A Second Honeymoon
Tags: KOREA -- History -- 1945-; KIM Il-chol; CHO Seong Tae; INTERNATIONAL relations
Related Articles
- A Second Honeymoon. Beals, Gregory; Lee, B.J. // Newsweek (Pacific Edition);10/09/2000, Vol. 136 Issue 15, p29
Discusses the visit of North Korea Defense minister Kim Il-chol to South Korea. Talks of the defense ministers which were aimed at easing military tensions between the two sides; View of South Korea Defense minister Cho Seong Tae on North Korea; Outlook for peace between North and South Korea.
- Peace-Making Process on the Korean Peninsula. Tae-Hwan Kwak // World Affairs;Spring88, Vol. 150 Issue 4, p251
Identifies fundamental differences and basic positions that have existed between North Korea and South Korea since 1948. Perspectives on the reunification issue; Obstacles to improvement and normalization of relations between the two countries; Evaluation of stalemated inter-Korean dialogue...
- 1950-1960 PEACE AND PROSPERITY: 1950-1953 THE KOREAN WAR. Baron, Robert C.; Scinta, Samuel // Millennium 2000 -- 20th Century America: Key Events in History;1996, p64
This article presents an overview of the Korean War from 1950 to 1953. On June 25, 1950, the North Korean Communist Army crossed the 38th parallel, invaded the Republic of South Korea and rolled south toward the capital of Seoul. Two days later U.S. President Harry S. Truman pledged U.S....
- Kim Jong-Il fires senior military leader in unusual move seen tied to succession. // East-Asia-Intel Reports;5/19/2010, p3
The article reports on the dismissal of Vice Marshal Kim Il-Chol, a top military leader, by North Korean ruler Kim Jong-Il. According to the official of the Korean Central News Agency, Il-Chol has been dismissed from all of his positions which include his membership in the National Defense...
- Remarks on the 50th Anniversary of the Korean War. Clinton, William J. // Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents;7/3/2000, Vol. 36 Issue 26, p1496
Presents the text of the remarks given by United States President Bill Clinton on June 25, 2000 which deals with the 50th anniversary of the Korean War.
- The Teachers' Movement Struggle for a Peace Model of Reunification Education in South Korea. Synott, John // Social Alternatives;Jan2002, Vol. 21 Issue 1, p42
This article discusses the formation in North and South Korea and the challenge to them by groups of teachers who formed an illegal teachers' movement through the 1990s. The social movement of teachers who formed "Chunkyojo" the Korean Teachers and Educational Workers' Union, became a major...
- UNITED NATIONS USE OF MASS COMMUNICATIONS IN KOREA, 1950-1951. Gordenker, Leon // International Organization;Aug54, Vol. 8 Issue 3, p331
This article focuses on how the United Nations deployed mass communications programs during the two-year Korean peninsula conflict. The political separation of the peninsula into two separate states became a hindrance to the United Nations as it tries to monitor the persistence of hostilities....
- How Our Air Raiders Plastered Korea. Martin, Harold H. // Saturday Evening Post;8/5/1950, Vol. 223 Issue 6, p26
The article tells the untold story of what the U.S. Air Force and Navy did in June 1950 and how they attacked during the first days after the Communists struck South Korea. The word went down the line that the trouble in Korea was an all-out war. B-29s of the 19th Bombardment Group took off from...
- What Must We Do About Korea Now? Worden, William L. // Saturday Evening Post;12/15/1951, Vol. 224 Issue 24, p32
Reports on the impact of resisting communism on the lives of Koreans in Seoul, Korea during the Korean War in 1951. Assistance provided by U.S. soldiers to war-affected Korean civilians; Role of the United Nations in post-war rehabilitation; Problems with the increasing population of refugees.


