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Korean Demilitarised Zone
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The Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) is a 250-kilometer-long and 4-kilometer-wide buffer zone established in 1953 to separate North and South Korea under the Korean Armistice Agreement. The DMZ is heavily militarized, with both sides maintaining large numbers of troops and military personnel along its borders. The zone intersects the 38th parallel north, which was the original border between North and South Korea, and is home to the Joint Security Area, where negotiations between the two nations take place. Despite the armistice agreement, there have been numerous incidents and casualties along the DMZ, with over 500 South Korean, 50 American, and 250 North Korean soldiers killed between 1953 and 1999.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.Russian Foreign Policy
- 2.Russia-Ukraine War
- 3.Chinese Foreign Policy
- 4.Ukrainian Politics
- 5.Russia-North Korea Relations
- 6.North-South Korea Conflict
- 7.South Korea Foreign Policy
- 8.North Korea Nuclear Posture
countries
- 1.China
- 2.Israel
- 3.United Arab Emirates
- 4.India
- 5.Iran, Islamic Republic of
- 6.Japan
- 7.Korea, Democratic People's Republic of
- 8.Viet Nam
- 9.Uzbekistan
- 10.United States
- 11.Ukraine
- 12.Thailand
organizations
- 1.Hamas
- 2.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 3.Workers Party
- 4.Democratic Party
- 5.Health Effects Institute
- 6.Far Eastern Federal University
- 7.Ewha University
- 8.Planet Labs
- 9.Maxar Technologies Inc
- 10.Council on Foreign Relations
- 11.Center for Strategic and International Studies
- 12.Amnesty International
persons
- 1.Benjamin Netanyahu
- 2.Edward Howell
- 3.Dmytro Kuleba
- 4.Denis Manturov
- 5.Ian McKellen
- 6.George Ducker
- 7.Fumio Kishida
- 8.Rachel Minyoung Lee
- 9.Mark Rutte
- 10.Lim Eun-Jung
- 11.Chris Godfrey
- 12.Choe Son Hui