I do not know.. I don't think anyone would know the answer to that, but since I'm a South Korean, I say that South Korean women are going to win! Since North Korean women don't have much rights, but South Korean women have all the rights a person needs, I think South Korean women would be more stronger than North Korean women in any way.
North Korea says it was in their territory and wouldn't leave, North and South Koreas have different stories.
The North Korean leadership would simply never accept that.
Ban Ki Moon is from South Korea. Honestly, do you think they would make a North Korean a secretary general of UN?
they might have to but wouldnt want to
South Korea would now be dominated by communist North Korea
The 38th Parallel on the globe, same as today. That border was established by the Allies at the end of World War 2 in 1945, and it remained the border at the end of the Korean War in 1953. In World War 2 it was decided that North Korea would be liberated by the USSR, and South Korea would be liberated by the US.
No. It is impossible for a country to invade itself. However, North Korea invaded South Korea and would have been victorious if not for the United Nations intervention.You could make the argument, however, that since South Korean forces participated in the Inchon invasion launched by General Macarthur, that the South Korean Army invaded sovereign South Korean territory under North Korean Occupation, but this is a long stretch as regards terms.
If the United Nations had not stepped in, chances are South Korea would not exist. Korea would be one, united country, which would most likely be run by the current dictator of North Korea.
From Kaesong to Seoul (the current capital of South Korea), one would have to go south southeast (SSE).From Kaesong to Pyongyang (the current capital of North Korea), one would have to go north northwest (NNW).It depends on what you are calling "Korea". The North Korean capital of Pyongyang is north of Kaesong as the map in the Related Link indicates. The South Korean capital (and capital of the Choson dynasty prior to the Japanese occupation) of Seoul is south of Kaesong.
Joseph Stalin supported the North Korean attack in South Korea. Without his support there would have been no Korean War, as we know it today. The Korean War was a US-Soviet War fought by proxy. When Stalin died in 1953, the Korean War ended (1953).
They are separate countries with historical ties, South Korea was created during the Korean War because they wanted a nation that would help oppose the spread of communism throughout Asia. Today the countries have different types of government. And they are separated by a border known as the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
No, the 38th parallel is a line of latitude that served as the dividing line between North Korea and South Korea following World War II. It was not the actual western border of North Korea, but rather the line that separated the two countries.