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The Cultural Cold War in Korea, 1945–1950
2003
Journal of Asian Studies
By definition, the cold war was understood on both sides of the conflict to be a global struggle that stopped short of direct military engagement between the superpowers (the U.S. and the USSR). In Europe, the putative center ofthat struggle, the geopolitical battle lines were fixed after the early 1950s, or they at least could not be altered by normal military means without provoking World War III—which would result in mutual annihilation. Therefore, each side hoped to make gains over the
doi:10.2307/3096136
fatcat:7mcyk6hnfjbllcugtorjl22i5e