" ARAN LANA RA leh GRA ah 2 a dM ai ' Mt ue : : , N, 5 ee y y fait: ‘s u LEE ieee, oe pee , A eA 3 ; : Wh aes ee NG % y eae yy . Z a Ry Nate (ities eh A ah UE AEG L nah, EL ; Gy 2 Vancouver, British Columbia, November 10, 1950 Moth Vol. 9, No. 45 Price Five Cents Demand Ottawa act now GIVE CHINA UN SEAT, END ‘IN KOREA Peace hangs by a thread. Yankee imperialism has passed from the talking stage of the cold war to the fighting stage of armed intervention in Korea, and now threatens aggressive action against the great sovereign See Korea as graveyard of : a f y. Impertarsm PEKING “The rugged mountains of North Korea are an ideal Staveyard for the imperialist invaders,” writes Teng Chao in the latest issue of the in- ternational affairs weekly World: Culture. Teng Chao declares that American forces in Korea are now eating the bitter fruits of “victory,” pointing out that guerrila warfare 1s Particularly effective now that U.S. troops are well in- land. He expresses the view that the struggle in Korea will be a long and hard one because, despite their super- lority in metal, the Ameri- Cans are fatally weak in men. The Korean People’s Army, Y concentrating its efforts upon annihilation of Amert- can manpower, is hitting at the weakest spot in Am- erican strategy. ‘The north- ern parts of Korea are ideally Suited to this kind of war- fare and the Koreans have Steat experience gained in their struggle against the Japanese,” he writes. ‘Some 60 percent of the total present strength of America’s ground forces have een pinned down in the Ko- rean war. George Marshall; US. Secretary of Defense, has admitted that America’s “greatest danger today is the Continued on page 6 See KOREA RLU nn Men ne MOU Wott Did Ca at Civic Workers’ m PTT ETL Te UU te PREMIER CHOU EN-LAI @ holm Appeal ful seat in the UN, the door will o ful settlement of the war in Korea. state of People’s China. for peace, Provocative air raids are being launched along the border of the People’s Republic of China, and American planes have deliberately crossed the Manchurian frontier on a number of occasions in the past two months. The danger of war is very real. China has denounced the brazen intervention of America in the internal affairs of Korea, and stated that China supports the Korean people in their valiant fight to drive out the U.S. interventionists. There is still time to save the peace and prevent America from plunging the world into an atomic war—a war which the imperialist forces could not win, but which would cost the lives of millions of innocent people. First step in getting the world back on the road to peace charted by the UN in 1945 is the immediate seating of China in the UN. Only maneuvering of a bloc within the UN, dominated by the U.S., and includ- ing Canada, prevents this step being taken. Once China assumes her right- pen to negotiate amicably for a peacé- No sane man or woman in the world today wants war. a fact at- tested by the signatures of some 450,000.000 people in the great Stock- Canada’s voice must be raised tor peace, and against the crimes in Korea. A powerful campaign is called for across the country to com- pel the St, Laurent government to recognize People’s China and change its Far East policies. Unity and action around these demands for peace is the need of the hour: @ Withdraw all foreign troops from Korea. @ Recognize People’s China. @ Seat People’s China in the United Nations. PREMIER CHOU EN-LAI CHARGES U.S. EXTENDING WAR Negotiate for a peaceful settlement of the Korean issues. ‘China will not tolerate aggression’ PEKING “The Chinese people love peace but, in order to defend peace, they never have heen nor will they be afraid to oppose aggressive war. The Chinese people absolutely will not tolerate foreign aggres- — sion, nor will they supinely toler- ate seeing their neighbors being savagely invaded by imperialists. PULL OCU ULL UL Wie ti baba This statement, made by Chinese Premier Chou En-lai not long be- fore General Douglas MacArthur officially reported to the UN that Chinkse ‘volunteer trpops! wene supporting the Korean People’s Army in Korea, provides the key to Chinese policy toward the Kor- ean war. ¥rom the outset, the Chinese Peopiie’s government stated its . support and sympathy for the Kor ean Democratic People’s Repub- lic, whose war against American intervention was intimately linked with the action of the U.S in pro- tecting the remnants of Chiang Kai-shek’s discredited regime in its Formosa refuge. Continued on page 6 See CHINA Pr ee ee ee eee rl Berg plan riot ‘ eet? SEE STORY ON PAGE 6 Hsu Kuochen, locomotive engh:- eer (above) was one of the many wounded or killed in U.S, attacks on Chinese territory.