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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper examines the Korean War and argues that it is an important physical manifestation of the cold war. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA1119war.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
It began not much after the end of World War II, a time when Japan ruled Korea. But Korea was split into two divisions, one of which was communist.
Communism was a significant growing force at the time and the domino theory would emerge. Fear was in the air. There had been a policy of containment in Communist China
and a commitment to support the Kuomintang led regime in the Korean War (He,43). On some level, the Korean War would be an early representation of the emerging
Cold War. In fact, one could say that the Korean War represented the start of the Cold War. While most people equate the cold war with the U.S.S.R., the truth
is that the Korean War was a powerful statement of what was evolving in the United States at the time. The Cold War is generally thought of as the
time when the U.S. and Russia were the major world powers and there was an underlying competition for each to become more powerful than the other. There was a build
up in nuclear arms and a fear of communism. But things were somewhat more complex. There were two primary blocs, which were the first and second worlds, or the free
world and the communist bloc. Many equated the U.S. as a major force of the first world and the U.S.S.R. as a major participant in the second, but
the reality was that there were other nations involved, inclusive of Korea. The Cold War was not merely a fight between two countries. It is important to remember that the
Korean War would start after the end of World War II, which was also a time that Europe and Japan were being rehabilitated. Malkasian argues that the Korean War was
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