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Reducing Tensions: The View From Moscow
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17541 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1990 |
1,841 Words |
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Vladimir I. Ivanov Vladimir I. Ivanov is the head of the Pacific Region Studies
Department of the Institute for World Economic and
International Relations (IMMEMO), part of the USSR Academy of
Sciences. |
In less than five years, changes within the Soviet Union helped to alter the international climate to such an extent that many analysts compare it to the end of World War II. Nevertheless, the superpowers' new post-Cold War rhetoric, mentality, and behavior have not eased tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
The Korean War is still remembered not only by those who survived the hostilities and by the divided families but also by the governments of the North and the South, as well as by all of the nations around Korea. In Northeast Asia, the division of Korea became a constant source of tension. For the United States and the Soviet Union, it is probably one of the few potentially explosive problems they cannot effectively control by themselves. For the two Korean sides, it has always been grounds for political, military, and emotional confrontation. Mutual distrust, suspicion, and bitterness on both sides have risen to such levels that any comparison of the Korean and the German states simply does not work.
The conflict in Korea is damaging for the security, political, and long-term economic interests of the Soviet Union, both in the Asia-Pacific region and in relations with the United States. It still puts at risk the relations between all major powers of the Asia-Pacific region, including China, Japan, the United States, and the Soviet Union.
All four major states appear to be interested in lessening tensions with certain accommodations between North and South. Among them, the Soviet Union has occupied a rather unique position since 1988, when close diplomatic, economic, and political relations with the Democratic People's Republic of
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