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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 15 page paper that discusses the diplomatic relations between and among these three countries. The essay provides a brief historical overview and then focuses on the last decade. The writer explains the Six-Party Talks, its members, actions and outcomes. North Korea's most recent nuclear testing in 2009 is reported and discussed as is North Korea's most recent demands. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PGsknkus.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Korea and that entire Eastern region experienced significant turmoil and confusion over the last two centuries. In those early days, it was the Chinese government that interceded with Korea on
behalf of the United States and Britain. However, in 1876, the United States became the first Western country to establish a formal diplomatic and trading relationship with Korea (Lee, 2006).
Korea followed these with treaties with other nations such as Britain, Germany, Italy, Russia, France and Austria-Hungry (Lee, 2006). It is a long and complicated history. At one point, Japan
ruled over both China and Korea. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Russia and Japan struggled over who would rule Korea. The U.S. stayed out of those early conflicts.
There was little understanding between America and Korea, neither understood the others culture or ways of doing things but the Korean ruler asked for help from the United States (Lee,
2006). Most countries thought that Korea was completely incapable of ruling itself. Teddy Roosevelt was willing to give Japan influence of Korea if Japan left the Philippines to the U.S.
(Lee, 2006). That lax attitude towards Japan ended in December 1941. During the early 1940s, leaders in the United States, Britain, Russia and China all convened to get Japan out
of Korea. The orders were fuzzy at best. As early as 1944, the leader of Korea, Syngman Rhee warned the West that the Soviets could take over Korea and establish
a Communist government. After the U.S. dropped the bomb in 1945, the Soviets immediately went into Korea and Manchuria. The U.S. president, Harry Truman, quickly identified the 38th parallel as
the location that would separate where the Soviets would received forces that were surrendering and where the U.S. would do the same (Lee, 2006). This, then, divided the Korean peninsula
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