W.E.B. Griffin - Retreat, Hell!

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It is the fall of 1950. The Marines have made a pivotal breakthrough at Inchon, but a roller coaster awaits them. While Douglas MacArthur chomps at the bit, intent on surging across the 38th parallel, Brigadier General Fleming Pickering works desperately to mediate the escalating battle between MacArthur and President Harry Truman. And somewhere out there, his own daredevil pilot son, Pick, is lost behind enemy lines--and may be lost forever. Apple-style-span From Publishers Weekly
Megaseller Griffin (Honor Bound; Brotherhood of War; Men at War) musters another solid entry in his series chronicling the history of the U.S. Marines, now engaged in the Korean War. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, nicknamed El Supremo by his subordinates, is taken by surprise when the North Korean Army surges south across the 38th parallel. After early losses, he rallies his troops and stems the tide, but not for long. Intertwining stories of literally an army of characters reveal how MacArthur and his sycophantic staff overlook the entire Red Chinese Army, which is massed behind the Yalu River and about to enter the war. Brig. Gen. Fleming Pickering attempts to mediate the ongoing battles between feisty, give-'em-hell Harry Truman and the haughty MacArthur, while worrying about his pilot son, Malcolm "Pick" Pickering, who has been shot down behind enemy lines. The introduction of the Sikorsky H-19A helicopter into the war by Maj. Kenneth "Killer" McCoy and sidekick Master Gunner Ernie Zimmerman details the invention of tactics that will become commonplace in Vietnam. Readers looking for guts and glory military action will be disappointed, as barely a shot is fired in anger, but fans of Griffin's work understand that the pleasures are in the construction of a complex, big-picture history of war down to its smallest details: "There were two men in the rear seat, both of them wearing fur-collared zippered leather jackets officially known as Jacket, Flyers, Intermediate Type G-1." Veterans of the series will enjoy finding old comrades caught up in fresh adventures, while new-guy readers can easily enter here and pick up the ongoing story.

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1 . REFERENCE IS MADE TO

A. MESSAGE DIRECTION OF THE PRESIDENT SUBJ: PICKERING, MAJ MALCOLM USMCR 15OCT50

B. YOUR SECRET URGENT SUBJECT AS ABOVE 03 00 16 OCTOBER 1950

2. CINCPAC DIRECTS

A. DETACHMENT OF DESTROYER OR DESTROYER ESCORT FROM COVERING FORCE FOR PURPOSE OF TRANSPORTING SUBJECT OFFICER TO NEAREST PORT OFFERING SUITABLE AIR TRANSPORT OF SUBJECT OFFICER TO USNAVY HOSPITAL USNAVY BASE SASEBO JAPAN.

B. SUBJECT OFFICER BE ACCOMPANIED BY NAVY PHYSICIAN DURING MOVEMENT FROM BADOENG STRAIT TO SASEBO. TRANSFER TO TRANSPORTING VESSEL TO TAKE PLACE WHENEVER AND WHEREVER BADOENG STRAIT DEEMS ADVISABLE.

C. BADOENG STRAIT WILL ADVISE CINCPAC AND ADDRESSEES HEREON BY URGENT MESSAGE OF SUCCESSFUL TRANSFER OF SUBJECT OFFICER TO TRANSPORTING VESSEL, PORT OF DESTINATION, AND ETA THEREAT.

3. BADOENG STRAIT WILL PASS FOLLOWING PERSONAL MESSAGE FROM CINCPAC TO SUBJECT OFFICER AT EARLIEST OPPORTUNITY. QUOTE WELL DONE. YOUR RECENT ACTIONS IN HIGHEST TRADITIONS OF USMC AND NAVAL SERVICE. WELCOME BACK. END QUOTE

FOR THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF, PACIFIC

STEVENS, VICE ADMIRAL, CHIEF OF STAFF

Pickering read the message and handed it back to Huff. Huff held the other messages up.

"You can read these, of course, if you like," he said. "But they are simply administrative messages to implement what's going to happen. The thumb­nail of the situation is that a Navy R4-D hospital plane will be waiting at Pusan—that's the nearest port—to fly your son to Sasebo. The Supreme Com­mander has arranged for you to be flown to either Pusan or Sasebo, whichever you prefer—"

"Sasebo," Pickering interrupted. "I don't see much point in going to Korea just to come back. And I would just be in the way."

And it smacks of special treatmentnot for Pick, for me.

"Yes, sir. There are two remaining problems."

"Which are?"

"The President has directed that Major Pickering be flown to the naval hospital in the United States most convenient for Mrs. Pickering. They have apparently been unable to contact her."

"San Diego," Pickering said. "Send him to the Navy Hospital in San Diego."

"Yes, sir."

"And the second problem?"

"Miss Priestly. We haven't been able to locate her. We know she's in Korea, and probably in Pusan, but we haven't been able to find her so far."

"I understand she was headed for Wonsan."

"We've checked Wonsan. They don't know where she is, and her name does not appear on any flight manifest of flights from Pusan to Wonsan." He paused, then added: "We'll find her, General."

"I'm sure you will," Pickering said. "Thank you, Sid."

"I know the Supreme Commander is expecting you, sir," Huff said. "I'll tell him you're here."

[SIX]

When Colonel Huff opened the door to MacArthur's office and announced, "General Pickering, sir," MacArthur and Major General Charles Willoughby, his intelligence officer, were standing at a table to one side of the room, look­ing down at a map.

"Ah, come on in, Fleming!" MacArthur called heartily. "I've been waiting for you."

"Good morning, sir," Pickering said, and saluted.

Marines and sailors do not salute indoors—unless under arms or "covered" (wearing a hat or cap)—soldiers do. Pickering had decided nine years before, in Australia, that it was wiser to follow the Army custom. His relationships with the officers around MacArthur were bad enough as it was without adding "the arrogant SOB doesn't even salute" to the listings of what was wrong with him.

"The Supreme Commander has just told me about your son, Pickering," General Willoughby said. "What good news!"

"Thank you, General," Pickering said.

"And Huff has you up to speed, right, on what's happened about that this morning?" MacArthur asked.

"Yes, sir, he has."

"Are you going out to the carrier, or to Korea?"

"No, sir. I think I'd just be in the way. I'll go to Sasebo and wait there."

"Probably the wisest thing to do. Huff will arrange whatever is necessary."

"Thank you."

"Willoughby has been bringing me up to speed on what's happening. Would you like to listen, or are you anxious to leave for Sasebo?"

"I'd prefer to hear General Willoughby's briefing, sir, if I may."

"Start from the beginning, Willoughby," MacArthur ordered.

"Yes, sir," Willoughby said. "On the west coast," he began, using his swag­ger stick as a pointer, "I Corps is poised to take Pyongyang. ..."

The briefing took only ten minutes. It was upbeat and confident. The impli­cation was that the Korea Peace Action was just about over.

MacArthur had asked only two questions of Willoughby.

"And the Wonsan mines, Willoughby?"

"Admiral Struble's Joint Task Force Seven, as of this morning, sir, has nine­teen minesweeping vessels working on the problem."

"And?"

"X Corps will sail today from Inchon, General," Willoughby said. "I have every confidence that by the time the invasion fleet arrives off Wonsan, the mines will no longer pose any problem at all."

"And the Chinese?"

"There has been no reliable intelligence of any movement of Chinese troops toward the border, sir," Willoughby said. "I've personally taken a look at a good deal of the Air Force photography. There's simply nothing there."

Pickering had another unkind thought about Major General Charles Willoughby:

He obviously believes what he's saying, but that is not the same thing as saying that what he believes is true.

What I should do, I suppose, is stand up and say, "General, please remember that Willoughby is the guy who told you guerrilla operations in the Philippines were absolutely impossible, and that there was no indication of hostile inten­tions on the part of North Korea, and his confident statements about no mines and no Chinese should be judged accordingly."

Why don't I? Because I don't know if the mines are gone from the approaches to Wonsan or not, and I don't know if the Chinese are going to come in the war, and absent proof of either, MacArthur's going to go with Willoughby.

And, furthermore, Bedell Smith made the point that the intelligence-gathering function of the CIA ends with passing it on to those charged with making decisions. Making decisions is not our responsibility.

MacArthur interrupted his thoughts. "Have you any questions for Willoughby, Fleming?"

"No, sir."

"In that case, Willoughby, would you give General Pickering and me a moment?"

"Yes, sir, of course."

Willoughby went through the door into Huff's office. "Willoughby tells me that you have sent the CIA Tokyo station chief home," MacArthur said, making it a question.

I can answer that tactfully, which means lie, and say Bedell Smith ordered it. Or I can tell the blunt truth, and probably antagonize him. It's probably time for the blunt truth.

"In my judgment, General, he needed to be replaced. For one thing, he failed to gain intelligence of North Korea's intentions when this war started, and for another—and no disrespect is intended—he was entirely too close to mem­bers of your staff, especially General Willoughby." MacArthur considered that a full fifteen seconds. "Have you decided on a replacement?"

"Colonel Ed Banning, sir. Do you remember him?"

"Of course. He was your deputy in the Second War."

"Yes, sir, he was."

"It's always nice, Fleming, to have old comrades-in-arms in one's inner com­mand circle. You know they can be trusted," MacArthur said, then smiled. "Well, I suppose you're anxious to head for Sasebo, aren't you?"

He meant Willoughby in that philosophical observation, not Ed Banning. Is he asking me to understand his relationship with Willoughby?

"Yes, sir, I am."

Pickering saluted again, then walked out of MacArthur's office into Huff's office, where Captain Hart and Master Sergeant Keller were waiting for him. Willoughby nodded at Pickering, then went back into MacArthur's office.

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