[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 52 (Tuesday, April 1, 2014)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E485-E487]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                        HONORING ROBERT HARBULA

                                 ______
                                 

                         HON. MICHAEL F. DOYLE

                            of pennsylvania

                    in the house of representatives

                         Tuesday, April 1, 2014

  Mr. DOYLE. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to one of my 
constituents who is truly an American hero.
  Mr. Robert Harbula of West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, fought bravely as a 
U.S. Marine in the Korean War--including the Battle of Chosin 
Reservoir. Private First Class Harbula served in G Company of the Third 
Battalion of the First Marine Regiment, part of the First Marine 
Division, in the Korean War. His unit was referred to initially as 
``George Company'' and then, later, after Chosin Reservoir, as ``Bloody 
George.''
  Private First Class Bob Harbula was assigned to the Marine unit 
guarding Camp David, the Presidential retreat, when he served as an 
usher for the Washington, DC, premiere of ``Sands of Iwo Jima'' in 
January of 1950. After seeing the movie, he decided that he ought to 
get a more dangerous posting, so he volunteered for a marine raider 
unit several months later. Soon thereafter, he ended up in Camp 
Pendleton as part of the 1st Marine Division--and in August 1950, he 
found himself on a troopship headed for Japan with the First Marines as 
one of the early reinforcements for the hard-pressed UN forces in 
Korea. Mr. Harbula was part of the machine gun squad attached to G 
Company's First Platoon.
  Korea had been occupied for 35 years by Japan until the end of World 
War II, at which point it was partitioned at the 38th Parallel. South 
Korea was occupied and protected by US forces. North Korea was occupied 
by the Soviet Union. UN plans to hold elections and unify the country 
were rejected by the Soviets, and a communist dictatorship was 
established in the north.
  On June 25, North Korean troops crossed the boundary separating North 
and South Korea, taking the ill-prepared South Korean Army by surprise 
and overwhelming it. Three days later, the North Korean army occupied 
Seoul, the South Korean capital. US troops from the Eighth Army based 
in Japan rushed to aid the South Koreans. They were thrown into battle 
piecemeal in a desperate effort to gain time for more reinforcements to 
arrive. South Korean troops and the US 24th Infantry Division fought 
the North Korean troops repeatedly, inflicting substantial casualties, 
but they were repeatedly defeated by superior numbers and forced to 
retreat. By August, US and South Korean forces had been pushed back to 
a fragile perimeter around the port city of Pusan in the southwest 
corner of the Korean peninsula. Despite repeated North Korean attacks, 
the Pusan Perimeter held and bled the North Koreans dry.
  General Douglas MacArthur, commander of US forces in the region, 
decided to launch a major amphibious landing deep in the North Korean 
army's rear at the port city of Inchon on Korea's west coast. Mr. 
Harbula's unit was in the first wave of the assault craft, which landed 
under heavy fire on September 15th. From that moment on, George Company 
was in nearly constant combat as US forces captured Inchon and fought 
their way into Seoul, where the fighting often deteriorated into 
vicious house-to-house combat. On the night of September 25, George 
Company--heavily outnumbered--stopped a major North Korean 
counterattack by tanks, self-propelled artillery, and hundreds of men 
along Seoul's Ma Po Boulevard. Mr. Harbula and his section did what 
they could, firing a machine gun non-stop at the lead tank. With 
artillery support, George Company withstood and repelled the attack--
but at a terrible cost.
  The Inchon landing and the liberation of Seoul caused the weakened 
and over-extended North Korean forces in the south to collapse and beat 
a panicked retreat northward. The US Eighth Army began pressing 
northward in aggressive pursuit along Korea's west coast. The X Corps, 
which included the 1st Marine Division, was pulled out of the line and 
loaded onto amphibious transport ships. They sailed around the Korean 
Peninsula and disembarked at the end of October in the port of Wonsan 
on North Korea's southeastern coast, which had already been secured by 
South Korean units.
  George Company's first assignment after landing at Wonsan was holding 
a village called Majon-ni several miles inland at the junction of roads 
leading to Seoul, Wonsan, and Pyongyang. On November 2nd, PFC Harbula's 
machine gun squad was helping to escort a re-supply convoy through a 
treacherous mountain gorge when it was ambushed. Bob Harbula provided 
cover, firing a .30 caliber machine gun from the hip, while the 
surviving trucks were carefully turned around on the one-lane, cliff-
edged road and driven out of the ambush to Wonsan, where they reported 
to headquarters and requested a rescue mission for the remaining 
survivors.
  George Company garrisoned Majon-ni for several weeks after the 
ambush. PFC Harbula took command of his 10-man machine gun squad after 
the sergeant who had been in charge was seriously wounded in the 
ambush. On November 14, George Company moved north to the Hungnam-
Chigyong region.
  The rugged Taebaek Mountains that ran up the middle of the Korean 
peninsula divided the Eighth Army from X Corps as each force pushed 
north. On November 24, MacArthur ordered the ``Home by Christmas'' 
offensive to conquer all of North Korea up to the Yalu River, which 
formed the boundary between North Korea and China. The Eighth Army was 
to push north, while the First Marine Division was to push west from 
the Chosin Reservoir, cut off a North Korean major supply line, and 
link up with the Eighth Army.
  Unbeknownst to General MacArthur and his advisors, hundreds of 
thousands of Chinese troops had begun infiltrating into North Korea in 
mid-October. The General and his staff thought that there were only a 
few small Chinese units fighting in North Korea. In fact, Chinese 
troops were massing for attacks in both the east and west. In the east, 
the 9th Army Group of the Chinese ``People's Volunteer Army'' had 
encircled most of the Chosin Reservoir, a large man-made lake north of 
Wonsan and 65 miles northwest of the port city of Hungnam.
  On November 25, nearly two hundred thousand Chinese troops launched a 
surprise attack on the Eighth Army, defeating it resoundingly in the 
Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River and sending it retreating southward in 
what came to be called ``the Big Bug-out.''
  On November 27, however, the First Marine Division's orders were 
still to attack northwestward. Most of the Division's combat troops, 
primarily thousands of Marines from the First Marine Division's 5th and 
7th Regiments, were positioned around the village of Yudam-ni west of 
the reservoir. An understrength regimental combat team from the 7th 
Infantry Division held territory on the east side of the reservoir up 
through the village of Hundong-ni to Sinhung-ni. A winding narrow road 
led through the mountainous terrain from each village to the bottom of 
the lake, where they met in the village of Hagaru-ri, which was lightly 
defended by a hodgepodge of units from the First Marine Division, 
including a

[[Page E486]]

number of companies from George Company's First Marine Regiment. 
Essential supplies had been stockpiled at Hagaru-ri, and engineers were 
desperately trying to build a small airstrip when they weren't fighting 
off enemy attacks.
  It was 14 miles of treacherous terrain from Yudam-ni to Hagaru-ni. 
From there, the road wound 11 miles through more mountainous terrain to 
the town of Koto-ri, where the 1st Marine Regiment's headquarters was 
located--defended by the Regiment's Second Battalion--and then another 
10 miles to Chinhung-ni, defended by First Battalion, First Marine 
Regiment. From there, it was another 37 miles to the port city of 
Hungnam. That one narrow road was the only way First Marine Division 
and the other units from X Corps could get out of the mountains and 
back to the coast.

  Meanwhile, George Company was stuck somewhere in the rear echelons 
for lack of transportation.
  On the night of November 27, all hell broke loose. The 9th Army Group 
of the People's Volunteer Army attacked the X Corps forces on either 
side of the Chosin Reservoir and at various points along the road as 
far south as Koto-ri. Tens of thousands of Chinese soldiers attacked 
the Marines. The Marines at Yudam-ni were surrounded and cut off, as 
were the soldiers of the 7th Infantry's Regimental Combat Team 31 on 
the east side of the reservoir--and the Divisional headquarters and 
elements of the 1St Marine Regiment at Hagaru-ri.
  On the morning of November 28, George Company finally got some 
wheels. They were ordered into trucks and headed north, arriving in 
Koto-ri at nighfall.
  That night, the Chinese launched a massive attack on Hagaru-ri. They 
almost succeeded in overwhelming the outnumbered Marines, who had 
thrown every able-bodied man who could fire a rifle into the front 
line--down to, and including, the cooks and truck drivers. Wheu dawn 
came, the defenses had held, but Chinese forces occupied the strategic 
high ground--East Hill--and unless reinforcements arrived, it seemed 
inevitable that Hagaru-ri would fall and the units around the Chosin 
Reservoir would be doomed.
  George Company's 200 men formed part of the 900-man ``Task Force 
Drysdale'' that was rapidly thrown together on the morning of November 
29th in Koto-ri to reinforce Hagaru-ri. It took the column all day to 
fight their way up the 11 miles of road between Koto-ri and Hagaru-ri. 
They had to stop repeatedly to clear enemy roadblocks, and they were 
under fire the whole time from thousands of Chinese soldiers dug in on 
either side of the road. The route was subsequently given the name 
``Hell Fire Valley.''
  Late in the day, the rear of the convoy was stopped by a burning 
truck and surrounded by Chinese troops. Fighting through the night 
until their ammunition was nearly all gone, the surviving soldiers 
finally had no choice but to surrender.
  The front of the column, consisting of the surviving tanks, George 
Company, and some of the Royal Marines pushed on and finally broke 
through to Hagaru-ri. Only a third of the men who set out that morning 
in Task Force Drysdale made it to Hagaru-ri, but the 300 soldiers and 
the tanks that made it through Hell Fire Valley at such a terrible cost 
significantly bolstered the town's defenses.
  The next morning, November 30, George Company was given the daunting 
mission of retaking East Hill. They slowly advanced up the hill, 
slipping and falling repeatedly on the ice and taking heavy rifle and 
machine gun fire. By the end of the day, they held the south end of the 
ridge, but the Chinese still held the center. George Company dug in as 
best they could, but the temperature at night dropped past -20 degrees 
and the ground was frozen hard. Private Harbula was forced to resort to 
piling dead Chinese soldiers around his machine gun like sand bags.
  Once it was dark, Chinese forces counterattacked, charging down the 
hill several thousand strong. The men of George Company fought 
bravely--eventually hand-to-hand. Private Harbula's machine gun jammed, 
and his position was overrun by the enemy. An officer ordered the men 
to pull back. He remembers hitting one Chinese soldier in the face with 
his helmet and firing his pistol at several others. As he slipped and 
slid back down the hill, he fell into a shell crater. In the crater, he 
found several dead Americans and one of his comrades, Richard Haller, 
still alive but wounded in both legs. Private Harbula carried Haller 
down the hill to safety, but he ruptured his Achilles tendon in the 
process. Private Harbula was out of the fight, but the surviving 
members of George Company fought on. Finally, near dawn on December 
1st, the Chinese attack petered out.
  December 1st was something of a turning point. That day, the Marines 
in Yudam-ni began a break-out to the south. By nightfall, they had 
fought their way to Toktong Pass, halfway to Hagaru-ri. In addition, 
the engineers who had been working on the airstrip completed enough of 
the runway that C-47 transport planes could use it. That afternoon, 
planes started bringing in supplies and reinforcements and flying out 
the wounded.
  There was bad news on December 1st as well. With half of the men in 
Regimental Combat Team 31 dead or wounded, its commander, Lieutenant 
Colonel Don Faith, ordered his troops to destroy any equipment they 
couldn't carry and attempt to break through to Hagaru-ri. As the column 
advanced, it was attacked constantly by thousands of Chinese soldiers 
on each side of the road to Hagaru-ri. As night fell, Lieutenant Faith 
was killed trying to take a roadblock and the column disintegrated. 
Many small groups of soldiers fled through the night and made it to the 
Hagaru-ri perimeter alive, but everyone who stayed with the convoy was 
killed.
  Most of the First Division was now reunited in Hagaru-ri. The 
remaining able-bodied but exhausted members of George Company continued 
to defend the perimeter, moving to one end of the runway on December 
5th and repulsing another large Chinese attack.
  On December 6, the First Marine Division began its breakout effort--
or as its commanding officer General O.P. Smith put it, not so much 
retreating as attacking in a different direction. George Company fought 
its way back down Hell Fire Valley--but this time as part of a unit 
powerful enough to defend itself. They reached Koto-ri by the end of 
the next day. The retreat continued the following day with the 5th and 
7th Regiments pushing ahead and the 1st Regiment and George Company 
acting as a rear guard. Finally, reached the port of Hungnam, where an 
armada of ships evacuated a quarter of a million soldiers and 
civilians, as well as a great deal of equipment.
  The ``advance in a different direction'' by the ``Chosin Few'' has 
become a legendary example of heroism, sacrifice, endurance, and 
suffering. Thousands of American soldiers rebuffed surprise attacks by 
overwhelming numbers of enemy forces and then conducted a 70-mile 
fighting retreat through treacherous mountain terrain in subfreezing 
weather.
  George Company, now ``Bloody George,'' did their part, fighting their 
way into Hagaru-ri, up East Hill, and then--outnumbered 10 to 1--
holding their perimeter against determined enemy counterattack. Private 
First Class Bob Harbula served bravely in the Battle of Chosin 
Reservoir until he was injured.
  Remarkably, several months later, Bob's brother, John, who was a 
Marine stationed in Norfolk, saw a Marine on crutches hitchhiking. John 
picked him up and they got to talking, and the Marine mentioned that he 
was at the Chosin Reservoir with G-3-1. John told his passenger that he 
had a brother who had also fought there with G-3-1. The hitchhiker 
asked John what his brother's name was, and when John told him that it 
was Bob Harbula, the Marine's face turned white and he said, ``that's 
the SOB that saved my life!'' John had given a lift to Richard Haller!
  Chosin Reservoir didn't mark the end of Bloody George's or Bob 
Harbula's combat action in Korea by any means. Soon after, he was back 
in combat. On April 15, 1951, he was promoted to Corporal and put in 
charge of 2 machineguns and 20 men at the start of Operation Ripper. He 
fought again with G Company in North Korea at the Hwachon Reservoir, 
where the First Marine Division was awarded its third Presidential Unit 
Citation for action on Hill 902. He was finally rotated home on 6 June 
1951.
  Mr. Harbula was recently quoted in the McKeesport Daily News as 
saying, ``I don't consider myself a hero.'' Well, I think it's safe to 
say that the rest of us do. I am grateful to U.S. Marine Corporal 
Robert Harbula for his heroic service to our country, and I am very 
proud to represent him in the House of Representatives.
  Mr. Harbula may not consider himself a hero, but he believes deeply 
that his comrades in George Company, especially those who gave their 
lives for this country, are heroes who never got the recognition they 
deserved. He has endeavored in recent years to educate the American 
public about the critical role George Company played in reinforcing and 
defending Hagaru-ri and holding it until the 5th and 7th Marine 
Regiments could reach it and the First Marine Division could carry out 
its legendary fighting withdrawal.
  That may finally be happening some 60-some years after the fact. In 
2010, a writer named Patrick K. O'Donnell published ``Give Me Tomorrow: 
The Korean War's Greatest Untold Story--the Epic Stand of the Marines 
of George Company.'' The book is based on extensive interviews with the 
surviving members of G Company. In addition, earlier this week, the 
story of George Company's actions in the Battle of Chosin Reservoir was 
the subject of an episode of ``Against All Odds''--a six-part series 
about battlefield heroism on the American Heroes Channel--which until 
recently was known as the Military Channel.
  Mr. Speaker, all Americans can be proud of the fact that in the 
course of our nation's history, there have been many inspiring, often 
heartbreaking stories of heroes who have

[[Page E487]]

given their lives for this country. There are many, many more Americans 
who have served this country who have risked their lives for this 
country. Many have come home wounded and disabled. We owe them all a 
debt we can never begin to repay. It's my belief, though, that we 
should remember them and honor them as best we can for what they've 
done. That's why, when I learned about Bob Harbula and George Company's 
service in the Korean War, I felt it was only right that I share their 
story with you and have it included in the Congressional Record.
  Mr. Harbula has spent much of his life trying to call attention to 
his brothers in arms--the Chosin Few--so I urge my colleagues to join 
me in recognizing the bravery and tremendous sacrifices of Bob Harbula 
and the men of Company G, Third Battalion, First Marine Regiment for 
their heroic service in the Korean War. God bless them, and God bless 
everyone who serves or has served our nation in its armed forces.

                          ____________________