Blood Chit

Korea - Another Face of War

by William R. Cubbins

 

Book Details

The American blood chit is a bandana-size-nylon cloth carried by all American combat airmen. It bears an inscription in several languages of the combat area that identifies him or her as a member of the U.S. military, and promises a reward for his or her return to friendly territory. The chit is readily identifiable by a replica of the American flag printed there on. It also has a serial number and the bearer’s signature. A blood chit is not only a promissory note to those who assist Americans to escape from enemy territory, it is a bond between the government and members of the armed forces who willingly accept the special fidelity of being combatants deep in enemy territory. The record of evasion in World War II and Korea is rich with expressions of integrity and fidelity on the part of our government in fulfilling it’s promise of a meaningful reward. All that an enemy helper needs in order to collect a reward is the American’s name and the blood chit’s serial number.

 

About the Author

William R. Cubbins

Born in Memphis, Tennessee in 1924, Lieutenant Colonel Cubbins was barely nineteen when he became the commander of a four-engine bomber crew and the youngest B-24 commander in WWII. He and his crew were shot down three times and were prisoners of war in Romania. With the start of the Korean War, he was sent to Seoul to be the Chief of the Evasion and Escape Branch of the 5th Air Force.