Opinion: Provocations on the Korean Peninsula

preview_player
Показать описание
Heritage Foundation senior research fellow and former CIA deputy division chief Bruce Klingner on whether the recent eruption of violence between North and South Korea could escalate into a more serious conflict. Photo credit: Getty Images.

Subscribe to the WSJ channel here:

Visit the WSJ channel for more video:
More from the Wall Street Journal:

Follow WSJ on Facebook:

More from the Wall Street Journal:

Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Korea has lain. History is being rewritten selfishly.
Female prostitution was legitimate occupation during the Second World War.
Korean poor parents were selling their daughter to Korean's trafficker.
Korea was Japan then and they agreed under the protection of a law as Japanese.
It isn't a colony. School was made with Japanese money as a Japanese country and a lesson was given. Little girl buying and selling was prohibited and modal protection in those days was given. I told agricultural technique and made food production increase. Most of the people was the slave class by a slave system in Korea. It's Japan that that was freed.
The population of the Korea increased in double by divine protection of those Japanese investment, aid and community systems development, and the life expectancy also developed on leaps and bounds.

sophy