History, asked by Ratan95, 1 year ago

what is bipolarism ? briefly explain it's impact on the war of north korea?

Answers

Answered by thakursaransh
1
impact of north korea conflict
The Korean conflict is based on the division between the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in the north and the Republic of Korea in the south, both of which claim to be the government of the entire peninsula. During the Cold War, North Korea was backed by the Soviet UnionChina, and other communist states, and South Korea was backed by the United States and its allies. The division of Korea occurred at the end of World War II in 1945, and tensions erupted into the Korean War in 1950. When the war ended, the country was devastated, but the division remained. North and South Korea continued a military standoff with periodic clashes. The cold civil war survived the collapse of the Eastern Bloc of 1989 to 1991

bipolarism



thakursaransh: plz.... mark it as brainliest answer
Answered by AadilPradhan
1

Bipolar disorder is a treatable disease followed by extreme changes in mood, thought, energy, and behavior. Bipolar disorder is also known as manic depression because a person’s mood can alternate between the “poles”—mania (highs) and depression (lows). The change in mood can last for hours, days, weeks, or months.  

Theories of the cold war that stress the imperatives of the American domestic politico-economic system or the requirements of bipolarity are undermined by the argument that  the Korean war strongly influenced international history and indeed brought about most  of the characteristics which we associate with the cold war. Without Korea, U.S. policy  would have been very different, and there were no events on the horizon which could have  been functional substitutes for the war. The international or the American domestic  system may have "needed" high defense budgets, the globalization of American commitments, and the militarization of NATO, but these patterns arose only in the wake of  Korea. To explain the cold war in terms of such requirements is therefore inadequate.

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