Unequal Partners in Peace and War: The Republic of Korea and the United States, 1948-1953
The course of the Korean War swung like a pendulum powered by two outside interventions: that of the United States, made largely due to the symbolic value of Korea; and that of China, an action taken mainly for security reasons. Chay identifies key actions, including the division of Korea along the 38th Parallel, the 1949 troop withdrawal, and the failure to build an adequate military and economic deterrent in the South, as events that, had they not occurred, might have influenced the final outcome of the conflict. Restraint on the part of the United States and China and the role of the Korean peninsula as a geographic buffer zone ultimately prevented either side from gaining control of the entire peninsula, resulting in a stalemate. While issues of relative strength and weakness hindered U.S.-Korean cooperation after the end of the Second World War, once war came to the region the two powers built a successful partnership that addressed the national interests of both parties. |
讀者評論 - 撰寫評論
內容
5 | |
15 | |
35 | |
Establishment of the Republic of Korea | 77 |
The Policies of the Two Republics | 93 |
The US Troop Withdrawal Issue | 111 |
Economic and Military Aid | 131 |
The Four Episodes | 157 |
The War | 187 |
Wartime Diplomacy | 225 |
Armistice Negotiations | 233 |
Korean Reaction and the Armistice | 249 |
Aid Diplomacy and Korean Domestic Politics | 269 |
Conclusion | 283 |
Bibliography | 295 |
Index | 311 |