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Korean War. By Gilbert Morgan. The Players. Republic of Korea (South Korea) Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) United States China Soviet Union United Nations. Personality of Actors. Republic of Korea
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Korean War By Gilbert Morgan
The Players • Republic of Korea (South Korea) • Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) • United States • China • Soviet Union • United Nations
Personality of Actors • Republic of Korea • Under control by the United States Army Military Government in Korea (USAMGIK) from 1945–48) • Was divided in 1945 via Potsdam Conference by the Allies • Wanted to reunify Korea under its own Government • Anti-communist • Established its constitution on July 17, 1948 • Elected a president, Syngman Rhee (an Authoritarian) on July 20, 1948 • Established as the Republic of South Korea on August 15, 1948.
Personality of Actors • United Nations • Supported the Republic of Korea during the War • Creation of an independent South Korea became UN policy in early 1948 • Came to help the South Koreans in warding off the invasion of North Korea • Condemned the invasion by North Korea and signed a resolution • Agreed to the Armistice (both parties agree to stop fighting) and signed of on it (United States, North Korea and China also signed)
Personality of Actors • United States • Occupied the southern part of the 38th parallel • Also came to the aid of South Korea Soviet Union • left Korea in 1948 • Aided North Korea and China with military weapons • Allied with North Korea and China
Personality of Actors • People’s Republic of Korea • Had been suspected of Communism • Wanted to reunify Korea under its political system • (Kim Il-sung) Pressed his case with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin that the time had come for a conventional invasion of the South • Saw a weakness when troops had left South Korea and decided to invade • Did not sign the Armistice
Reputation of Actors • United States • South Korea • United Nations • United Kingdom (working Unitarily) • North Korea • Soviet Union • China (somewhat Unitarily..but divided)
Goals/Interests • North Korea • Used a Surprise Attack when they invaded South Korea • Were later a victim of a Surprise Attack at the Battle of Inchon • Can be seen as the aggressor, initiated the war • Engaged in a Deterrence vs. Compellence • “My enemy’s enemy is my friend”—North Korea aligning with Soviet Union • Used a surprise offense to destroy US military credibility • Engaged in Strategic Intelligence • North Korea knew South Korean troops were not ready for an attack
Goals/Interests cont. • Surprise Attack • Chinese Intervention • First Phase Offensive, Battle of Unsan (China attacked the Republic of Korea 1st Infantry Division at Unsan on October 25. This resulted in surprising the United Nations forces and surprising the US 8th Cavalry Regiment. As a result, this became one of the most desolating US loss in the war.) • Chinese New Year's Offensive • PVA(People’s Volunteer Army—China) and the KPA(Korean’s People’s Army—North Korea) attacked UN command
The Appeasement Theory of War • North Korea strategically asked Soviet Union to join them in invading North Korea. North Korea saw an opportunity and saw that the best time to attack would be sooner than later. • Aggressor nation (North Korea)/nation A (that wants to change the status quo) believes that • status quo nation D (South Korea) is weak in military capability
Chicken Game • The payoff would have an advantage if one side swerves
Initial Response to Chicken Game Black-North Korea Green-South Korea
Stalemate From July 1951 – July 1953 • Nash Equilibrium (No advancing) • No player wanted to change their strategy. Little territory was exchanged
Security Dilemma • Both countries wanted to “beef up” their military. However, three things took place. • an indirect arms race between North Korea and South Korea • rising tensions between North Korea and South Korea (increased violence in each country..especially around the 38th parallel • A war taking place
United State’s THREAT • US President Harry Truman commented on using the atomic bomb against the PVA after an attack on the UN Command by North Korea in hopes to end the war. • Was this brinkmanship? • The threat to use atomic welfare is a dominant strategy and is very credible due the fact President Truman had already used an atomic bomb before
Armistice • The battle of the Kumsong ended the war and started talks in exchanging POW’s (Hostage-Holding Game—releasing hostages gives leverage, also gives bargaining power). Syngman Rhee agreed to let 27,000 Korean internees escape. The United States disagreed, but in the interest of peace, compromised and signed the agreement. Peng Dehuai for the China and Kim Il-sung for the North Korea later signed the agreement.