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Major Kurt Chew-Een Lee retired from the USMC in 1968. He holds the distinction of being the 1st Asian-American to hold a regular commission in Marine Corps history. Following his retirement, Maj. Lee worked for the New York Life Insurance Company for seven years. In 1975 he began working as a Regulatory Compliance Coordinator for the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. He held that position for nearly twenty years. He is now completely retired and living in Arlington, VA.
Other Comments:
In 2000, the California Military Museum mounted describing the bravery and military service of the three Lee brothers. In a 2002 speech about the Chosin Reservoir battle, General Ray Davis said that Maj. Lee was the bravest Marine he ever knew.
The story of Lee's bravery in the Korean War was the subject of a documentary produced by the Smithsonian Channel. The documentary, titled "Uncommon Courage: Breakout at Chosin", was broadcast on Memorial Day, May 31, 2010.
Major Lee's superior officers criticized him for his aggressive "chip-on-shoulder" attitude. Lee responded to his critics by saying that the chip "is my teaching tool to dispel ignorance". The Major had experienced a lot of attitudes that held Chinese-Americans" as very timid.
Korean War/UN Offensive (1950)/Inchon Landing/Operation Chromite
From Month/Year
September / 1950
To Month/Year
September / 1950
Description (September 15–26, 1950) in the Korean War, an amphibious landing by U.S. and South Korean forces at the port of Inchon, near the South Korean capital, Seoul. A daring operation planned and executed under extremely difficult conditions by U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the landing suddenly reversed the tide of the war, forcing the invading North Korean army to retreat in disorder up the Korean peninsula.