To travel from North Korea into communist China, an allied tank would head southwest. The border between North Korea and China lies to the southwest of North Korea, and crossing it would typically involve moving in that direction. Depending on the specific starting point in North Korea, the exact route may vary slightly, but the general direction remains southwest.
An Allied tank would travel north to go from North Korea into Communist China.
An Allied tank would travel north to go from North Korea into Communist China.
An Allied tank would travel north to go from North Korea into Communist China.
i love one direction
North Korea. South Korea was allied with the US (they were a democracy), and they teamed up to fight the Communists (North Korea). In the end North Korea still won and that's why its is till one of the few dictatorships/communist countries in the world today.
During the Korean War they were supported by China and the Soviet Union (the two major communist powers)
North Korea is communist South Korea is capitalist
North Korea is communist, South Korea is democratic. Which means South Korea is not a communist.^0^
During the Korean war they were supported by China and the soviet union (the two major communist powers)
South Korea. After the expulsion of the French from Indochina, two rival factions controlled Korea: the communist North and the authoritarian South, which allied itself with the anti-communist Western powers.
During the Korean War, North Korea was primarily allied with the Soviet Union and, to a lesser extent, China. The Soviet Union provided military equipment and strategic support, while China sent troops to aid North Korea in its efforts to take over South Korea. This alliance was part of the broader context of Cold War tensions between communist and non-communist nations.
southeast