[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 142 (Tuesday, September 20, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S5905]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KOREAN WAR VETERANS MEMORIAL WALL OF REMEMBRANCE ACT
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I want to applaud Senate passage of H.R.
1475, the Korean War Veterans Memorial Act, which is the House
companion to the bill I introduced with Senator Boozman, S. 1982. This
legislation honors Americans who died during the Korean war by adding a
wall of remembrance to the Korean War Veterans Memorial without the use
of public funds.
The Korean war, often referred to as the Forgotten War, began on June
25, 1950, when the Democratic People's Republic of Korea launched a
surprise attack on the neighboring Republic of Korea. Against the
expectations of the North Koreans and the Soviet Union, the United
States immediately provided military support to South Korea, and the
United Nations Security Council passed a resolution, UNSC resolution
82, demanding a North Korean withdrawal to the 38th Parallel. The
conflict ended with the signing of an armistice on July 27, 1953. By
the time this armistice was signed, 36,575 Americans had sacrificed
their lives, 103,284 were wounded, 7,140 were captured, and 664 were
missing.
To honor the Americans who served during the Korean war, Congress
passed a law on October 28, 1986, authorizing the construction of a
Korean War Veterans Memorial. This Korean War Veterans Memorial,
however, does not honor the Americans who died during the war by
displaying the names of the fallen.
The wall of remembrance H.R. 1475 authorizes will list the names of
members of the Armed Forces of the United States who died in theater in
the Korean war, as well as the number of servicemembers who were
wounded in action, are listed as missing in action, or who were
prisoners of war during the Korean war. The wall may also list the
number of members of the Korean Augmentation to the U.S. Army, the
Republic of Korean Armed Forces, and other nations of the United
Nations Command who were killed in action, wounded in action, are
listed as missing in action, or were prisoners of war.
Building a wall of remembrance to honor the 36,575 Americans who died
in the Korean war would not deviate from the norm: many countries who
fought in the war also honor their fallen, and the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial Wall contains the name of Americans who died during that war.
Korean war veterans' memorials that display the names of a nation's
fallen soldiers can be found across the globe in the 22 UN coalition
countries. The Republic of Korea even displays the personal names of
the 36,575 Americans who died during the war. These names are etched on
bronze tablets and listed by home State. The Vietnam Veterans
Memorial's wall also lists the names of those who died in the theater
of its respective war. It has also been augmented with the additions of
the three-soldier sculpture and Nurse Memorial.
The addition of the wall of remembrance would also not cost any
taxpayer dollars. Korean war veterans who have campaigned for this wall
have also been raising money for the wall's construction. This
legislation would not allow any Federal funds to be used for the
construction of this wall. Construction, therefore, would be privately
financed.
I want to thank Senator Boozman and the other Senators who
cosponsored S. 1982 and have helped me to pass this legislation. I also
want to thank my colleagues in the House of Representatives--especially
Representatives Sam Johnson, Charlie Rangel, and John Conyers--for
their service to our Nation during the Korean war and for their
tireless efforts to honor their fellow servicemen and women. And
finally, I want to thank the Korean War Veterans Memorial Foundation,
Inc., for its support, on behalf of all Korean war veterans, to build
this wall. Authorizing the construction of a wall of remembrance is
just one way we can help ensure that those who died while serving our
country in the ``Forgotten War'' are no longer forgotten.
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