A NEW CHAPTER FOR NORTH KOREA?

AuthorBrown, Bryan
PositionTIMES PAST

The Korean War never officially ended. Now a historic summit meeting is bringing hopes for peace. But can North Korea's brutal young dictator be trusted to give up his nuclear weapons?

Just a year ago, the world was bracing for a possible nuclear war between the United States and North Korea. In the summer of 2017, the isolated Communist nation successfully tested ballistic missiles that experts say are capable of reaching many American cities. North Korea's young dictator, Kim Jong Un, threatened to reduce the U.S. to "ashes and darkness." In response, President Trump vowed to unleash "fire and fury like the world has never seen" on North Korea. A nuclear conflict seemed more likely than at any time since the end of the Cold War (1947-91).

Then, on the morning of June 12, 2018, the seemingly unthinkable happened: Bitter enemies put aside their decades-long hostility and recent threats and vowed to work together for peace--at least for the moment. Trump and Kim shook hands at a hotel in Singapore, marking the first time a sitting U.S. president had met with a leader of North Korea. At the conclusion of their historic summit, they signed a joint statement in which Kim committed to "work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula." In return, Trump said he would suspend military exercises with South Korea, which the U.S. has been conducting for more than 40 years.

The statement also said that Trump and Kim would "join their efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime" on the divided peninsula. If further talks are successful, some experts say, they could eventually lead to the signing of a treaty finally ending the conflict that made their nations enemies: the Korean War (1950-53).

"We're ready to write a new chapter between our nations," Trump told reporters. "Yesterday's conflict does not have to be tomorrow's war. "

But critics warned that North Korea has failed many times before to live up to its promises, and it remains to be seen whether anything has really changed.

"What the United States has gained is vague and unverifiable at best," said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York. "What North Korea has gained, however, is tangible and lasting. By granting a meeting with Chairman Kim, President Trump has granted a brutal and repressive dictatorship the international legitimacy it has long craved."

North Korea is an authoritarian state where millions of people live in poverty, and anyone who challenges the country's leaders can be arrested and forced to work in labor camps--or simply be killed. North Korea's leaders have spent much of the country's money developing nuclear arms. For decades, U.S. officials have considered an unstable North Korea to be one of America's gravest threats (see "Danger Zones," p. 13). North Korea has also long threatened neighboring South Korea, one of America's staunchest allies and a modern democracy with a thriving high-tech economy.

So how did we get here?

North vs. South

The current hostilities date back to World War II (1939-45). Japan had long occupied Korea, brutally repressing its people and even forbidding them from using their language. During the war, the U.S. allied with the Soviet Union against Japan. When Japan surrendered in 1945, the Americans and Soviets agreed to temporarily occupy Korea. They divided the peninsula at the 38th line of latitude, or the 38th parallel.

Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, whose country controlled the northern half, and U.S. President Harry Truman initially agreed that a united Korea's future leaders would be decided by elections. But the Cold War--the long contest for global influence that pitted the U.S. and its democratic allies against Communist nations led by the Soviet Union--was deepening. Stalin soon refused to participate in the Korean elections.

In 1948, a U.S.-backed government became the Republic of Korea--or South Korea. The Soviet-backed North then declared itself the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Despite the "Democratic" in its name, it was headed by a Communist named Kim II Sung, a former major in the Soviet army and Kim Jong Un's grandfather. He quickly gained dictatorial powers.

Then in 1949, Communists under Mao Zedong won a civil war in China and seized control of the Chinese government. The West feared that Communism was spreading. So in June 1950, when North Korea attacked the South and occupied South Korea's capital, Seoul, President Truman believed he had to take a stand. He turned for help to the United Nations (U.N.), which authorized its member states to fight the invaders. (Though 16 countries would eventually send troops, most were South Koreans and Americans.)

The 38th Parallel

Early on, the U.N. forces, led by General Douglas MacArthur, seemed poised for victory. After retaking Seoul in September 1950, they began making their way across the 38th parallel and toward North Korea's border with China.

But in late November of that year, Mao sent some 300,000 Chinese troops to aid North Korea. Outnumbered, the U.N. forces were soon in full retreat, pushed back below the 38th parallel.

With the war at a stalemate, peace talks opened in July 1951. It took two years of slow negotiations for representatives from the U.S., North Korea, and China to finally sign an armistice, leaving the North-South border close to where it had been at the start of the war. The agreement created a 2.5-mile-wide demilitarized zone (DMZ) that would serve as a buffer between the two countries.

But the peace was incomplete. South Korea was unwilling to accept anything less than a unified Korea and refused to sign the armistice. To this day, no formal peace treaty has ever been signed. The war--which left an estimated 5 million dead, including nearly 37,000 American soldiers--has technically never ended.

Today, the Korean Peninsula's DMZ remains one of the most heavily secured borders in the world. Hundreds of thousands of North...

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