U.S. NAVY SEVENTH FLEET IN KOREAN WAR, FORMOSA CRISIS, COLD WAR 73492
Made in 1957 by the
U.S. Navy about the
Seventh Fleet, this historic film shows the activities of the 7th during the
Korean War, and during the
Formosa Crisis of 1954 --
Quemoy. The protection of
Taiwan,
Japan and
South Korea as well as nations in
Southeast Asia is described. Korean War end of hostilities are shown at the 6 minute mark, with the signing of a cease fire in July,
1953. This date marked an expansion of the
Fleet's responsibilities to the broader
Asian region. Generalissimo Chiang-Kai Shek is shown meeting with a
Navy Admiral aboard the
USS Wasp at the 7 minute mark, and the evacuation of the
Taichung Islands at the 10 minute mark. There's also coverage of the early stage of the
Vietnam War with refugees evacuated as part of "
Operation Passage to Freedom" at the 8 minute mark. Operation Passage to Freedom was a term used by the
United States Navy to describe its transportation in 1954–55 of
310,
000 Vietnamese civilians, soldiers and non-Vietnamese members of the
French Army from communist
North Vietnam (the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam) to
South Vietnam (the
State of Vietnam, later to become the
Republic of Vietnam).
The Seventh Fleet is a numbered fleet (a military formation) of the United States Navy. It is headquartered at
U.S. Fleet Activities
Yokosuka, in
Yokosuka, Japan, with some units based in Japan and South Korea. It is part of the
United States Pacific Fleet. At present, it is the largest of the forward-deployed
U.S. fleets, with 60 to 70 ships,
300 aircraft and 40,000 Navy and
Marine Corps personnel.
Seventh Fleet units participated in all major operations of the
Korean and Vietnamese
Wars. The first Navy jet aircraft used in combat was launched from a
Task Force 77 (TF 77) aircraft carrier on 3 July
1950. The landings at
Inchon, Korea were conducted by Seventh Fleet amphibious ships. The battleships
Iowa,
New Jersey,
Missouri and
Wisconsin all served as flagships for
Commander, U.S. Seventh Fleet during the Korean War. During the Korean War, the Seventh Fleet consisted of
Task Force 70, a maritime patrol force provided by
Fleet Air Wing One and Fleet Air Wing Six,
Task Force 72, the Formosa
Patrol, Task Force 77, and Task Force 79, a service support squadron.
Over the next decade the Seventh Fleet responded to numerous crisis situations including contingency operations conducted in
Laos in
1959 and
Thailand in 1962. During
September 1959, in the autumn of 1960, and again in
January 1961, the Seventh Fleet deployed multiship carrier task forces into the
South China Sea. Although the
Pathet Lao and
North Vietnamese supporting forces withdrew in each crisis, in the spring of
1961 their offensive appeared on the verge of overwhelming the pro-American
Royal Laotian Army.
Once again the fleet moved into
Southeast Asian waters. By the end of
April 1961, most of the Seventh Fleet was deployed off the
Indochinese Peninsula preparing to initiate operations into Laos.
In June 1962 the Seventh Fleet held 'Flagpole '63,' a joint naval exercise with the
Republic of Korea.
Seventh Fleet represented the first official entrance of the
United States into the Vietnam War, with the
Gulf of Tonkin incident. Between 1950 and
1970, the U.S. Seventh Fleet was known by the tongue-in-cheek nickname "
Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club" since most of the fleet's operations were conducted from the
Tonkin Gulf at the time.
The Fleet has three major assignments:
Joint Task Force command in a natural disaster or joint military operation,
Operational command of all naval forces in the region, and
Defense of the
Korean Peninsula. In
1994,
7th Fleet was assigned the additional responsibility as Commander, Combined Naval
Component Command for the defense of South Korea.
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