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The Cold War and the Crisis in Korea

What was the Cold War?

The Korean War was fought in the context of the Cold War, a 44-year period of conflict which began in 1947...

Chinese stamp featuring Joseph Stalin and Mao Zedong
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Photograph of President Truman signing proclamation

President Harry Truman was the 33rd President of the United States of America. An artillery officer in WWI, Truman was vice president when the president, Franklin Roosevelt, died suddenly in April 1945. Truman took the decisions to drop two atomic bombs on Japan and, five years later, to take a firm stand against the North Korean invasion of South Korea. Here Truman is shown at his desk at the White House signing the proclamation declaring a national emergency – initiating US involvement in the Korean War. [Source: Wikimedia Commons] ... Enlarge the photo of President Truman

The Cold War was a state of economic, political and military tension between the Unites States of America (USA) and its allies and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and its allies. It ended in 1991 with the disintegration of the USSR.

The USA and the USSR were the two most powerful of the World War Two allies who defeated the Axis powers: Germany, Japan, Italy, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. After the war the two victors could not agree on the makeup of the post-war world. Tension first arose in Europe where their armies faced each other in 1945 after the defeat of Germany. The USSR organised its eastern European conquests into the Eastern Bloc, which by 1955 had a military alliance known as the Warsaw Pact. The USA and its allies formed the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. Over time, the Cold War spread to Asia and Africa and most nations aligned either with the USA or the USSR. Sometimes each bloc was identified by its economic policy and was called either the ‘capitalist western bloc’ or the ‘communist eastern bloc.’ China, which participated in the Korean War, was a member of the eastern bloc. Those nations that did not wish to take sides formed the Non Aligned Movement.

Throughout the Cold War the USSR and the USA were wary of directly confronting one another militarily as both had a well-founded fear that this would escalate into a nuclear war. Instead, wars by proxy occurred. The first one was the Korean War. Proxy wars were characterised by the overlay of domestic friction, such as that between North and South Korea, with the worldwide contest between the USA and the USSR.

Australian Service Medal 1945-1975

The Australian Service Medal 1945–1975 with clasp 'Berlin' was awarded to Royal Australian Air Force personnel for service during the Berlin Airlift. The airlift supplied Berliners with food when the city was cut off by Soviet forces in the first overt act between the USSR and the USA which resulted in the Cold War. [AWM REL31527.001] ... Enlarge the image of the Australian Service Medal

At the end of WWII an agreement was made to temporarily split Korea into two administrations along the 38th parallel, dividing the country into north and south. The two superpowers supported their allies and client states with financial aid, military technology and training. Joseph Stalin, the leader of the USSR, backed Kim Il-Sung, a North Korean communist, while President Truman of the USA backed Syngman Rhee, the anti-communist first president of South Korea.

The USSR provided support to North Korea when it invaded the south. Within days of the 25 June 1950 invasion the USA declared its intent to stand by South Korea. The USA won the support of the United Nations Security Council which condemned the invasion, and endorsed the USA plan to send troops to defend South Korea. Australia was one of the 16 United Nations members who responded by sending land, sea and air forces.