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Korean War |
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Korean War![]() US marines in action on the Korean front in 1951. Under the command of General Douglas MacArthur, the United Nations sent troops to aid South Korea during the Korean War. ![]() US troops are shown landing from helicopters during the Korean War of the 1950s. This war, which brought the USA into confrontation with communist North Korea, was the first in which the United Nations took a military role. ![]() Troops of the US 1st Cavalry Division crossing a stream during the Korean War. They are moving into their forward positions on 31 July 1950. The US forces formed the larger part of the United Nations contingent that supported South Korea in the Korean War. They were fighting the armies of communist North Korea and China, who had invaded South Korea five weeks earlier. War from 1950 to 1953 between North Korea (supported by China) and South Korea, aided by the United Nations (the troops were mainly US). North Korean forces invaded South Korea on 25 June 1950, and the Security Council of the United Nations, owing to a walk-out by the USSR, voted to oppose them. The North Koreans held most of the South when US reinforcements arrived in September 1950 and forced their way through to the North Korean border with China. The Chinese retaliated, pushing them back to the original boundary by October 1950; truce negotiations began in 1951, although the war did not end until 1953. The Korean War established that the USA was prepared to intervene militarily to stop the spread of communism. After 1953 the Korean peninsula remained a Cold War battleground. By September 1950, the North Koreans had overrun most of the South, with the United Nations (UN) forces holding a small area, the Pusan perimeter, in the southeast. The course of the war changed after the surprise landing of US troops later the same month at Inchon on South Korea's northwest coast. The troops, led by General Douglas MacArthur, fought their way through North Korea to the Chinese border in little over a month. On 25 October 1950, Chinese troops attacked across the Yalu River, driving the UN forces below the 38th parallel. Truce talks began in July 1951, and the war ended two years later, with the restoration of the original boundary on the 38th parallel. The armistice was signed 27 July 1953 with North Korea, but South Korea did not participate, and a peace treaty did not follow.
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