metchelle
contestada

Which of the following reasons best explains the division of the Korean peninsula after WWII as shown?
A. The Chinese communist government had moved their troops to the 38th parallel in Korea during the war and taken control of the northern part of the country.

B. The defeat of Japan led to the division with a Soviet backed communist government in the north and a U.S. backed democratic government the south.

C. The South Koreans had fought on behalf of the Allies during WWII while the North Koreans had fought on behalf of the Axis powers.

D. The United Nations Charter of 1945 called for the division of the country into a democratic North and a communist South

Which of the following reasons best explains the division of the Korean peninsula after WWII as shown A The Chinese communist government had moved their troops class=

Respuesta :

A. The Chinese communist government had moved their troops to the 38th parallel in Korea during the war and taken control of the northern part of the country

The war caused a lot of pushing up and down the frontline. First the North Korean troops came to control almost the entire peninsula as it pushed down, when Seoul failed to repel the attack they continued to gain terrain. However when United Nation troops under command of Mc Arthur decided to counterattack , they approached the Yalu River , a natural border with China. To surprise of the Occidental armies, on October 1950, a huge amount of  Chinese divisions crossed the Yalu and entered the war.  With these upheavals of fortune, Seoul switched hands four times.

When the conflict ended in 1953, the armistice was held on the 38th parallel that still today represents a region of tension and militar surveillance from both sides.


The correct answer is B. The defeat of Japan led to the division with a Soviet backed communist government in the north and a U.S. backed democratic government the south.

At the suggestion of US General Douglas MacArthur, in October 1943 the heads of state of the United States and the USSR met in Moscow and agreed that the USSR would declare war on Japan once the war in Germany had ended. This decision was supported by the belief that the Japanese Empire was more vulnerable in the north, in Manchuria and Korea, than in the south, in the Philippines, where it was winning the battles.

On August 8, 1945, two days after the atomic bombing of Japan in Hiroshima by the US, the USSR declared war on Japan and the next day attacked the Korean peninsula in the north. This decision alarmed the United States, that after the atomic bombings on Japan, thus ensuring the early Japanese surrender, were no longer interested in the entry of the Soviet Union into the war. One day after the second atomic bombing of Japan in Nagasaki on August 10, 1945, the United States sends troops to Busan, south of the Korean peninsula. Korea, on the other hand, counted on a guerrilla of communist ideology that faced Japan and supported the measures of the USSR. The American troops were also well received at their landing in Busan, to the south.

On August 10, when preparing the general surrender of Japan, the Operations Division of the US Department of War chose the 38th parallel as the boundary of the country's defense. On August 15 the surrender was published. Joseph Stalin, in a climate of growing tension between the United States and the Soviet Union, ordered his troops to stop north of the 38th parallel, while US troops were stationed south of it at the same time. Stalin admitted the surrender of Japan and said nothing about the division of Korea. The Americans took this act as an acceptance of the division.