One war which is still on hold to this day due to the armistice.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, south 'korea' is puppet sate of the US.
as a tourist, both countries are pretty safe except you have to be careful of what you say in North Korea, if you say something that scrutinizes the N. Koreans or the Government there, i believe that you can be taken away by soldiers. even though north korea has a lot to offer, i would suggest South Korea just for convenience.
The country that has the largest army is China, followed in order by #2 India, #3 N Korea, #4 S Korea, #5 Pakistan, #6 United States.
The Soviet Union (Russia) and Communist China support Communist N. Korea. The USA and the United Nations supported S. Korea. Their is still trouble Today between N. and S. Korea, even though the war ended in 1953.
The First World War (WW1) 1914-1918 The Second World War (WW2) 1939-1945
KOREA
S. Korea's capital is Seoul. N. Korea's capital is Pyongyang.
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, south 'korea' is puppet sate of the US.
Prevent communism/n and s Korea
Israel,France,UK,Ireland,Mexico,Taiwan,S. Korea,Phillipines n many more
WW II and Korea.
Yes, Korea was a major war, but called a "police action" by the UN
The DMZ, the 38th Parallel.
Donald N. Clark has written: 'Korea Briefing, 1993' 'Christianity in Modern Korea' -- subject(s): Church history 'The Kwangju Uprising'
Seoul is the capital of South Korea. You may want to rephrase your question. The capital of North Korea is Pyongyang. Do you want the temp in N. or S. Korea?
as a tourist, both countries are pretty safe except you have to be careful of what you say in North Korea, if you say something that scrutinizes the N. Koreans or the Government there, i believe that you can be taken away by soldiers. even though north korea has a lot to offer, i would suggest South Korea just for convenience.
This is a technicality, but yes any US citizen can visit the Demilitarized Zone separting N and S Korea through a guided tour (or could when we visited S Korea in Oct 2010). While in the DMZ, there is a quonset hut that straddles N and S Korea demarcation. If one walks around the conf table, where the Korean War Ceasefire talks were held, one technically passes into N Korea. But under the very watchful eye of S Korean guards. So it's technically a VERY SMALL walk in N Korea territory, but it is / was permissable. Visiting the DMZ is very educational and informative. Also visit the Korean War Museum in Seoul. Get a tour, our docent had lived through the Korean War and had very interesting personal knowledge that we wouldn't have known with just the exhibits.