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The Cold War Was The Korean War

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President Richard Nixon once famously remarked, “The Cold War isn’t thawing; it is burning with a deadly heat. Communism isn’t sleeping; it is, as always, plotting, scheming, working, fighting.” If there is only one statement that captures the raw tension and scale of the Cold War, it is this. In fact, the real heat of the Cold War was often felt in Asia, rather than Europe or America itself. Real conflict broke out in Asia during this tense period of American history, such as in the correlated but separate spheres of Korea and Vietnam, but there was also diplomacy that took place, such as in China. To begin, the first major event that took place in the Asian sphere of the Cold War was the Korean War. It is interesting to note that, as History.com (2009) states, the invasion of the southern Republic of Korea by the northern Democratic People’s Republic of Korea was the first military operation of the Cold War. The Korean War was largely a battle between two ideologies, backed by two superpowers; the United States and the Soviet Union, which promoted democracy and communism, respectively. American forces were mostly concerned about containing the spread of communism within the region, partially for practical reasons, such as allies, and partially for a show of force against communism. This quote accurately represents the ideology at play in the situation, from an American perspective,
By the end of the summer [of 1950], President Truman and General Douglas MacArthur

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