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China-Japan-Koreas
Troops Honor GIs Who Fell in Korea
2007-04-12
YONGSAN GARRISON, South Korea (AP) - Troops and diplomats from countries that fought in the Korean War paid respects Thursday at the repatriation of remains recovered from North Korea of six American servicemen who died more than a half-century ago.

Dozens of military personnel in dress uniforms stood at attention behind the six coffins draped in blue United Nations flags - representing the U.S.-led U.N. alliance that battled the North after it invaded South Korea in 1950.

The remains were brought Wednesday from the North to South Korea by a U.S. delegation led by New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and Anthony Principi, former U.S. veterans affairs secretary. At the repatriation Thursday, U.S. Army Gen B.B. Bell praised the efforts of troops from 21 nations that fought to help South Korea deter the North. ``It was their selfless service and ultimate sacrifice that saved the nation, giving the people of the Republic of Korea and opportunity to forge their destiny,'' said Bell, the top U.S. commander on the peninsula, referring to South Korea by its official name.

Military officials saluted the coffins as they were taken from a gymnasium at Yongsan Garrison, the main U.S. base in central Seoul, to six polished hearses while a band played ``Abide With Me.''

The ceremony provided a stark contrast to when the delegation received the remains Wednesday in North Korea, where they had been packed into six small black cases and lined up on a road near the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone dividing the Koreas. From there they were escorted across the border into South Korea, where they were then transferred to coffins.

The remains were to be flown later Thursday to Hawaii for identification. Three of the sets of the remains came with identification tags.
Six young men with hopes and dreams that remained in Korea when they fell. We welcome them home and we thank them for all they did.
Posted by:Steve White

#1  Of all the war memorials in DC, I found the Korean war memorial the most touching.

Statues of a group of men, brothers in arms, walking across a field, capturing a moment in time during that war.

And the inscription on the monument hits you like a blow to the chest.

"Freedom is not free"
Posted by: John Frum   2007-04-12 06:40  

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