Idk if North Vietnam had the same diplomatic relations. Was South Vietnam considered a seceded sovereign state at the Paris Peace accords?

  • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    DPRK economic and political development was superior to the ROK which was a cutthroat military dictatorship that was committing massacres left and right. The two Koreas were very distinct.

    It’s only until the illegal dissolution of the USSR that the DPRK struggled as the US waged a genocidal war on anyone connected to the soviets. The Korean extermination by starvation plan failed so the US pumped a bunch of investment into occupied Korea via the neoliberal transition. This coincided with Bush’s axis of evil speech and so NK became the designated enemy.

    I’ve noticed a lot more people saying “Korea” when they mean the ROK which speaks to the success of the West’s propaganda blitz. In the US, the Korean war is nicknamed “The forgotten war” even though it was more destructive than WWII.

    • reaper_cushions [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      That’s not entirely accurate, although the general sentiment is correct. The RoK was able to develop a moderate industrial capacity during the reign of Park Chung-hee, which played a fundamental role in the rise of the RoK to being a local power. And while American investment certainly did not hurt, the industrial policies of the Park era were genuinely cleverly implemented as far as capitalist development goes. That, of course, does not contradict that the DPRK enjoyed far greater development and wealth (especially since it was more equitably distributed) than its sister state, but the RoK was not quite the basket case you make it out to be.

      But yeah, most of the DPRK’s modern problems stem from the economic isolation following the dissolution of the USSR and the triple whammy of floods and droughts in the late nineties paired with the Bush admin’s torpedoing of the sunshine policy. The multipolar world that the US and its goons are forcing into existence, however, seems to be opening up trade opportunities for the DPRK with the BRICS-aligned countries at least.