Korean War: A Stalemate Echoing Through Decades

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In 1950, the Korean War began, North Korea on one side, South Korea on the other. The result was a stalemate, but this created conflict that is still lasting to this day. The war was a major step in the battle of containing or expanding communism. The war also remembered as a war between two superpowers, the U.S.S.R. backing North Korea and the expansion of communism, the U.S. supporting South Korea and containing communism. After the war, no real peace was made, and so far isolated battles make up the foreign relations of the Koreas. But before all of this, North and South Korea weren’t even separate countries, instead they were part of another country.

Until World War II, Korea was part of Japan. When Japan lost the war, the decision
Soldiers in North Korea were highly trained while South Korean soldiers had little to no training at all. Even the soldiers sent from the United States didn’t do very well in supporting the South because of illness. After a full year of the North and South fighting both defensively and offensively, both sides agreed to a ceasefire but it took two years to work out the negotiations. Finally, on July 27, 1953, an armistice was agreed to by both sides with a demilitarized zone at the 38th parallel. The conflict resolved in 1953 was just a temporary fix for an even bigger
Not only did this create conflict for the future, but it was a major part of the battle between expanding and containing communism. The U.S.S.R. backed North Korea, making it the side supporting expansionism, while the U.S. supported South Korea and containing communism. Both the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. were and still are world superpowers, giving this war more importance than if they weren’t involved. North and South Korea are still on aggressive terms and will continue being aggressive towards each other for a long time in the future without wars, only isolated battles. The past, present, and future of the Koreas show that this has just been a very long global conflict, involving more than just the two

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