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As the war now dragged on into its 18th day, dozens upon dozens of North Korean military units began to surrender in droves, many of them trying to capitulate before the Chinese army was able to assume control of them. It was a crazy 48 hours as nearly 300,000 Korean soldiers tried to surrender while the Chinese Army raced to get its own military commanders to take charge.

With nearly half of the Korean People’s Army killed during the short 18 days of fighting, close to half of the forces that had survived surrendered before the Chinese assumed control. However, China made it much farther south than the Americans anticipated to be possible.

The rest of the North Korean soldiers ended up being rounded up by the People’s Liberation Army. Although there were many North Korean soldiers in terms of sheer numbers, the vast majority of them were hungry, demoralized, and lacked adequate weapons to be considered combat effective. As the Chinese moved farther into North Korean territory, these ragged soldiers were marched back towards the Chinese border, where they would be re-equipped, and reorganized into new units with Chinese officers and NCOs before they would be thrown back into the fighting.

New Day, New Alliance

Washington, DC
White House
Situation Room

President Gates was glad to finally be back in the White House after having to essentially go into hiding. He had only been back in the White House for three days when word came in about the North Koreans seeking terms of surrender. As Gates walked into the Situation Room, everyone rose. He quickly signaled for them to sit back down, and took his own seat at the head of the table.

“OK everyone, bring me up to speed on what’s going on in Korea before we transition to anything else. Do we have a ceasefire in place, and what are the Chinese doing in response?” the President asked, wanting to get right down to business.

Admiral Peter Meyers, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, answered this question. “Mr. President, we have confirmed that Colonel General Ryu is the highest-ranking military commander left alive in North Korea. He has largely assumed control of the government and military, and they have responded back by acknowledging him as their new commander. Upon reaching a ceasefire agreement with our forces and the South Koreans, he has agreed to surrender the military and the country. By and large, hundreds of thousands of Korean People’s Army units have been surrendering. The units in the far north and units that have linked up with the Chinese Army have been unable to surrender-the Chinese have now assumed control of the remaining KPA forces and have said they will continue to fight on and unify Korea under their communist rule.”

Secretary of Defense Castle piped in at this point, “This was a huge political and strategic victory, Mr. President. While the Chinese plan on continuing the fight in Korea, we have gotten the DPRK to officially surrender within eighteen days of combat. Casualties have been high, but not nearly as high as we had anticipated. As of right now, we have lost 21,248 killed in action, most of those deaths occurred when the Kunson Airbase was nuked. We have also suffered roughly 42,345 wounded, with roughly 60 % of them returning back to duty within the next couple of weeks.”

His demeanor darkened. “Sir, I don’t mean to be a pessimist, but the real fighting is still ahead of us as the Chinese continue to pour over 100,000 soldiers across the border. The Air Force is doing their best to bomb and harass them as they make their way down the peninsula, but we are also suffering horrific aircraft losses.”

The President’s National Security Advisor posed a question to the group, “With the losses we are sustaining in Korea, how is that going to affect our efforts in Europe?”

“That is a good question, Tom,” said the President. “We have a major offensive underway in Belarus, Ukraine, and the Baltic States. We are starting to sustain some heavy losses there, both in troops and equipment. The last 18 days of fighting in Korea has also cost us dearly in the way of equipment, aircraft and soldiers. How are our armed forces fairing with all of this? Are we on the verge of an utter collapse? Do we need to take a pause in operations to get new trainees deployed and additional equipment built and replaced?”

Several of the military officers sat back in their chairs, looking at Admiral Meyer to see how he would respond. While the military wanted to keep fighting and stay on the offense, they also knew they were running out of soldiers and equipment. They had already signed a series of DoD contracts to plus-up their support operations and private security contractors at their forward deployed bases. The need for support and security personnel was crucial; however, getting everyone a security clearance and getting them deployed to where they were needed was proving to be a logistical challenge they were having a hard time meeting.

Admiral Meyers signaled that he would answer this question, taking the national security advisor off the hook. “We are stretched beyond our breaking point, Mr. President. While we have won a major victory in Korea, the Navy was hit hard. We lost a supercarrier, and the Carl Vinson is going to be out of action for several months while it undergoes major repairs at the shipyard. We’ve hurt the Chinese navy in northern China, but we have not gone after their blue water navy that is now taking up station around Taiwan. That force has already sunk or heavily damaged much of the Taiwanese navy. The continual air and missile bombardment of the country has also caused significant damage to their air force and their ability to defend the island. It is only a matter of time before they launch their invasion.”

He plowed on. “In Europe, the 82nd Airborne in the Baltic States has neutralized the Russian incursions into those countries. While they have prevented the Russians from capturing them, they are in no position to push across the border into Russia. They are purely just trying to hold the line. Our incursion into Belarus by Three Corps has been met by extremely hard resistance. While we maintained control of Minsk for several days, ultimately our forces were pushed back and forced to give up the city. We had thought Three Corps would have been able to capture the Russian 6th Tank Army, but after they rushed in significant reinforcements including a Russian Spetsnaz brigade and two airborne brigades to Belarus, they have successfully beaten our forces back. In Ukraine, we have bloodied them up, but were unable to obtain a breakthrough.”

The President sighed heavily, then looked back to his military advisor. “So, what exactly is the problem then? We have the forces in place after weeks of shuffling units around and moving our forces forward. Why are the NATO member states not contributing more forces to help us defeat the Russians? This war has been going on for nearly eleven weeks. The Russians should have been pushed out of Ukraine already. Why haven’t we been able to make that happen?” asked an exasperated Gates.

The Secretary of State spoke up for the first time since the start of the meeting to address this question. “Mr. President, NATO is a mess right now. We have some member states contributing as much as possible to the alliance-Canada, Bulgaria, Romania, Albania, Croatia, the Baltic States, and Norway-but these countries’ forces are small. Their air forces have been invaluable, but they have also sustained heavy losses, just as our aircraft have. The unfortunate part is that these nations do not have the financial means or the industrial capability to replace the losses they’ve been sustaining.”