The Battle of Chumonchin Chan or the action of 2 July 1950 was fought between surface combatants during the main phase of the Korean War. It began after an Allied flotilla encountered a Korean People's Navy supply fleet.
Battle of Chumonchin Chan | |||||||
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Part of the Korean War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
North Korea | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Jesse D. Sowell | Kim Kun Ok | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2 cruisers 1 Sloop |
4 motor torpedo boats 2 gunboats 10 ammunition ships | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
None |
Unknown human casualties, 3 torpedo boats sunk |
Battle
editOn 2 July 1950, USS Juneau, HMS Black Swan, and HMS Jamaica were sailing along the coast of the Sea of Japan when they encountered four North Korean torpedo and gunboats that had just finished escorting a flotilla of ten ammunition ships up the coast. The North Korean torpedo boats began an attack on the allied ships. Before their torpedoes could be fired however, they were met with a salvo of gunfire from the United Nations ships which destroyed three of the torpedo boats. The surviving North Korean craft fled. Later in July, Juneau encountered the same ammunition ships and destroyed them.
"Sinking" USS Baltimore
editThe Victorious War Museum in Pyongyang, North Korea has several exhibits which claim that the USS Baltimore (CA-68) was sunk by motor torpedo boats belonging to the Korean People's Navy, under the command of Kim Kun Ok.[1] Exhibits include a poster and the "actual" boat which supposedly sank the American cruiser. However, the Baltimore was in the United States Navy’s decommissioned reserve from 1946 to 1951 and mothballed in Bremerton, Washington, therefore she did not participate in any battles anywhere in 1950. In 1951, the Baltimore was recommissioned and assigned to the Atlantic (not Pacific) Fleet, and in 1955, she was transferred to the Pacific Fleet, two years after the end of the Korean War. She was struck from the Navy list on 15 February 1971, sold on 10 April 1972 to the Zidell Ship Dismantling Company of Portland, Oregon, and subsequently scrapped in September 1972.
References
edit- ^ Kim, Min Joo (2023-09-08). "North Korea says it has produced a 'tactical nuclear attack submarine'". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2023-10-20.