Ratings1
Average rating3
Focuses in on a dozen or two American POWs taken in North Korea and follows them through their experiences in the camps, and the court martials that followed their return for crimes of collaboration with the enemy. Discusses the huge level of early mortality (over 40% died in first 6 months) followed by far fewer deaths and fewer cases of beatings and overt killings after the Chinese take over the camps and especially after the list of POWs turned over the UN forces.
Makes great use of transcripts but left me feeling uneasy about a number of things:
1) The anecdotes that he builds more than half the book on come from transcripts and records that he then shows to be deeply problematic when used in the context of court martial trials. How much can we believe? There needs to be a similar work which hopefully can find some other Chinese or Korean sources.
2) Would love to have seen even some slight discussion of the conditions of ROK prisoners in the North or of Chinese/DPRK soldiers in Koje (very brief mention of latter)
3) Because the book focuses almost entirely on some of the court martialled troops, there isn't much discussion of those who never came under suspicion for collaboration - instead this larger mass are merely referred to as a majority who mostly did similar things to those who were put on trial. I suspect the picture is more complex.
4) The transition from high-coercion, torture, beatings, killings, and completely inhumane conditions in the earliest stage to still problematic and underfed prisoners in camps after the first half year is really important - whenever Lech wants to emphasize the evil of the Chinese/Koreans he keeps referring back to this first stage - seeing the transition as one of strategy, rather than explained by availability of supplies, better organization, and correction of excesses. I think this is deeply unfair to the PRC/DPRK side which, though clearly guilty of atrocities I doubt are quite the monsters throughout that are described.