No. North Korea is an independent country. However, North Korea is heavily dependent on Chinese economic assistance to prevent widespread famine.
China and Russia.
China and Russia to the north and South Korea to the (surprise!) south
North Korea borders three countries, not two. They are China, Russia, and South Korea.
The only country that borders China, Russia, and South Korea would be North Korea.
North Korea (officially: Democratic People's Republic of Korea, DPRK or 조선민주주의인민공화국) is bordered by:* China and Russia to the north* South Korea (officially: Republic of Korea, ROK or 대한민국) to the southKorea is a peninsula.
The yalu river forms part of the boundary between China and North korea
Communist China and North Koreacommunist china and North Korea
It was in China in the past. Korea was part of China historically and believed to be eastern end of China. Korea became completely independent after Sino-Japanese war in 1895.
China, North Korea, and South Korea are all different countries.
No. Open a map... Look at size of North Korea, then look at size of China. Even historically, no country from the north ever successfully controlled the whole country of China.
its the north part. it borders north korea, russia and mongolia its basically the part above bejjing
yula jiang
Part of China, tip of north Korea
North Korea and China are both in Asia.
Taiwan, part of the Chinese mainland, and the East China sea lie between the Philippines and North Korea.
china and south korea. There are 3. North Korea also has a short border with Russia.
China in the north, South Korea in the south.