Page 28 of King of Spies


  beginning of war, 65, 68

  napalm use, 118, 120

  Nichols’s targeting information, 9, 58, 72–73, 84–85, 88–92, 97, 101

  Pusan Perimeter, 81–82

  Fink, Max, 166

  forced labor, 114, 163

  Fort Benning, 143

  Fort Lauderdale Country Club, 173, 174–75

  Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, 175

  George Washington University, 31

  Gideon, Clarence, 179

  Gideon v. Wainwright, 179

  Goodfellow, Millard Preston, 44

  Great Arab Revolt, 15

  Great Depression, 3, 20, 170

  Gregory, George T., 120–21, 184

  Guam, 1, 22

  Gyorae, 39

  Haas, Michael E., 35, 151, 155–56

  Han River bridge bombing, 70–72, 223n

  Harvard University, 31, 118

  Hastings, Max, 95

  Hausman, James H., 44

  Heart of Darkness (Conrad), 8

  Henderson, Gregory, 217n

  Hernando County, 182–83

  Hernando County Courthouse, 189

  Hernando High School, 184–85

  Hershey’s, 3, 171

  Higgins, Marguerite, 76

  Hillenkoetter, Roscoe H., 60

  Hirohito, emperor of Japan, 23, 29

  Hodge, John R., military governor of Korea, 24–26, 28, 30, 35–36, 37

  attitude toward Korean people, 25, 214–15n

  Hollywood, Florida, 19

  Hollywood Beach Hotel, 19–20

  homosexuality, 104–5, 152, 163, 174–75

  How Many Times Can I Die? (Nichols), 7, 9–10, 198

  on Army life, 21

  on assassination attempts, 124

  on family, 128–29, 172

  on fugitive status, 176

  on intelligence activities, 30, 40, 42, 43

  on Korean War activities, 70, 71, 74, 75, 77, 79, 101, 105–6, 108, 122, 127, 151

  on morality of behavior, 195

  on psychiatric treatments, 168–69

  publishing, 185–86

  research and writing, 183–84, 196

  on Rhee, 32

  on trial, 180–81

  Hull, Harris B., 161

  human rights, 25, 26, 107–8

  Hurlburt Field, 10

  Ilyushin IL-10, 50

  interrogations, 40–42, 95, 110, 115

  Japan

  American occupation of, 16, 18, 25, 53

  Korea and, 22–23, 25

  during Korean War, American evacuations, 69–70

  Murray in, 85–86

  Nichols in, 158–60, 161

  post–World War II, 18

  World War II, 8, 22–23, 118, 122, 134

  attack on Pearl Harbor, 20–21

  Jebu Island, 116

  Jeju uprising, 39, 57, 218n

  Johnson, Louis, 83

  Jones, John G., 190

  Karachi, 21, 22

  Kesey, Ken, 163

  Kim Bok-dong, 40, 91

  Kim Chi-hoe, 41

  Kim Chong-sup, 211n

  Kim Chung Yul, 43, 83, 100, 117

  Kim Dong-choon, 33

  Kim Gye-son, 106

  Kim Il sung, 27–28

  before Korean War, 27–28, 32, 45

  during Korean War, 72, 81, 93, 96

  armistice, 137–39

  Nichols ransacking of house and offices, 2, 94, 97

  No’s defection, 132–33, 134, 136

  war tactics, 88, 226n

  post–Korean War, 145

  show trial, 124–28

  Kim In-ho, 104–5, 105

  Kim In Hwa, 128–31, 196–97

  Kim Ji-eok, 114–17

  Kim Jong Il, 27

  Kim Jong Un, 27

  Kimpo Air Force Base, 37, 41, 70–71, 94, 132

  Kim “Snake” Chang-ryong, 33, 154, 155, 188

  Kleinpeter, James E., 158

  Korean Armistice Agreement, 123, 137–39, 144

  Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA), 75, 102

  Korean Democratic Youth Alliance, 28–29

  Korean Liaison Office, 53

  Korean Military Advisory Group (KMAG), 45, 55, 71

  Korean National Police, 28–29, 34, 40, 194

  Korean Peninsula. See also Korean War; North Korea; South Korea

  division of, 23–26

  history of, 22–28

  Korean People’s Army

  before Korean War, buildup of, 45, 46

  during Korean War, 34, 77, 83, 84, 87, 111

  beginning of war, 65, 66

  codebreaking, 2, 83–86, 89–90

  fall of Seoul, 70–71, 72

  Pusan Perimeter, 87–89

  Korean War, 2, 5–7, 8

  air war, 9, 98–99, 134–35, 144

  American evacuations to Japan, 69–70

  armistice, 123, 137–39, 144

  background of, 45–47

  Battle of Inchon, 87, 88, 96, 125, 126, 130

  beginning of, 65–69

  China’s intervention, 94–99

  codebreaking, 82–86, 89–90, 94

  factors in U.S. intervention, 68–69

  Han River bridge bombing, 70–72, 223n

  MiG operations, 5–6, 101–4, 132–36, 228–29n

  napalm use, 97, 118–22

  North Korea’s invasion, 65–72, 76–77, 81

  No’s defection, 132–37

  public ignorance about, 193–94

  Pusan Perimeter, 81–82, 86–89

  stalemate, 109–11

  Suiho Dam attack, 121–22

  Summer of Terror, 6–7, 76–80

  T-34 salvage mission, 73–76, 101–2

  Taejon massacre, 6–7, 77–80, 186, 211–12n, 224–25n

  Truth and Reconciliation Commission, 33, 78

  UN Security Council authorization of force, 67

  Ku Klux Klan, 182

  Kun Soo Sung, 133–34

  Kuter, Laurence S., 146

  labor camps, 114, 163

  land reforms, 23, 26, 28

  Langdon, William R., 214–15n

  Lawrence, T. E. (Lawrence of Arabia), 15–17

  Lee Kang-hwa, 91

  Lee Kun Soon, 50, 106–8

  Lee Whal, 134–35

  LeMay, Curtis E., 9

  Life (magazine), 9

  Los Angeles Times, 178

  MacArthur, Douglas, 2

  background of, 51

  during Korean War

  Chinese offensive, 95–96, 97–98

  firing of, 100–101

  Inchon, 87, 88, 96

  North Korean invasion, 66, 68, 76, 77

  Pusan Perimeter, 81

  nickname of Kim “Snake” Chang-ryong, 33

  North Korea’s military buildup, 44, 52–54, 59, 60, 61

  occupation of Japan, 16, 18, 25

  occupation of Korea, 24–26, 30, 35–36, 37

  personality of, 51–52, 96

  Truman and, 51, 52–54, 96, 100–101

  McCarthy, Joseph, 67

  MacDill Field, 20

  Manchester, William, 51

  Manchuria, 174

  Mao Zedong, 2, 96, 97

  Marshall, George, 24

  Mason, Herb, 10

  Mastrangelo, Gene, 34

  Maxwell Air Force Base Hospital, 168–69

  Meadows, Robert “Bobby,” 184, 185

  Miami Herald, 178

  MiG-15s, 98–99

  Nichols’s operations, 5–6, 101–4, 112–13, 228–29n

  No’s defection
, 132–36

  “MiG Alley,” 98–99, 110, 134–35

  military payment certificates (MPC), 150–51

  Millett, Allan R., 39, 52

  Mirim airfield, 115–16

  “modified electroshock,” 166

  Morgan, Lindsay, 186–87

  Moscow Trials, 125–26

  Muccio, John J.

  Korean War, 70, 79, 97

  Nichols and

  letter to Willoughby, 55–56, 221n

  Rhee’s relationship, 34, 42–43

  Partridge and, 57

  Murray, Edward, 85–86

  Nagoya Air Field, 65

  Naktong River, 86

  napalm, 97, 117–22

  National Archives, 10, 59, 184

  National Assembly (South Korea), 104

  National Geographic, 24

  National Intelligence Service (Korea), 75, 102, 154

  National Security Agency, 83, 85

  Naval Institute Press, 9

  Nazi Germany, 8, 57–58, 118

  New York Herald Tribune, 76

  New York Times, 87

  Nichols, Bill, 20

  Nichols, Bruce (Kim Si Koo), 172–73, 176–77

  Nichols, Donald

  alleged assassination attempts, 124

  Army enlistment, 20–22

  autobiography of. See How Many Times Can I Die?

  awards and citations, 5–6, 73, 74, 75, 90, 101, 103, 154, 184, 187–88

  in Brooksville, 182–87, 196–97

  at brother’s farmhouse, 170–74, 179

  burial at Brooksville Cemetery, 192–93, 196–98

  cash stashes of, 4, 111, 150–52, 171, 172, 173, 177–80, 184

  children and family, 128–31, 172–73, 176–78, 186–87, 196–97, 232n

  in CIC, 1, 22, 28–29, 30, 71

  currency trading, 150–52

  death of, 191

  early life of, 3, 18–20, 21–22

  eating habits of, 3, 19, 171, 175

  education of, 3, 19

  electroshock treatments, 7, 8, 162–67

  fugitive in Mexico, 4, 176–80

  surrender, 179–80

  hero’s return to South Korea, 187–88, 239n

  homosexuality of, 104–5, 152, 163, 174–75

  involuntary hospital stays, 7, 158–67, 168–69

  Kim Il Sung show trial, 124–25, 126–28

  before Korean War

  arrival in South Korea, 22–23, 28–29

  counterintelligence, 28–29, 30, 40–42

  North Korean war plan reports, 46–55, 59–60

  predictions of North Korean invasion, 50–51, 53, 66

  witness to civil war, 39–44

  during Korean War

  agent recruitment, 90–92, 104–8, 114–15, 120

  American evacuations to Japan, 69–70

  armistice, 137–39

  beginning of war, 65–66

  bombing targets, 9, 58, 72–74, 84–85, 88–92, 119–23

  Chinese offensive, 94–99

  codebreaking, 2, 82–86, 89–90, 94

  covert missions, 90–91, 99–104, 111–13

  double agents, 6, 108, 120–21

  extensions of overseas duty, 113–14

  Han River bridge bombing, 70–72, 223n

  island empire, 110–11, 114, 123

  Kim and, 114–17

  late-night attack, 106–7

  loss rate for agents, 107–8, 120–21

  MiG operations, 5–6, 101–4, 112–13, 228–29n

  MP’s disappearance, 107–8

  napalm use, 118–22

  Nick’s Unit, 2, 5, 99–100, 104–8, 110–13, 114, 144–45, 157–58

  North Korean defectors, 41–42, 44, 50, 82–84, 106–7, 114–17, 132–37, 145

  No’s defection, 132–37

  Pusan Perimeter, 82, 86–89

  searching Kim Il Sung house, 2, 94, 97

  spying sources and methods, 131–37

  Suiho Dam attack, 121–22

  T-34 salvage mission, 73–76, 101–2

  Taejon massacre, 6–7, 77–80, 186, 211–12n, 224–25n

  treatment of Americans, 147, 148

  treatment of Koreans, 147–48, 149

  post–Korean War military career, 143–46, 157–58

  discharge from air force, 167–68

  post–Korean War civilian life, 170–74

  arrest, 177–79

  fugitive status, 4, 176–80

  sexual molestation charges, 173–78, 188–91, 195–96

  trial, 180–81

  Lawrence compared with, 15–17

  legacy of, 194–95

  morality of behavior, 195

  Muccio and, 34, 40, 42–43

  letter to Willoughby, 55–56, 221n

  parachute jump training, 105–6, 110, 116–17, 143

  paranoia of, 124

  Partridge and, 92, 97, 183

  first meeting, 56–58

  intelligence gathering and covert missions, 57–59, 60, 68–69, 90–91, 94, 99–100, 108, 111, 113, 145–46

  letters seeking help, 160, 161–62, 164–65, 167

  promotions, 90

  personality of, 3–4, 17

  personal life in Korea, 128–31

  police work of, 21, 22

  promotions of, 4–5, 90, 209n

  psychiatric treatments of, 7, 158–67, 168–69

  Rhee and, 2, 31–35, 154, 169, 174, 188, 194–95

  creation of air force, 42–44

  Korean War, 6, 72, 103–4, 105, 137, 194–95

  Nichols’s dismissal from Korea, 152–53, 155–56

  personal request as adviser, 42–43, 45

  post–Korean War, 137, 139

  sacking of, 7, 146–58

  Dunn report, 146–49

  formal investigations, 149–52

  rebuttal, 157–58

  Rhee and, 152–55

  Willoughby and, 50, 53, 54–56, 59, 61, 92

  during World War II, 20–21

  Nichols, Donald, II (“Donnie”)

  birth father questions, 128–29

  death of, 186–87

  father’s fugitive status, 176–78

  in Florida, 129, 172–73, 184–86

  gravesite of, 196

  Nichols, Donald H., 22, 124, 129, 131, 152, 165, 171–72, 174, 187, 190

  Nichols, Fern, 22, 172

  Nichols, Judson, 177

  brother’s arrival in household, 170–74, 179

  brother’s cash, 151–52

  brother’s fugitive status, 178–79

  brother’s treatments, 165

  early life of, 20, 21–22

  Nichols, Lee Tae Chon, 172–73, 176

  Nichols, Linda, 187, 190

  Nichols, Walter, Jr., 22, 172

  Nichols, Walter, Sr., 3, 18–19, 20, 197

  Nichols, William, 22

  Nicholson, Jack, 163, 166

  Nick’s Unit (Detachment 2 of 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron), 2, 5, 99–100, 104–8, 110–13, 114, 144–45, 157–58

  Noble, Harold, 126

  No Kum Sok (Kenneth Rowe), 132–37, 233n

  North American Air Defense Command (NORAD), 145, 160, 164

  North American F-86 Sabres, 98, 102–3, 113

  North American T-6 Texans, 85

  North Korea, 1–2

  division of, 23–26

  Kim Il Sung’s show trial, 124–28

  during Korean War, 5–6, 9, 16

  armistice, 137–39

  defectors, 41–42, 50, 82–84, 106–7, 114–17, 132–37, 145

  invasion, 16,
65–72, 76–77, 81

  Nichols’s bombing targets, 9, 58, 72–73, 84–85, 88–92, 119–23

  Nichols’s reports on war plans, 46–55, 59–60

  prewar military buildup, 44, 46–55, 59–60

  Soviet Union and, 16, 23–24, 26–28

  North Korean People’s Army. See Korean People’s Army

  occupation of Japan, 16, 18, 25, 53

  occupation of Korea. See American occupation of Korea

  O’Donnell, Emmett “Rosie,” 94, 143–44

  Oliver, Robert T., 44, 45

  One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (movie), 163–64, 166

  Operation Everready, 138–39

  Opium Wars, 29

  Oryu-dong, 131–32, 150

  Paek Hyong-bok, 127

  parachute jumping, 105–6, 110, 116–17, 143

  Partridge, Earle E., 56–59

  appearance of, 58

  background of, 57–58

  during Korean War, 68–69, 90–91, 100, 103, 119

  beginning of war, 65–66

  codebreaking, 84–85

  Nichols and, 92, 97, 183

  first meeting, 56–58

  intelligence gathering and covert missions, 57–59, 60, 68–69, 90–91, 94, 99–100, 108, 111, 113, 145–46

  letters seeking help, 160, 161–62, 164–65, 167

  promotions, 90

  at NORAD, 145, 160, 164

  Partridge, Katy, 66

  Partridge, Kay, 66

  Patton, George S., 81

  Pearl Harbor attack, 20–21

  Pearson, Joynelle, 183–84

  Peng Dehuai, 96

  People’s Army (North Korea). See Korean People’s Army

  People’s Liberation Army (China), 94–96, 96

  Pierce, Frank, 79

  “positive intelligence,” 30

  post–World War II, 17–18

  Princeton University, 31

  prisoners of war (POWs), 76, 95, 108, 138

  Project Willy, 85–86

  prostitution, 104–5

  Purple Heart, 73, 223n

  Pusan Perimeter, 81–82, 86–89

  Pyongyang, 73, 94, 96–97

  Raynor, Spencer W., 50

  Red Scare, 67–68

  Reed, Jack B., 29–30

  Republic of Korea. See South Korea

  Republic of Korea Army, 6, 45–46, 49, 66, 76

  Han River bridge bombing, 70–72, 223n

  Rhee, Syngman

  background of, 31–32, 36–37

  education of, 31, 36

  independence activities, 25, 37–38

  during Korean War, 6, 34, 69

  armistice, 137–39

  Summer of Terror, 6–7, 76–80

  Taejon massacre, 6–7, 77–80, 211–12n, 224–25n

  military hardware requests, 44, 45–46

  Nichols and, 2, 31–35, 154, 169, 174, 188, 194–95