Victory in Shanghai tells the long-hidden story of a family from Korea that struggled for three decades to become Americans and ultimately fought their way to the United States through heroic actions with the U.S. Army during World War II. Among the first families from Korea to migrate to the United States in the early twentieth century, the Kim family was forced into exile in Shanghai in the mid-1920s after a new U.S. immigration law in 1924 excluded Asians. Two decades later, the family’s four sons—raised as Americans in the expatriate community of Shanghai—voluntarily stepped forward during World War II to defend the nation they considered theirs.
From both sides of the Pacific, the Kim brothers served in uniform with the U.S. Army and in the underground U.S. intelligence network in Shanghai. At the end of the war the eldest son led the liberation of seven thousand American and Allied civilians held in Japanese internment camps in Shanghai. His actions and the support of the leading generals of the U.S. Army in China led to three special acts of Congress that granted him U.S. citizenship and admitted the entire Kim family into the United States. Four Kim brothers became some of the earliest intelligence officers of the nascent U.S. intelligence community, and three of them ascended to leadership positions in the CIA and the Army Special Forces.
Victory in Shanghai tells two intertwined American origin stories: a Korean family’s struggle to become Americans during the World War II era and the contributions of Korean Americans to the creation of modern U.S. intelligence and special operations. Withheld from the public until recently due to the secrecy surrounding their actions during World War II and the Cold War, the history of the Kim family is one of the great stories of coming to America and defending and strengthening it in the process.
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Part I: Americans in Exile
Chapter 1: Victory
Chapter 2: From Korea to America
Chapter 3: Exile in Shanghai
Part II: 1941-1945
Chapter 4: James Kim, American Soldier
Chapter 5: American Resistance
Chapter 6: Exodus from Shanghai
Chapter 7: Peter and Richard Kim, American Soldiers
Chapter 8: American Underground
Chapter 9: Baptism of Fire
Chapter 10: Liberator
Chapter 11: Victory over Japan
Chapter 12: Mission to Shanghai – Operation Sparrow
Chapter 13: Victory in Shanghai
Chapter 14: The Caretaker of Shanghai
Chapter 15: Reunion in Shanghai
Part III: Return to America
Chapter 16: Americans at Last
Chapter 17: Reunited by the Korean War
Chapter 18: American Intelligence Officers
Chapter 19: Major Peter Kim, U.S. Army
Chapter 20: James Kim, CIA Station Chief
Chapter 21: Lieutenant Colonel and Reverend Richard Kim
Chapter 22: Arthur Kim, A Man with a Particular Set of Skills
Chapter 23: A Victory for America
Notes
Bibliography
Index