Korea North became independent from its colonist in August 15, 1945.
Yes it is.
the Korean peninsula: includes both south and north Korea
No, Korea is a peninsula to the East of Mongolia, Mongolia is its own country and North and South Korea are independent countries
an independent government
North Korea has been communist since it was founded in 1948.
North Korea became a country in 1948. 1871 would be during Korea's Joseon Dynasty.
Before WWII, North and South Korea were united as one country; they were just Korea. Part of Korea, the south, wanted to break apart and be independent because they wanted to become democratic, while the rest wanted one communist country. They broke into civil war, and the US and UN jumped on the south's side and the USSR helped the north. It's still basically a stalemate between North and South Korea; which is why we still have troops there on the 36 Parallel.
um... 1. Which Korea are you talking about... North Korea or South Korea? 2. When you've lived in either Korea long enough and can 'pass' as a North/South Korean, and can actually act, then I suppose you could become a North/South Korean actress.
Yes. South Korea, North Korea, China, and Russia are all independent nations. They may also be known as their official names as listed below respectively:Republic of Korea (South Korea)Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea)People's Republic of ChinaRussian Federation
because ussr forced north korea to be communist by army
noin our lifetime
To "Liberate" South Korea is the main reason for the North to attack. The North, which became communist after the Korean peninsula was freed from Japanese rule, wanted South Korea to become communist as well.