United Nations Command Explained

Unit Name:United Nations Command
Native Name:Korean: 유엔군사령부
Dates:7 July 1950 – present
Battles:Korean War (1950–1953)
Commander1:Gen. Paul J. LaCamera (US Army)
Commander1 Label:Commander UNC/CFC/USFK
Commander2:Lt. Gen. Derek A. Macaulay (Canadian Army)
Commander2 Label:Deputy Commander
Notable Commanders:
Identification Symbol Label:Flag

United Nations Command (UNC or UN Command)[1] is the multinational military force established to support the Republic of Korea (South Korea) during and after the Korean War. It was the first international unified command in history, and the first attempt at collective security pursuant to the Charter of the United Nations.

The UNC was established on 7 July 1950 following the United Nations Security Council's recognition of North Korean aggression against South Korea. The motion passed because the Soviet Union, a close ally of North Korea and a member of the UN Security Council, was boycotting the UN at the time over its recognition of the Republic of China (Taiwan) rather than the People's Republic of China.[2] UN member states were called to provide assistance in repelling the North's invasion, with the UNC providing a cohesive command structure under which the disparate forces would operate.[3] During the course of the war, 22 nations contributed military or medical personnel to UN Command; although the United States led the UNC and provided the bulk of its troops and funding, all participants formally fought under the auspices of the UN,[4] with the operation classified as a "UN-led police action".[5]

On 27 July 1953, United Nations Command, the Korean People's Army, and the Chinese People's Volunteers signed the Korean Armistice Agreement, ending open hostilities. The agreement established the Military Armistice Commission (MAC), consisting of representatives of the signatories, to supervise the implementation of the armistice terms, and the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission (NNSC), composed of nations that did not participate in the conflict, to monitor the armistice's restrictions on the parties' reinforcing or rearming themselves.[6] [7] In 1975, the UN General Assembly adopted resolution 3390 (XXX), which called upon the parties to the Armistice Agreement to replace it with a peace agreement, and expressed the hope that UNC would be dissolved on 1 January 1976.[8] But the UNC continues to function after that.[9]

Since 1953, UNC's primary duties have been to maintain the armistice and facilitate diplomacy between North and South Korea.[10] Although "MAC" meetings have not occurred since 1994, UN Command representatives routinely engage members of the Korean People's Army in formal and informal meetings. The most recent formal negotiations on the terms of Armistice occurred between October and November 2018. Duty officers from both sides of the Joint Security Area (commonly known as the Truce Village of Panmunjom) conduct daily communications checks and have the ability to engage face-to-face when the situation demands.[11]

Origin and legal status

United Nations Command operates under the mandates of United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolutions 82, 83, 84, and 85. These passed while the Soviet Union was boycotting the UN for awarding China's seat in the Security Council to the Republic of China.[12] While the UN had some military authority through Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, early Cold War tensions meant that the forces envisaged in those articles had yet to become reality. Thus the UN had little practical ability to raise a military force in response to the North Korean invasion of the South. Consequently, the UNSC designated the United States as the executive agent for leading a "unified command" under the UN flag. As it was a designated body, the UN exercised little control over the combat forces. This represented the first attempt at collective security under the UN system.

When the warring parties signed the Korean Armistice Agreement on 27 July 1953, the commander delivered the Agreement to the UN. In August 1953, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution “noting with approval” the Armistice Agreement, a step that was critical for the UN to take the next step of organizing the 1954 Geneva Conference meant to negotiate a diplomatic peace between North and South Korea. The adoption of the Korean Armistice Agreement in the UN General Assembly underwrites UN Command's current role of maintaining and enforcing the Armistice Agreement.

The role of the United States as the executive agent for the unified command has led to questions over its continued validity. Most notably, in 1994, UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali wrote in a letter to the North Korean Foreign Minister that:

The UN's official position is that the Korean War-era Security Council and General Assembly resolutions remain in force. This was evidenced in 2013 when North Korea announced unilateral abrogation of the Armistice Agreement: UN spokesman Martin Nesirky asserted that since the Armistice Agreement had been adopted by the General Assembly, no single party could dissolve it unilaterally. The UNC continues to serve as the signatory and party of the Armistice opposite the Korean People's Army.

In JENNINGS v. MARKLEY, WARDEN, a determination was made by the Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit that American soldiers of the UNC were still liable to the Uniform Code of Military Justice although they fought under the UN blue flag.[13]

Establishment in 1950

After troops of North Korea invaded South Korea on 25 June 1950, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 82 calling on North Korea to cease hostilities and withdraw to the 38th parallel.[14]

Two days later, the UNSC adopted Resolution 83, recommending that members of the United Nations provide assistance to the Republic of Korea "to repel the armed attack and to restore international peace and security to the area".[15]

The first non-Korean and non-U.S. unit to see combat was the No. 77 Squadron of the Royal Australian Air Force, which began escort, patrol and ground attack sorties from Iwakuni Royal Australian Air Base, Japan on 2 July 1950. On 29 June 1950, New Zealand made preparations to dispatch two Loch class frigates, and, to Korean waters;[16] on 3 July, the ships left Devonport Naval Base, Auckland and joined other Commonwealth forces at Sasebo, Japan on 2 August. For the duration of the war, at least two NZ vessels would be on station in the theater.

Resolution 84, adopted on 7 July 1950, recommended that members providing military forces and other assistance to South Korea "make such forces and other assistance available to a unified command under the United States of America".[17]

President Syngman Rhee of the Republic of Korea assigned operational command of ROK ground, sea, and air forces to General MacArthur as Commander-in-Chief UN Command (CINCUNC) on 15 July 1950:

On 29 August 1950, the British Commonwealth's 27th Infantry Brigade arrived at Busan to join UNC ground forces, which until then included only ROK and U.S. forces. The 27th Brigade moved into the Naktong River line west of Daegu.

Units from other countries of the UN followed: the Belgian United Nations Command, the 25th Canadian Infantry Brigade, the Colombian Battalion,[18] the Ethiopian Kagnew Battalion, the French Battalion, the Greek 15th Infantry Regiment, New Zealand's 16th Field Regiment and Royal New Zealand Artillery, the Philippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea, the South African No. 2 Squadron SAAF, the Turkish Brigade, and forces from Luxembourg and the Netherlands. Additionally, Denmark, India, Iran, Norway and Sweden provided medical units; Italy provided a hospital, even though it was not a UN member at the time.

By 1 September 1950, less than two months before the formation of United Nations Command, these combined forces numbered 180,000, of which 92,000 were South Koreans, with most of the remainder being Americans, followed by the 1,600-man British 27th Infantry Brigade.

Rockoff writes that "President Truman responded quickly to the June invasion by authorizing the use of U.S. troops and ordering air strikes and a naval blockade. He did not, however, seek a declaration of war, or call for full mobilization, in part because such actions might have been misinterpreted by Russia and China. Instead, on July 19 he called for partial mobilization and asked Congress for an appropriation of $10 billion for the war."[19] Cohen writes that: "All of Truman's advisers saw the events in Korea as a test of American will to resist Soviet attempts to expand their power, and their system. The United States ordered warships to the Taiwan Strait to prevent Mao's forces from invading Taiwan and mopping up the remnants of Chiang Kai-shek's army there."[20]

As of 1 July 1957 the commander of the United Nations Command was "triple hatted" being given command the United States Forces Korea and Eighth United States Army in addition to the UN command. The first commander to be "triple hatted" in this way was General George Decker, who would later serve as the Chief of Staff of the United States Army.

Current membership

Contributing forces: 1950–1953

During the three years of the Korean War, the following nations were members of the UNC.[25] By 27 July 1953, the day the Armistice Agreement was signed, UNC had reached a peak strength of 932,964:

During the course of the war, UNC was led by Douglas MacArthur, Matthew B. Ridgway, and Mark Wayne Clark. After the armistice was signed, John E. Hull was named UNC commander to carry out the ceasefire (including the voluntary repatriation of prisoners of war).[26]

Post Korean War (1953–present)

Following the signing of the Armistice Agreement, UNC remained in Korea to fulfill the functions of providing security and stability on the Peninsula, as well as supporting UN efforts to rebuild the war-torn Republic of Korea. Much of the fifties was marked by continuous negotiations in Military Armistice Commission meetings while the international community worked to bolster South Korea's economy and infrastructure. During this period, North Korea maintained economic and military superiority over its southern neighbor owing to Chinese and Soviet support.

The sixties proved a tenuous decade on the Korean Peninsula, punctuated by a period of hostilities between 1966 and 1969 that saw a heightened level of skirmishes in the DMZ as well as major incidents including North Korea's attempted assassination of South Korean leader Park Chung-hee and seizure of the .

The seventies saw a brief period of rapprochement that later contributed to structural changes to UNC. In 1972, the North and South Korean governments signed a Joint Communique calling for more peaceful ties between the two Koreas. Concurrently, consecutive U.S. administrations (Nixon, Ford, and Carter) sought to decrease the South Korean reliance upon U.S. forces for maintaining deterrent capabilities on the Korean Peninsula. On 7 November 1978, a combined headquarters, the Republic of Korea – United States Combined Forces Command (CFC), was created, and the South Korean military units with front-line missions were transferred from the UN Command to the CFC's operational control. The commander-in-chief of the CFC, a United States military officer, answered ultimately to the national command authorities of the United States and that of South Korea.

From 1978, UNC maintained its primary functions of maintaining and enforcing the Korean Armistice Agreement, facilitating diplomacy that could support a lasting peace on the Peninsula, and providing a command that could facilitate multinational contributions should the armistice fail. UNC decreased in size, and over time, many of the billets assigned to UNC became multi-hatted with U.S. Forces Korea and Combined Forces Command.

The 1990s again saw notable change in UNC. In October 1991, UNC transferred responsibility of all DMZ sectors except for the Joint Security Area to the ROK military. In 1992, UNC appointed a South Korean General officer to serve as the Senior Member to the Military Armistice Commission. This led to the Korean People's Army and Chinese People's Volunteers boycotting MAC meetings. The collapse of the Soviet Union also led North Korea to question the alignment of their choices for the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission. They no longer recognized Czech or Slovak representatives of Czechoslovakia when the nation split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. In 1994, North Korea expelled the Polish delegation and also dismissed the Chinese People's Volunteers from the Panmunjom mission. Owing in part to a protest over China's warming ties with South Korea.

Since 1998, UNC has seen a gradual increase of permanent international staff within the command. In between 1998 and 2003, several of the original contributors to the Korean War began deploying personnel to Korea to support UNC's armistice maintenance functions. This internationalization has continued over the next decades. In May 2018,[27] Canadian Lt. General Wayne Eyre became the first non-American to serve as deputy commander of the UNC.[28] [29] [30] Succeeding him was Australian Vice Admiral Stuart Mayer, and the Lieutenant General Andrew Harrison of the British Army, continuing the trend of non-American leadership in UNC.

UNC–Rear

United Nations Command–Rear is located at Yokota Air Base, Japan and is commanded by a Royal Australian Air Force group captain with a deputy commander from the Canadian Forces. Its task is to maintain the SOFA that permits the UNC to retain a logistics rear and staging link on Japanese soil.[31]

Future of the Joint Security Area

To further the September 2018 inter-Korean Comprehensive Military Agreement, UN Command, Republic of Korea Armed Forces, and North Korean People's Army officials met in a series of negotiations to deliberate the demilitarization of the Joint Security Area.[32] The first two meetings in October led to Demining activities within the JSA, de-arming of personnel, and sealing off of Guard Posts.[33] On 6 November 2018, UNC conducted a third round of negotiations with the South Korean military and North Korean People's Army on "Rules of Interaction" which would underwrite a Joint Security Area where both sides of the Military Demarcation Line—the de facto border—would be open to personnel. For undisclosed reasons, the North Korean side refused to meet to finalize these rules and the next step for realizing a demilitarized Joint Security Area. Regardless of past compromises, North Korea began to arm their soldiers in the JSA with pistols around the end of November 2023.[34]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United Nations Command > History > 1950–1953: Korean War (Active Conflict). 2020-11-05. www.unc.mil.
  2. Web site: United Nations Security Council - History . Encyclopedia Britannica . 2021-05-12 . en.
  3. Web site: United Nations Command > History > 1950–1953: Korean War (Active Conflict). 2020-11-05. www.unc.mil.
  4. Web site: United Nations Command > Resources > FAQs. 2020-11-06. www.unc.mil.
  5. Web site: The United Nations in Korea Harry S. Truman. 2020-11-06. www.trumanlibrary.gov.
  6. The North Korean-Chinese MAC was replaced by the "Panmunjom Mission" under exclusive North Korean administration.
  7. Web site: State Department message to DPRK. https://web.archive.org/web/20000831081603/http://www.fas.org/news/dprk/1995/950313-dprk-usia.htm. 2006-11-29. 2000-08-31.
  8. Question of Korea . United Nations Digital Library . 1976 . 2021-02-27.
  9. News: Salmon. Andrew. 2019-05-08. In South Korea, a UN Command that isn't. Asia Times. 2021-04-10.
  10. Web site: Let the UN Command Remain a Tool for Korean Peace. 2020-11-06. Council on Foreign Relations. en.
  11. Web site: Joint Security Area / Panmunjom. 2006-04-09.
  12. Web site: United Nations Security Council – History.
  13. 10.1017/CBO9781316151594.110 . Jennings v . Markley, Warden . International Law Reports . 1966 . 32 . 367–368 . 248997335 .
  14. Web site: United Nations Security Council Resolution 82. PDF. 1950-06-25. 2016-03-04.
  15. Web site: United Nations Security Council Resolution 83. PDF. 1950-06-27. 2016-03-04.
  16. Korean ScholarshipsNavy Today, Defence Public Relations Unit, Issue 133, 8 June, Page 14-15
  17. Web site: United Nations Security Council Resolution 84. PDF. 1–2. 1950-07-07. 2016-03-04.
  18. Coleman . Bradley Lynn . The Colombian Army in Korea, 1950–1954 . . October 2005 . 69 . 4 . 1137–1177 . Project Muse (Society for Military History) . 0899-3718 . 10.1353/jmh.2005.0215 . 159487629 .
  19. Book: 10.1017/CBO9780511600999.008 . The Korean War . Drastic Measures . 1984 . 177–199 . 978-0-521-24496-1 .
  20. Book: 10.1017/CHO9781139032513.006 . The Korean War and Its Consequences . The New Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations . 2013 . 58–78 . 978-1-139-03251-3 .
  21. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BSK24VvZAUM 文정부, '6·25지원국' 덴마크에 '유엔사 제외' 일방통보
  22. https://n.news.naver.com/mnews/article/448/0000418130?sid=1004 국방부 "6·25 기여 형태와 무관하게 회원국의 유엔사 참여 가능"
  23. https://n.news.naver.com/mnews/article/262/0000012548?sid=004 美, 유엔사 재활성화 ‘동아시아판 나토’ 만든다
  24. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/rest-of-world/germany-joins-us-led-un-command-in-south-korea-policing-armistice-border/articleshow/112221967.cms Germany Joins US Led UN Command in South Korea policing armistice border
  25. Web site: United Nations Command. https://web.archive.org/web/20130312233107/http://www.usfk.mil/usfk/content.united.nations.command.68. 2013-03-12. 2011-06-27.
  26. Book: Paul M. Edwards. Historical Dictionary of the Korean War. 2010-06-10. Scarecrow Press. 978-0-8108-7461-9. 129.
  27. News: UN Command names Canadian to key post in South Korea for the first time. 2018-05-13. The Globe and Mail. 2019-07-18.
  28. Web site: Pinkerton . Charlie . Canadians at centre of 'potentially historic turning point' in Korea – iPolitics . Ipolitics.ca . 2018-11-05 . 2019-07-18.
  29. Web site: Deputy Commander UNC > United States Forces Korea > Article View . Usfk.mil . 2015-05-01 . 2019-07-18 . 6 November 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181106004853/http://www.usfk.mil/Leadership/Article-View/Article/1582206/deputy-commander-unc/ . dead .
  30. Web site: Can United Nations Command become catalyst for change in the Korean peninsula?. November 2018. National Interest. 2019-07-18.
  31. Web site: Fact Sheet . 2018-03-27 . 2015-12-22.
  32. Web site: UNC, ROK, DPRK Conduct Historic Trilateral Meeting 유엔사 및 남북한은 역사적인 3자회의 개최 . 2024-03-26 . United States Forces Korea . en-US.
  33. Web site: Jun-suk . Yeo . 2018-10-16 . Two Koreas, UNC hold first trilateral talks to disarm JSA . 2024-03-26 . The Korea Herald . en.
  34. Web site: Eun-jung . Kim . 2023-11-28 . (LEAD) N. Korean soldiers in truce village armed with pistols: sources . 2024-03-26 . Yonhap News Agency . en.