 To this day, it is known as a forgotten war, but for many Korean war veterans, the notion of forgetting is inconceivable. For the past 62 years, a small group of surviving members have carried memories of horror and heroism from one of the war's most brutal conflicts that is simply known as the Battle of Chosen Reservoir. Well, the conditions over there involved an enemy who vastly outnumbered us. They killed 3,000 of us up there, and they wounded over 6,600. But that includes the Army's regimental combat team and the British Royal Marines. Trapped by an encirclement of 120,000 soldiers from a relentless and unforgiving Chinese army, the 15,000 Allied ground forces known as the Chosen Few, comprised of U.S. soldiers, sailors, and Marines, along with their British counterparts, fought their way through 78 miles of roadblock after roadblock on mountainous terrain and minus 30-degree weather, before finally making it to their extraction point in the port city of Hangnam, North Korea. The Chinese came back in, replacing the roadblocks, holding the convoy up, and the lorries at different intervals were getting shot up, having to be pushed off the road, set on fire and so forth. A total of 17 medals of honor, 70 Navy crosses, plus many distinguished service crosses were awarded for the campaign, the most for a single battle in U.S. military history. Reporting for Army South, Sergeant Robert Quintero.