Korean refugees flee the war and head south on board trains in this file photo dated 1951
It's the war that never really ended -- leaving the Korean peninsula
splintered in 1953. The brutal war that raged 60 years ago killed more
than two million Koreans, separated thousands of families, and created
the world's most heavily fortified border. It also drew the alliances
that exist today.
The armistice agreement
that ended the war is a truce, rather than a peace treaty. Starting on
Tuesday, North Korea threatened to dismantle the armistice, as it has
done so in the past.
In 2009, North Korea said
its military would no longer be bound by the agreement because South
Korea was joining a U.S.-led anti-proliferation plan. In 2003, Pyonyang's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) announced that it may have "no option" but to stop honoring the armistice because of the United State's "persistent war moves."
This time, KCNA declared
that come March 11, North Korean forces will "completely declare
invalid" the armistice agreement, because "the U.S. imperialists and the
south Korean puppet forces" have violated it. It cited joint U.S.-South
Korean military exercises as "an open declaration of a war" and slammed
the countries using its trademark colorful language.
U.N. toughens sanctions on North Korea
"The U.S. is, however,
working with bloodshot eyes to swallow up the DPRK (the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's official name), not content
with having incurred the pent-up grudge of the Korean people which can
never be settled. What matters is that the South Korean puppet forces
steeped in worship and sycophancy toward the U.S. are dancing to its
tune," KCNA said.
The latest flare-up stems from tougher sanctions passed in the U.N. Security Council against North Korea in response to its nuclear test on February 12. Pyongyang carried out its third nuclear test, despite international condemnation.
Here's a look into the tension between the Koreas and why a Cold War conflict still affects global dynamics.
Causes
For most of the first
half of the 20th century, Japan controlled the Korean peninsula as its
colony. By the end of the World War II as Japan neared defeat, the
allies agreed to an independent Korea. The United States and Soviet
Union divided postwar occupation of Korea along the 38th parallel and
the two sides were ideologically opposite.
To the north was Kim
Il-Sung, the grandfather of North Korea's current leader, Kim Jong-un.
As a communist guerrilla leader, Kim Il-Sung had trained in Moscow and
resisted Japanese rule in Korea and Manchuria. With revolutionary
credentials, he was favored by the Soviets.
In the south, a separate
election in 1948 brought Rhee Syng-Man, a U.S.-educated independence
advocate who was intensely anti-Communist, as the first president of the
Republic of Korea.
Both Rhee and Kim wanted
to unify the peninsula under their respective governments. Tensions
festered between the two sides, backed by their respective superpower
allies.
How the war broke out
On June 25, 1950, a
surprise attack by North Korean soldiers who crossed the 38th parallel
easily overwhelmed South Korean forces. The United States leapt to the
defense of the South. As South Korean, U.S. and U.N. forces fought back
and gained ground into North Korea, Chinese forces joined the war on the
North's side later that year.
The fighting continued
until the signing of the armistice in July 1953. The terms of the
armistice included the creation of the Demilitarized Zone, a heavily fortified 155-mile long (250 kilometers) 2.5-mile wide line separating the two countries.
The toll of the war
included about 1.2 million deaths in South Korea, 1 million deaths in
North Korea, 36,500 deaths for U.S. troops and 600,000 deaths for
Chinese soldiers.
The Korean rivalry
Immediately after the
war, the North became economically prosperous with the backing of the
Soviet Union. However, as the USSR collapsed in the 1990s, so did the
North Korean economy and the rice rations distributed to its people
disappeared. A famine in the 1990s is believed to have killed as much as
10 percent of the population.
In stark contrast, South
Korea had a turbulent start after the war with autocratic leadership
and struggled as one of the poorest economies in the world. But the
country's economy gained ground in the late 1960s, which is now heralded
as a model for economic miracles. It now ranks as the fourth largest
economy in Asia.
President Park Chung Hee
was one of the founders of modern Korea who took power after a coup
d'etat and ruled with a heavy hand for 18 years before his assassination
in 1979. Some in South Korea regard him as the cornerstone of the
country's present prosperity; others view him as a dictator. His
daughter, Park Geun-hye became the new president of South Korea last
month.
She took office with a pledge to keep South Korea safe against the threat of an increasingly hostile North Korea.
Tense relationship
In the last 60 years, diplomacy between North and South has zigzagged from conciliatory to bellicose.
During more friendly times, the two countries arranged emotional family reunions for those separated by the war in 2000, their leaders shook hands in a 2007 Pyongyang summit and ran freight trains across the border. South Korean president Kim Dae-jung
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 for his efforts for "peace and
reconciliation" with North Korea, although his legacy remains mixed.
But periods of
rapprochement have been counterpointed by violence, with incidents such
as the 1983 bombing that killed members of the South Korean cabinet
visiting Myanmar and another bombing in 1987 that blew up Korean Air Flight 858,
killing all aboard. Despite investigations that found that North Korea
carried out both attacks, the government in Pyongyang has steadfastly
denied involvement.
More recently, the North shelled the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong
leaving two marines and two civilians dead. Pyongyang claimed Seoul
provoked the 2010 attack by holding a military drill off their shared
coast in the Yellow Sea. That same year, North Korea was also accused of sinking a South Korean warship, killing more than 40 sailors. The incidents caused widespread anger in South Korea.
Relations have remained
fraught, especially after North Korea's nuclear testing last month,
which the South Korean government has denounced as "an unforgivable
threat to the Korean peninsula's peace and safety."
China, a long-standing
ally to North Korea since the war, backed the UN resolution for more
sanctions against the nation. The sanctions target uranium enrichment
and luxury goods -- aimed at North Korea's ruling elite. China has
previously resisted strong sanctions on the Kim regime, which it
supports economically.
In a Financial Times editorial
that received significant attention in Asian media, Deng Yuwen, a
senior editor of the Study Times, the journal of China's Central Party
School, urged China to "re-evaluate its longstanding alliance with the
Kim dynasty."
"Even if North Korea was a useful friend during the cold war, its usefulness today is doubtful,"
culled from www.cnn.com
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