Politics of the Korean War
The politics of the Korean War involves the U.S. Policy of Containment, Jockeying for Political Advantages, United Nations Security Council, Initial Goals, and First Military Conflict of the "Cold War." In the next few pages, you will learn about all of these topics.
Implications
Implications I can draw as each as a dynamic of the process leading to war is that the U.S. policy of containment was probably a law that the U.S. enforced that helped contain nations. I can draw that jockeying for political advantages is about the struggles that the leaders of all the nations went through. I think this is probably how the Korean War grew tension. For the United Nations Security Council, I can draw that it was a council that was lead by the United Nations. It was probably a type of council that helped make decisions about whether to go to war or not. I think the initial goals is about what all the intentions that all the nations wanted to achieve from the beginning of the Korean War. I think these goals was the start of how the nations were in the verge to do anything they can to achieve their goal. I think the first military conflict of the Cold War was a conflict that caused the Korean War and it was how the Cold War was initiated.