Garand Picture of the Day #104 -Hungnam Evacuation, December 1950
USS General J.C. Breckinridge (AP-176)
A U.S. Marine guards two captured enemy soldiers on board the transport, probably while en route from Hungnam to Pusan, circa late December 1950.
Note his M1 rifle (with safety in the "off" position), cartridge belt and other gear.
This photograph was received by the Naval Photographic Center on 18 January 1951.
Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives.
Chinese & North Korean prisoners --
One of the reasons the war dragged on so long was the prisoner issue.
The Communists would not release our prisoners (any) unless we returned ALL North Korean and Chinese prisoners.
However, many, perhaps most, did not want to go back to the "people's liberated worker's paradise." They wanted to go to Taiwan or be released in the ROK.
Syngman Rhee, for his own political reasons, just had his guards on his PoW camps open the fences and let the prisoners run for the hills rather than go "home."
It took lots of talking but eventually the Communists did release most of our prisoners. IIRC it was finally established that many American and British PoWs, mainly pilots, were kept in Communist captivity and died there over the next years or even decades.