Causes of the Korean War

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Causes of the Korean War

After the USSR installed a Communist government in North Korea in

September 1948, that government promoted and supported an insurgency in

South Korea in an attempt to bring down the recognized government and

gain jurisdiction over the entire Korean peninsula. Not quite two years

later, after the insurgency showed signs of failing, the northern

government undertook a direct attack, sending the North Korea People's

Army south across the 38th parallel before daylight on Sunday, June 25,

1950. The invasion, in a narrow sense, marked the beginning of a civil

war between peoples of a divided country. In a larger sense, the cold

war between the Great Power blocs had erupted in open hostilities.

The western bloc, especially the United States, was surprised by the

North Korean decision. Although intelligence information of a possible

June invasion had reached Washington, the reporting agencies judged an

early summer attack unlikely. The North Koreans, they estimated, had not

yet exhausted the possibilities of the insurgency and would continue

that strategy only.

The North Koreans, however, seem to have taken encouragement from the

U.S. policy which left Korea outside the U.S. "defense line" in Asia and

from relatively public discussions of the economies placed on U.S. armed

forces. They evidently accepted these as reasons to discount American

counteraction, or their sponsor, the USSR, may have made that

calculation for them. The Soviets also appear to have been certain the

United Nations would not intervene, for in protest against Nationalist

China's membership in the U.N. Security Council and against the U.N.'s

refusal to seat Communist China, the USSR member ha...

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...l contingents by 1953 a

build-up directly attributable to the increased threat of general war

seen in the outbreak of hostilities in Korea. With further reinforcement

in the NATO forecast at the end of the Korean War, USSR armed aggression

in western Europe became unlikely. For the east, the major result was

the emergence of Communist China as a Great Power. A steady improvement

in the Chinese army and air force during the war gave China a more

powerful military posture at war's end than when it had intervened; and

its performance in Korea, despite vast losses, won China respect as a

nation to be reckoned with not only in Asian but in world affairs.

Bibliography:

Kaiser, Robert. Korea from the Inside. New York, 1980

Lawrence, John. A History of Korea. New York, 1993

Seeger, Elizabeth. The pageant of Korean History. Canada, 1967

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