Towards a Final Armistice
After half a century, the end may be at hand—one way or another

Tall Juche Latte, To Go
An encounter over coffee with North Korea's Dear Leader

Past Forward
South Korea's search for a new identity begins
Originally published August 18, 1998


Timeline
TIME traces the important events of the Korean War

Countdown to Crisis
A look back at the path to today's nuclear standoff

Eyeball to Eyeball
How the North and South stack up

Not Too Late?
A North Korean invasion takes the world by storm

Challenge Accepted
The U.S. Responds

In the Cause of Peace
Where will this war lead?

Winter War
On the cusp of victory, China enters the fray

Person of the Year
The American Fighting Man

Homeward Bound
General MacArthur leaves the field

The Price of Peace
A truce offering from the Soviets

At Last
Both sides finally come to the table

'I Cannot Exult'
An exhausted nation bids farewell to war


Covers Gallery
View TIME's cover stories from the Korean war

Recent History
The Koreas in the pages of TIME Asia





The Price of Peace
An opening from the Soviets points to a ceasefire

Originally published July 3, 1950

Just 22 hours before the anniversary of the day on which the North Koreans crossed the 38th parallel, Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Jacob Malik faced a microphone on the U.N.'s Price of Peace program. His text clanked along on familiar Communist lines until, at the end of the broadcast, came the words that caused the world to prick up its ears: Russia was proposing a Korea armistice. Did it mean that the Communists had had enough?

Washington read the speech backwards and forwards. So did London, Paris and Tokyo. The proposal was highly unspecific (see War in Asia); it seemed to be more than mere peace propaganda, less than an offer. A speech which President Truman had prepared to deliver in Tennessee was hurriedly rewritten, and this week, in two short paragraphs, without mentioning Malik, he gave Russia the U.S.'s fast answer.

There would be no retreats on any front. The President said determinedly: "We can put ourselves in a position to say to [the Soviet rules]: attack—and you will have the united resources of the free nations thrown against you; attack—and you will be confronted by a war you cannot possibly win...

"We are ready to join in a peaceful settlement in Korea now as we have always been. But it must be a real settlement which fully ends the aggression and restores peace and security to the area and to the gallant Koran people. In Korea... we must be ready to take any steps which truly advance us towards world peace. But we must avoid like the plague rash actions which would take unnecessary risks of world war, or weak actions which would reward aggression."

The U.S. made no bones about it; it longed for peace in Korea. As Eisenhower's HQ expressed it: "Naturally, everyone would like to see an end to the fighting." U.S. troops in Korea had already been fighting almost as long as U.S. troops did in World War I*. From the handful of 256 men (two and a half companies of the 24th Division) who made the first desperate stand north of Osan a year ago, the total of Americans committed had grown to 400,000. Of those first 256, more than half were dead or imprisoned. Of the 400,000, more had been killed or wounded in the past bitter year than were on all U.S. casualty lists in World War II's first year.

But all this did not mean that the U.S. was ready to quit. After the heavy price already paid, the U.S. could not afford any bad bargains.




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POSTED FRIDAY, JUL 25, 2003


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