HR-1475-114
Became Public Law No: 114-230.
What it does
This bill authorizes a private nonprofit organization — the Korean War Veterans Memorial Foundation, Inc. — to build a Wall of Remembrance at the existing Korean War Veterans Memorial. The wall would display the names of U.S. service members who died in the Korean War, as determined by the Department of Defense, along with casualty statistics for allied forces. No federal money may be used to pay for construction.
Who benefits
Families and descendants of the approximately 36,000 U.S. service members who died in the Korean War, who would gain a permanent, named memorial similar to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall. Veterans' advocacy organizations and the Korean War Veterans Memorial Foundation, which receives legal authorization to proceed with construction. Visitors to the National Mall who seek a more complete historical record of the conflict. South Korean and other allied-nation communities whose fallen service members may also be recognized on the wall.
Who is hurt
U.S. taxpayers face no direct construction cost under the bill's explicit prohibition on federal funding, though the National Park Service (which oversees the memorial site) may incur some administrative costs related to oversight and coordination. Private donors to the Korean War Veterans Memorial Foundation bear the full financial burden of construction. Some may argue that families of service members listed as missing in action — whose eligibility for inclusion is subject to DOD criteria — could be excluded depending on how those criteria are written.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Korean War veterans have long been underrecognized compared to veterans of other conflicts — a gap reflected in the Korean War's informal designation as "The Forgotten War." The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall demonstrated that listing individual names creates a deeply personal and powerful form of national tribute. Authorizing a comparable wall for Korean War dead would give the roughly 36,000 fallen service members the same individualized honor afforded to Vietnam veterans, providing long-overdue recognition to aging survivors and the families of the deceased. Because the bill explicitly bars federal construction funding, it does so at no cost to taxpayers, relying instead on private philanthropy. Supporters also note that the bill follows the established Commemorative Works Act process, ensuring proper oversight of any addition to the National Mall.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that while the goal of honoring Korean War veterans is broadly shared, the bill raises practical concerns about precedent and process. Authorizing a private foundation to add a significant new structure to an existing federally managed memorial on the National Mall could set a precedent for piecemeal additions to other memorials, potentially complicating the long-term integrity and design coherence of the Mall's commemorative landscape. Critics may also question whether DOD's unilateral authority to set eligibility criteria — with limited congressional or public input — could result in some categories of fallen service members, such as certain civilian personnel or allied troops, being excluded without adequate recourse. Additionally, some may note that the prohibition on federal funds, while fiscally conservative, places the burden of a national tribute entirely on private fundraising, raising questions about whether the memorial's completion can be reliably assured.