of skylarking, adventuresome, and
supremely confident American boys who were
transformed into cynical veterans with tired
and wary eyes, who counted days and hours, and
who believed in no one and who trusted no one
except each other. We didn't trust the North
Korean Army facing us, and, after a time,
trusted in no army and no government including
our own. Neither, as a general rule, did we
trust any civilians of any nationality -
particularly politicians and journalists.
We were a small group, thirty-five in all, and
believed without question that the rest of the
inhabitants of the world fell into two
categories: those who wanted to see us dead
and were actively working toward that end,
and those who didn't care, including our
own countrymen back home and the U.S. Army
Pacific. That's drawing the lines starkly by
anyone's standards, but the irony is that when
I look back now, as an older and more mature
man with the 20/20 hindsight that the passage
of time confers, I can see that those
youthful notions of ours were essentially
correct.
All our dreams and ambitions coalesced into
a single common goal-to survive. That was the
grim resolve that kept everyone going. The
readiness, the determination to do whatever it
took, including killing as many people as
necessary in order to get home again in one
piece. While I was there, the 151-mile line,
which stretched from coast to coast across the
Korean peninsula and which had been relatively
quiet for years, began to heat up. The firefights
which periodically erupted were sudden, brutal,
and deadly, but remained short and, although
the frequency of the firefights began to
increase dramatically, rarely involved any units
above squad level. The casualties were still
considered to be in the acceptable range by
both Eastern and Western military planners.
The U.S. Army's chief headache was finding a
way to explain to the men who were being shot at,
as well as to the families and Congressional
representatives of these
8 William Roskey
men, why they weren't receiving combat pay. It
was especially difficult to explain to widows
that their husbands hadn't been in combat when
they'd been shot. Men were receiving Purple
Hearts and decorations for valor. Some men were
even being shipped home in boxes, but the Army
said that the line was no longer a combat zone.
Look, the Army said to irate soldiers, families,
and Congressionals, let's be reasonable about
this. We have more than fifty thousand men in
Korea. Not all of them are being shot at on a
regular basis, and not all of them are even on
the line. Many are far to the south and never
hear a single shot fired. We cannot countenance
paying all fifty thousand men an extra $55 a
month under these circumstances, but we do want
to be fair about this. Therefore, we decree that
henceforth any man shot or killed in hostile
action will be considered to have been in combat
for that month, and he or his widow or other
beneficiary will receive the sum of $55. Should
a man be wounded twice, he will receive $110
if the wounds are sustained in separate months.
If three times. . . and so on.
Now even in those days, $55 was not exactly a
princely sum. And we, soldiers of the wealthiest
nation on the planet, could not help but feel
that our country was not only being miserly, but
also a little irrational. The absurdity was in
the best tradition of Joseph Heller: A thousand
may fall to your right and a thousand may fall
to your left, but unless you fall, you don't get
the fifty-five bucks. One night, as a running
firefight between North Korean infiltrators and
South Korean troops began to drift toward us,
I took up a position to give covering fire with
my M-60 machine gun, and I wondered in a
somewhat detached fashion which of us or our
survivors would be receiving checks for $55.
To the Army's credit, however, this policy only
remained in effect for less than a year. A few
months after I had returned to the United
MUFFLED SHOTS 9
States, I was told that the Army had extended
combat pay to all men who served north of the
Imjin River. This was a far more equitable
resolution of the problem, and I don't know
why they hadn't thought of that in the first
place.
The firefights were discussed virtually every
day at Panmunjom. "At 0207 hours this morning,"
one of the United Nations negotiators might say
for example, "the cease fire agreement was once
again violated by the North Korean Army, when it
ambushed a South Korean Army patrol near Kumhwa.
Four members of the patrol were killed and three
were wounded. The United Nations Command
demands an immediate cessation of such
irresponsible and hostile acts, along with a
formal apology and written assurance that there
will be no repetition of such incidents."
Whereupon the North Korean negotiator would
customarily respond with something like:
"At 0210 hours this morning, soldiers of the
puppet South Korean Army wantonly attacked a
small unit of the Army of the People's
Democratic Republic of Korea in the DMZ north of
Kumhwa. This cowardly attack by the lackies of
the imperialistic running dogs of Wall Street
was heroically beaten back, and serves as but
one more incident to add to the now many
hundreds of times that the U.S. warmongers and
their stooges have endangered world peace and
earned the just affront of all freedom and
peace-loving peoples throughout the civilized
world." And so another routine day would
begin at Panmunjom.
Firefights were one thing, but the specter of
another full scale invasion quite another. The
fear of that is something we lived with every
day for more than a year. The North Koreans had
done an excellent job of it. years before on
25 June 1950, when they'd sent ten crack
infantry divisions and 150 nearly invincible
Russian T-34 tanks, along with numerous other
supporting units hurtling across the 38th
parallel under a curtain of intensive and
highly accurate artillery fire. Three days
later they
10 William Roskey
entered Seoul, far to the south. They had
been threatening to do it again ever since,
and we had no reason to doubt them. The
Communists are serious about such things, and
they had all the necessary men and materiel
massed on the line ready to jump off at a
moment's notice or sooner. Radio Pyongyang
told us they were ready, willing, and more
than able to do the job. North Korean
propaganda leaflets dropped on us said the
same thing, and twin twenty-five-foot-diameter
North Korean propaganda speakers on one of
the hills facing us were also continually
blaring that our end was at hand. If that
invasion materialized, all of us on that
hill would die and we knew it.
This then was the atmosphere of day-to-day
life on the hill. Each of us shared in this,
but each man also had certain individual
experiences, obviously important or apparently
trivial, that stood out in high relief on the
lobes of his brain in a very personal way. One
of mine has to do with an enormous rat who had
the effrontery to bother me as I tried to eat
lunch, and this was in broad daylight. Enraged
by his audacity, I snatched up my rifle and
whirled around, kicking him away from my leg.
Despite his monumental arrogance, my explosion
of movement startled him and he took off.
Insane with fury, I charged after him,
vowing to chase him all the way across the
DMZ, through all of North Korea, and into
Manchuria if necessary. I think I would have
too, had he not eluded me with nimble footwork
and some lightning turns. He disappeared before
I could get off a single shot.
Another personal experience has to do with a
boot. Two of the men went down to the
northeastern base of the hill to explore the
scene of an old firefight. One returned with a
stick grenade of either North Korean or Chinese
manufacture; I couldn't tell which. The other
returned with a combat boot. The boot was
American made and contained a partially
decomposed foot. I had
MUFFLED SHOTS 11
seen dead men before as well as parts of dead
men, but I looked at that boot and at that foot
and felt a deep ineffable sorrow wash over me.
A sorrow I still feel. A sorrow I cannot find
words for.
My buddies and I physically left the hill many
years ago. None of us has kept in touch,
although we were all as close as the very
closest of brothers then. Even closer, because
we entrusted each other with our lives, and I
don't think you can trust anyone more than that.
Like brothers, we fought among each other now
and then, and some were closer than others.
But we all stood by each other. We counted on
each other, and, especially in the five-man
teams we were further subdivided into, we got
to know each other better than our own
families knew us, and very possibly better
than anyone would ever get to know us again.
One would think that the tensile strength of
the bond forged in this crucible would be of
a toughness beyond imagination, and would
last for a lifetime. But that isn't what
happened. When it was time to go, we simply
walked away. I was reminded of the last three
sentences of Steinbeck's Tortilla Flat:
"Danny's friends still stood looking at the
smoking ruin. They looked at one another
strangely, and then back to the burned house.
And after a while they turned and walked
slowly away, and no two walked together."
We wanted to, or said we wanted to, or thought
we wanted to leave the hill behind forever.
And I guess we all figured that one couldn't
do that without severing the bond that held
us together, so we did. We did everything we
could to put the hill behind us, yet it
stubbornly remains a part of us. I know that
I've never really left the hill, and I know
that, wherever they may be, none of the
others have left it either. For the hill is
not only the stuff of which nightmares are
made, but it is also the backdrop of a number
of priceless and irreplaceable memories. Of
a shared cigarette or a shared confidence on
a warm and
12 William Roskey
quiet Asian summer night. Of raucous song
fueled by a couple of bottles of forbidden
whiskey. Of the nicknames we gave each other,
which became more real to us than the names
stamped on our dog tags. Of the elaborate
practical jokes we played on each other and the
readiness" to help each other in so many ways,
from lending money, to covering for the
other guy, to just listening.
It has taken me all these years to realize that,
deep down where we really live, we remain on
the hill because we want to. We have become
confused and depressed and return to it in
nightmares because we've been conning, or,
more precisely, because we've been trying to
con ourselves. We refuse to believe or to
admit that there's a part of us that deplores
our transformation from lean and hard
twenty-year-old warriors living on the edge
to graying overweight middle-aged men computing
second mortgage payments and our future
retirement annuities. There's a part in each
of us, however repressed it may be, that
wants to return to the only place where many
of us felt good about ourselves, and, more
importantly, where the people around us cared
about us. The common bond we shared was more
than friendship, more than camaraderie, more
than team spirit or mutual respect. I realize
now that it was love, although none of us would
ever have thought of that word to describe it
at the time, and, if he had, he wouldn't have
used it. But what is love? The Expert,
Jesus of Nazareth, said, "Greater love hath
no man than this, that a man lay down his
life for his friends."
Wherever and whenever veterans of any war
or hostile action meet, there are the stories.
The unarmed medic who dashes out under
heavy enemy fire to retrieve a fallen comrade
and pulls or carries him back to safety. The
man who, already wounded, volunteers to act
as a rear guard to cover his buddies'
withdrawal. The helicopter pilot flying his
slow and clumsy bird-into impossibly
MUFFLED SHOTS 13
intense enemy fire to rescue a downed airman,
while other men above in jet fighters
frantically run interference. The man who
throws himself on a hand grenade to save his
friends. The hungry man who shares his
starvation rations with a fellow POW. The man
who undergoes torture rather than give the
enemy valuable information that could be used
against his comrades still in the field. The
men who stubbornly refuse to yield a position
although they are hopelessly surrounded and
outnumbered, simply to buy time for others.
These stories and many others are so familiar
that they have become commonplace. Admiral
Chester Nimitz described the battle for Iwo
Jima as a place where "uncommon valor was
a common virtue." But that description could
just as easily be applied to many battlefields
and many wars.
And men don't exhibit "uncommon valor" for
scraps of metal and ribbon to pin to their
uniforms. They don't do it for the couple of
hundred bucks a month they're paid. They don't
do it because they want promotions or because
they're afraid of court-martial. When the
chips are really down, they don't even do it for
the Constitution of the United States. That may
be why they enlist, but it isn't why they
become heroes. When the chips are down,
they do it for each other.
So we move through the rest of our lives
with a vague disquietude. We stare unseeingly
out the window as the subway goes racketing
through a tunnel, or gaze absently across the
plains at a sunset, feeling a loss we can't
find words for. Wondering, perhaps
subconsciously, who would be willing to make
those kinds of sacrifices for us today.
The other members of the car pool? The people
we work with in the factory or in the office?
The other people in the apartment building?
The people we meet in church or in the local
tavern? How about our own wives and children?
Sadly, in many cases, perhaps not even them.
For when we turned in our rifles, we turned
14 William Roskey
in something else. Something of incalculable
value that we may never see again. There can
be no gain without a loss, and this loss has
created a vacuum deep within our very souls.
It's a vacuum that cannot be filled with
Monday night football or new cars or
extramarital affairs or booze, and, even if it
were possible to turn back the clock and return
to our respective hills or ships or aircraft or
tanks or foxholes to recapture that feeling that
we lost, none of us would do it. Not even for
a day, because the price is now what it was
then - too high. Too high for a feeling anyway.
What then shall we do? Trying to forget it all,
the good as well as the bad, doesn't work.
Neither does the selective amnesia when we
try to remember only the good. I know because
I've tried that too. As for myself, I intend to
stop trying to forget any of it. Rather than
fighting, and have the hill come to me in
nightmares, I'll go to it. I'll go to it in
the daylight, fully awake, with my eyes wide
open. I'll go to it unafraid, remembering it
all, and sometimes I'll feel pride, sometimes
sorrow, and sometimes I'll even laugh. I may
never, will probably never, really come "home
from the hill," but I need never fear it
again either, and that makes all the difference
in the world.
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