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.