South Korea's ship was bombed by North Korea. There was proof under the sea of the bomb and we now it's North Korea because in 1965 South Korea found a full piece bomb and the people in South Korea said it was the same.
The U.S. Navy communications/surveillance ship USSPueblo (AGER-2), was captured by North Korea in January 1968 in what has become known as the Pueblo Incident.
Many things one is both countries might become under dictator ship.
North Korea says it was in their territory and wouldn't leave, North and South Koreas have different stories.
The USS Pueblo, captured by North Korea in 1968.
Abby Well i hope you mean pirates like AAARGH pirates, but yes there is a ship captain was recently held hostage by pirates, that help at all?
got ship-wreaked a couple of timescrew got addicted to lotuscrew got changed into pigsgot kidnapped by a cyclopswas held hostage a couple of times.
It was captured by North Korea because it allegedly strayed into their territorial waters. It is still in Korea - according to the Wikipedia article (see related link)
The political boundaries of the Korean peninsula did not change significantly. Korea remained a divided country. There was a military stalemate resulting in the continued division of the country An armistice was signed in July 1953.
The former intelligence gathering vessel, the USS Pueblo.
Yes. It is a typical communist country, in that the people can vote, but, they can only vote for one person-a communist. The leader of North Korea does not allow a free press, or allow people to have much control over their lives. North Koreans have been known to starve to death, or flee to China, to escape tyranny in North Korea. North Korea recently torpedoed and sunk a South Korean ship, which almost equal to declaring war on it's southern neighbor. North Korea is certainly run by a dictator and one who's mental abilities have been the subject of much negative speculation.
82 sailors were captured and one sailor was killed (gunfire from a sub chaser) in the 1968 USS Pueblo incident. The were repatriated on December 23, 1968, at the "Bridge of No Return (between North and South Korea's DMZ). The Pueblo is still an active U.S. Navy commissioned vessel, though still held by North Korea. They've tried to include it as part of diplomatic negotiations over the years, but without success.