Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The International Causes of Civil and Global War in Korea By Henry Lung (10097465) HIST383 Dr. Dawn Miller March 20th, 2014 1 The International Causes of Civil and Global War in Korea On the 25th of June in 1950, the Korean War began in earnest with North and South Korean armed forces clashing along the geographical 38th Parallel that had separated the young nations. The deadly conflict would encompass the United States, the Soviet Union, China, the Koreas and their respective allies in the Korean peninsula. The outbreak of the war was a direct result of multifaceted circumstances. Despite the goal of the United Nations and the Korean people to form a unified nation, war in the Peninsula was inevitable. The situation in the region became complex as the two similarly authoritarian leaders Syngman Rhee and Kim il-Sung contested for control over the North Korean peninsula based on their ideological differences. In addition, the strategic goals of the Soviet Union and United States respectively in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War had bolstered the political significance of the region. These immediate tensions in the Korean peninsula, in addition to the heightened strategic importance of the region would be propelled into the international struggle that defined the progression of the three year hot war. This political context would be vital to the eruption of the global Korean War as they forced and exasperated immediate tensions in the peninsula that preceded the war. It would be the concurrent emergence of a more active foreign policy in containment and deterrence on the part of both the United States and Soviet Union that would spur the war into an international conflict. Effectively, this key political shift would supplement the atmosphere to facilitate the outbreak of warfare. These political circumstances directly resulted in the initial fighting between North and South Korea. The initial outbreak of fighting on the Korean Peninsula began directly with the partisan maneuverings of the opposing Korean leaders Kim il-Sung and Syngman Rhee in the North and South respectively. It is vital to understand the motivations of these leaders to accurately reflect 2 the historical narrative of why local tensions were created and inflamed. The Allied occupied and post Japanese ruled Korea had given rise to these enormously different men with equal tenacity in their cause in the aftermath of the Second World War. Divided along the 38th Parallel, Rhee headed the Republic of South Korea as a staunch conservative nationalist. Rhee’s character was defined by tenacious agitation and resistance against authorities which he deemed not in the best interests of the Korean nation. His early political career consisted of frequent and stubborn clashes with monarchist authorities leading six years of imprisonment which ended as Japan began to tighten its control on Korea in 1905 by naming the region as a protectorate.1 His succeeding years of displacement in the United States would prompt him to westernize his birth name from Yi Sung-nam to Syngman Rhee while zealously heading his “self-styled Korean government-in-exile” to protest Japanese occupation in Korea.2 His North Korean counterpart Kim-Il Sung possessed many of the same attributes that defined Rhee’s political career. Born Kim Sung Chu following the Japanese complete annexation of Korea as a colony, he similarly adopted a new name to better suit his nationalistic ideals by adopting the name of an antiJapanese military hero.3 Kim would be more actively engaged in resisting Japanese authorities as a guerilla leader in Manchuria. He had notably joined the Chinese Communist Party before Japan’s invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and actively fought a stubborn but futile resistance that resulted in his exile to the Soviet Union after a decade of fighting.4 At the conclusion of the Second World War, Kim would assume the status of liberator in the Soviet occupied Korea. This was directly as a result of the Soviets handing over Japanese administration to communist Koreans making the Democratic Republic People’s Republic of Lee Hong Yung review of, ”Syngman Rhee: The Prison Years of a Young Radical” by Chong Sik Lee in The Journal of Asian Studies 61:3 (2002) 1075. 2 Michael Hickey, The Korean War: The West Confronts Communism (London: John Murray Publishers Ltd 1999), 7. 3 Young Hoon Kong, “North Korea’s mysterious Kim Il sung,” in Communist Affairs 2:2 (1964) 21. 4 Kong, “North Korea’s mysterious Kim Il sung,” 22. 1 3 Korea to be the first new postwar nation to have diplomatic ties to the Soviet Union in 1948.5 Kim’s political cunning allowed him to unite and lead several fractured communist factions while purging domestic dissidents with Soviet support.6 His successes in building international relations allowed him to build upon his own Juche ideology which effectively was a variant of Marxism-Leninism that included Kim’s personal principles of “self-generated, autonomous, independent action.”7 The Soviet Union would continue support for North Korea and respect Kim’s personal ideological divergences to suit their overall strategic purposes of assisting a new political ally. The aftermath of the Second World War also granted Rhee the opportunity to ascend to power. The Allied nations had vaguely decided on the future of the Korean peninsula in a series of wartime conferences where other strategic focuses took greater precedent. At the Yalta Conference in 1945, Franklin Roosevelt of the United States and Josef Stalin had agreed on a vague multi-nation trusteeship in peninsula, but Japan’s unanticipated swift defeat demonstrated the weaknesses of addressing the finer details of partitioning Korea.8 Having had the advantage of seizing power in North Korea with Soviet support early in the confusion regarding the Korean trusteeship, Kim’s position in the geopolitics of the region was assured. The United States reacted parallel as they too intended to resolve the vague terms of the agreement at Yalta. In 1947, the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea was founded “prodded by the United States” to terminate allied military occupation and assist in establishing civilian rule in Korea both north and south of the 38th Parallel.9 Despite this American led attempt at influencing geo-political guidance in the entirety of Korea, Kim’s early political Jon Halliday “The North Korean Model: Gaps and Questions” in World Development 9:9 (1981) 890. Kong, “North Korea’s mysterious Kim Il sung,” 24. 7 Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. (Yuksabipyungsa: Princeton University Press 2002), 2: 295. 8 James I. Matray, “Civil War of a Sort: The International Origins of the Korean Conflict” in The Korean War in Restrospect, ed. Daniel J. Meador (Boston: University Press of America, 1998) 9. 9 Graeme S. Mount and Andre Laferriere, The Diplomacy of War: The Case of the Korean War, (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 2004) 4. 5 6 4 maneuverings had effectively allowed him to establish defacto control in the north. This forced the focus of the United States shifted to Korea south of the 38th parallel which effectively divided up the Koreas in terms of international allegiance and ideological autonomy. In 1948 with the absence of Soviet influence, the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea voted narrowly in favour of holding United Nations sponsored elections only in South Korea.10 Rhee would win the elections and assume power in the newly formed with implicit backing by the United States which had spearheaded the decisions of the United Nations Temporary Commission on Korea. Despite Rhee’s extended residency and political actions in the United States, he remained steadfastly focused on his native Korea and provided very little compromise for political opponents. The United States remained unmoved as he fuelled political violence in the months leading up to his election directed towards the leftist Chonp’yong labour unions by right wing Noch’ong labour union and police who had financial backing and implicit leadership from Rhee.11 Rhee was also confident enough in his international reputation. He even remarkably claimed to be the “President of Korea” in the United States prior to his election victory and relatively minimal influence as a lobbyist.12 The pragmatism of Rhee and Kim ultimately set the stage for the outbreak of fighting on the peninsula in the summer of 1950 as both leaders sought to unite Korea under a different ideological banner. Conflict between these two equally stalwart nationalists with sternly different ideological fundamentals and international affiliations clearly brewed the initial conflict in the Korean Peninsula. However, Rhee and Kim’s authority had been propped up by Western and Eastern blocs and their influence in allowing these leaders to rise to power should not be understated. In addition, their role in allowing these 10 Mount and Laferriere, The Diplomacy of War: The Case of the Korean War, 13. Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 203-204. 12 Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 64. 11 5 men to rise to positions of power, they inadvertently allowed their defacto protectorates to declare war through misunderstandings based upon a policy of mutual deterrence. The contemporary observer during the Korean War and Soviet expert George F. Keenan notably contested that the outbreak of conflict was regional and had been the direct result of these different but equally headstrong men clashing for power in civil war.13 However, the roots of the conflict are significantly more international in scale than merely influencing the rise of Rhee and Kim in the Korean peninsula. Japan’s involvement and capitulation at the end of the Second World War following decades of imperial rule in Korea made an Allied occupation inevitable. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour which signaled the American entry into the war had assured that allied occupation of Korea and made “postwar isolation” unrealistic for peninsula.14 Both Rhee and Kim had risen to power as both the Western and Eastern blocs drove their political influence into the Korean peninsula. This effectively set the stage for the increasing strategic significance of the region for the international community where a local war was already inevitable. The United States had heavily pursued a policy of attempting to contain the growth of Communism international as the Soviets had dismantled the American monopoly on nuclear weapons by testing their first atomic bomb in September of 1949. This loss of a significant advance, along with the emergent efforts at “accelerating” insurrection in nonCommunist countries in Asia which had been ceded to independent authorities after the Second World War directly prompted a re-evaluation of America’s strategic position and the creation of National Security Council Report 68.15 This document effectively increased military spending and pursued more aggressive practices in the containment of Communism internationally. This Matray, “Civil War of a Sort: The International Origins of the Korean Conflict” 3 Matray, “Civil War of a Sort: The International Origins of the Korean Conflict” 5. 15 Walt W. Rostow, “The Korean War: A Case of Failed Deterrence?” ” in The Korean War in Retrospect, ed. Daniel J. Meador (Boston: University Press of America, 1998) 49-50. 13 14 6 was bolstered by pre-existing attitudes based on conclusions set out by the Long Telegram sent by Keenan to Washington in 1946 after researching the Soviet Union. The telegram utilized “alarmist language” in expressing that the Soviet Union was radically different from the United States and in suggested that in an effort to keep internal American harmony, cautious and objective efforts would have to be made containing Soviet political expansion.16 Americans who sought approaches more cautious than interventionist containment such as isolationist pursuits were quickly attacked by a growing internationalist faction. The isolationists were frequently attacked by American propagandists such as John Flynn who stated that gradualist socialists were preaching isolationism to threaten the American “way of life”.17 Despite a protectionist form of interventionism in nature, there were evident themes of rabid and aggressive antiCommunism due to popular perceptions taking root as Soviet political expansion played out in regions such as North Korea. American strategic and political maneuverings in Korea as a result of would greatly concern the Soviet Union, interpreting it as aggression rather than fierce protectionism. For the Soviet aligned factions, their movements at expanding geo-political influence inadvertently became provocation in the view of the United States. Indeed, they viewed the advantageous addition of emergence of Communist China forming a defacto political union with Communist regimes internationally and the loss of the American atomic monopoly as opportunities to thrive in the early Cold War. They too would view the American strategic thought as offensive tactical provocations rather than strategically defensive investments. The Soviet strategic focus would shift to Asia also a result of the emergence of guerilla warfare throughout Southeast Asia earning the respective Malay, Filipino, Indonesian, and Indochinese Communists praise from Soviet Efstathios T. Fakiolas, “Kennan’s Long Telegram and NSC68: A Comparative Theoretical Analysis” in Eastern European Quarterly 31: 4 (1998), 419. 17 Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 93. 16 7 Second Secretary Andrei Zhdanov.18 Their support of these factions was to also contain the influence of anti-Communist groups in the geo-politics of Asia and create formidable alliances with new Communist regimes such as China. This was evidently a welcome change of pace following the initial phases of the Cold War with the Soviets being disadvantaged due to the failure of the Berlin Blockade and the American nuclear monopoly.19 The reality of their assistance and support for these regimes was ultimately far more limited than what the United States would have anticipated. North Korean rhetoric under Kim had boasted of Soviet liberators and supporting North Korea20 in addition to the increasingly notable strategic maneuverings in Asia. Korea became the focal point of the escalating wariness of the United States and the Soviet Union based on their policies opposing strategic goals. The last American reports from the Central Intelligence Agency prior to the outbreak of war claimed that was a rigidly controlled satellite of the Soviet Union lacking independence and completely reliant on the support of the Soviet Union for political and military survival.21 This presented the Soviet Union and a boisterous empire with a complete disregard for international stability and the balance of power, in keeping with conclusions of the Long Telegram. The inadvertent self-vilification of the Soviet Union however would be perpetrated in large part due to Kim’s tactful respect for Soviet assistance. Much like the United States, their strategic interests were very protectionist as highlighted by their ultimately limited military support of Korea. Notably, Soviet military equipment delivered to North Korea was generally obsolete and with an exception to air power in the form of the advanced MIG-23 fighter airplanes.22 This was hardly the Soviet satellite powerhouse that the United States had feared, and the outbreak of war prompted the swift Rostow, “The Korean War: A Case of Failed Deterrence?” 54-55. Rostow, “The Korean War: A Case of Failed Deterrence?” 54. 20 Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 444. 21 Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 443. 22 Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. 2: 447. 18 19 8 involvement of the international community, with each respective faction having feared the apparent aggression of their similar strategic visions. Stalin would support Kim in the outbreak of war for reasons unclear, but likely due to an attempt at containing Western influence in Japan and bolstering the strength of the new Sino-Soviet alliance. 23 For very similar reasons of selfpreservation, both Eastern and Western factions saw fit to enter into the war in a strong but cautious capacity. The mutually deterrence and containment policies practiced by both factions bolstered the political significance of the steeping conflict in Korea. It would ultimately be Kim-Il Sung with the blessing of his communist counterparts Mao in China and Stalin of the Soviet Union that invaded the Republic of South Korea in the summer of 1950. The joint Allied forces of the United Nations led by the United States would assist the South Koreans, while the Sino-Soviet alliance would assist the North Koreans. The battle lines of the war had been inadvertently drawn years before the first shots were fired. Regional tensions were created in the aftermath of the Second World War with the Soviet and American support of the Kim and Rhee regimes respectively. The concurrent political rhetoric and the wider political strategies of both factions led to interpretations of the aggression in partisan activities taken to contain and deter each other. Effectively, global forces created the regional conflict by inadvertently pitting Rhee and Kim against each other, and thrust the war into an international conflict due to their interpretations of the political significance of Korea and respective strategic motivations. Ultimately, the Korean War was unavoidable in the context of the early Cold War as the international community both caused and escalated the regional conflict to a vicious global war. Alan J. Levine, Stalin’s Last War: Korea and the Approach to World War III (Jefferson: McFarland and Company Inc. Publishers 2005), 40. 23 9 Bibliography Secondary Sources Print 1. Lee Hong Yung review of, ”Syngman Rhee: The Prison Years of a Young Radical” by Chong Sik Lee in The Journal of Asian Studies 61:3 (2002) 1075 2. Michael Hickey, The Korean War: The West Confronts Communism (London: John Murray Publishers Ltd 1999), 3. Young Hoon Kong, “North Korea’s mysterious Kim Il sung,” in Communist Affairs 2:2 (1964) 21-22, 24. 4. Jon Halliday “The North Korean Model: Gaps and Questions” in World Development 9:9 (1981) 890. 5. Bruce Cumings, The Origins of the Korean War 2 vols. (Yuksabipyungsa: Princeton University Press 2002), 2: 295, 203-204, 64, 93, 443-444, 447. 6. James I. Matray, “Civil War of a Sort: The International Origins of the Korean Conflict” in The Korean War in Restrospect, ed. Daniel J. Meador (Boston: University Press of America, 1998) 9, 3, 5. 7. Graeme S. Mount and Andre Laferriere, The Diplomacy of War: The Case of the Korean War, (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 2004) 4, 13, 54-55. 8. Walt W. Rostow, “The Korean War: A Case of Failed Deterrence?” ” in The Korean War in Retrospect, ed. Daniel J. Meador (Boston: University Press of America, 1998) 49-50. 9. Efstathios T. Fakiolas, “Kennan’s Long Telegram and NSC68: A Comparative Theoretical Analysis” in Eastern European Quarterly 31: 4 (1998), 419. 10. Alan J. Levine, Stalin’s Last War: Korea and the Approach to World War III (Jefferson: McFarland and Company Inc. Publishers 2005), 40. 10