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Average rating: 2/5

Based on 3 ratings

Blood on the Hills: The Canadian Army in the Korean War

by David Jay Bercuson

University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division | October 15, 1999 | Hardcover

The Korean War represented a series of firsts for Canadian soldiers - their first military action under UN auspices, their first under U.S. corps and army command, their first in Asia as ground troops, and their first in which people at home initially ignored their efforts, and then forgot about them. David Bercuson evokes the tastes and smells, the frustrations, the unfamiliar terrain, the international complexities, and the heroism that made the Korean War an unforgettable experience for those who fought there.

Caught by surprise with only a phantom army, the Canadian government in the summer of 1950 was forced by its major allies to promise a ground combat contribution to the UN effort to push back the Communist invasion of South Korea from the north. The Canadian Army Special Force, as the Korean contingent was first called, was hurriedly raised, trained, and sent to Korea, ill-prepared for a mountain war against a determined, well-armed enemy. Canadian soldiers fought bravely, often against impossible odds, to carry out their mission, but they were hindered by several factors - cautious UN Command strategy, poor British and Canadian defence doctrine, uneven leadership, and inadequate equipment and training. They did their duty, and more, in stopping Communist aggression in its tracks, but the Canadian army chose not to remember the lessons of Korea, even though that conflict, as a limited war, set the pattern for virtually all those that followed.

Blood on the Hills is the first full, non-official history of the Canadian army''s operations in the Korean War. The book covers the period from the start of that war to the cease-fire in July 1953 and describes and analyses the mobilization of the Canadian contingent, its training, manning, and equipment, and its efforts in combat. David Bercuson focuses on the many consequences of the army''s unreadiness for combat in Korea and on the army''s lack of success in learning lessons from its experience in an active theatre of war.

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  • Community Reviews
    • Was this review
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    Bercuson's colloquial style seems put on, as if he is eschweing his "intellectual" status; perhaps he thinks that using soldier's slang will fool his readers into thinking his background was with the military. The text reads as if he didn't bother to proof it.

    Bercuson seems to make a habit out of getting the details wrong - in The Valour and the Horror Revisited he didn't know the difference between a DSO and a DCM, in Battalion of Heroes he miscaptioned at least two photos and in this volume he talks about a "Mark IV" rifle (perhaps he means No. 4 Mk 1) for just one example.

    Bercuson ADMITS that he has not done all the research required when he tells us that no one has compared incidence of criminal behaviour in Korea with those in WW II. He tells that until that is done, "no one can conclude that Canadian soldiers in Korea were more, or less, inclined to break laws..." (p. 176) So why didn't Bercuson do it?

    And once again there is a lack of useful appendices and detailed maps.

    An obviously rushed job which does benefit from good primary research. One has to wonder though, if his conclusions, whether on the life of a soldier or the grand strategy, can be accurate given his poor grasp of details.

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    Craig MacKinnon

    Rating: 3/5

    Detailed, a little dry

    Craig MacKinnon

    12 years ago

    This book is exactly what the subtitle implies - a history of the Canadian army in Korea. The scope is limited to army operations and the necessary political background. There is very little about the forces of other countries involved except where they are related to the Canadian brigade. This is a strength of the book - it has well defined boundries and is thorough within those boundries, including copious endnotes and sources. The maps are limited, but easily accesible (collected at the beginning of the book).

    The author is quite critical with the politicians both in Ottawa and Washington, as well as the middle-ranking officers in the field and training camps. He is especially critical at the lack of training (in Canada), and the complacency that set in along the front in the final half of the war. Interestingly, he does not blame the senior officers, but rather politicians, for this complacency.

    For someone unfamiliar with the Korean conflict, this book would be inadequate. Bercuson assumes a cursory knowledge of the major events in the war. I would suggest Hasting's "Korean War" before reading this. Also, it feels incomplete without any mention of Canadian naval or air forces. Finally, the prose is a little too dry.

    All in all, this is a good, but not great, book not up to the standard of the same author's Maple Leaf vs. the Axis.

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