• brain_in_a_box [he/him]
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    259 months ago

    Foreign powers unilaterally divided the country in half, and the actual country itself just has to accept it?

    • @pingveno@lemmy.ml
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      19 months ago

      My point was more this. In the American Civil War, the South was a breakaway region. In the Korean War, the North and South were separate countries with separate governments. The government of the North invaded the South. Period.

      Before this gets brought up, the governments of both countries were authoritarian turds.

      • alcoholicorn [comrade/them, doe/deer]
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        99 months ago

        The US created south korea out of thin air at the end of WWII, literally just drawing a line on a map.

        Then they both held elections. The south’s election was rigged by the US, who used their sway at the UN (the USSR was boycotting at the time and PRC still hadn’t been accepted) to get South Korea’s puppet state recognized as the gov’t of all Korea, including the parts that didn’t even have the US’s sham elections. As preparation to invade the north, the US purged any non-compliant elements from the gov’t (going so far as to put compradors who’d worked for Japan during occupation in high ranking positions) and carried out massacres of elements likely to side with communists (such as rural villages that lead communal lifestyles).

        The north saw America was coming for them and the longer they waited, the worse position they’d be in.

      • Well you’re a dumbass if you can’t understand this lol. What the fuck does the American Civil War have to do with this? Nobody forced the slavers to make a separate country. Meanwhile the US forced the south of Korea to set up a government and refuse any discussion with the rest of Korea. You can define invasion however you want but it’s nonsense to define how you’re trying other “governments tm” being how you define it