How Did The Struggle That Lead To The Korean War

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Struggles between rivals is what starts most conflicts. Two people or organizations that once worked with each other, can easily start to plot and plan against each other with just the minor of problems. They believe false accusations and threats that the other side might be plotting then they make their own plots. This is what happened between the U.S., as well as their allies which included the nations that were in the U.N. and South Korea, and the USSR, as well as their allies which included China and North Korea. Before the cold war in the early 20th century Korea was occupied by Japan. With the defeat of japan in WWII, the USSR occupied the northern part of Korea while the US occupied Japan and the southern part of Korea. They worked with local leader but only with the ones that followed their interest. …show more content…

In two documents we learn about both sides and the struggle that lead to the Korean War. These documents are the “Korean War Telegrams” that was a series of telegrams that documented the interactions between the USSR mainly Stalin, North Korea mainly Mao Tse-Tung, and North Korea mainly Kim Il Sung, and “A Report to the President by the National Security Council” which was from the NSC to president Harry Truman about the Problems and possible solutions to Korea and there occupation in the south. The motivations of each superpower, which are the US and the USSR, was to have a united Korea without the conflict for it causing the next world war, but each superpower also wanted their own interest in Korea. The local pressure in the north caused the USSR to approve the Korean War and the south to fight back relatively

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