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List of wars involving North Korea

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of wars involving North Korea and its predecessor states.

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Transcription

List

Joseon: 1392–1897

Conflict Joseon dynasty and its allies Opponents Results Monarch of the Joseon Dynasty
Joseon dynasty
Second Tsushima Expedition
(1396)
 Joseon Dynasty Tsushima Province Victory
  • Resulted in yearly tributes by Tsushima.
King Taejong
Third Tsushima Expedition
(1419)
 Joseon Dynasty Tsushima Province Military defeat
Diplomatic victory
[1][2]
  • Korea gave up occupation of Tsushima.[3]
  • Wokuo pirates cease their activities in Joseon [4]
  • Tsushima would be granted trading privileges with Joseon, in exchange for maintaining control and order of pirate threats originating from the island.
King Sejong the Great
Joseon Northern Expedition
(1443)
 Joseon Dynasty Jianzhou Jurchens Victory
  • Led to establishment of present-day northern borders.
King Sejong the Great
Sampo Invasion
(1510)
 Joseon Dynasty Tsushima Province Victory
  • Joseon broke all diplomatic relations with Japan after the incident.
King Jungjong
Imjin War
(1592–1598)
 Joseon Dynasty

Ming dynasty

Azuchi-Momoyama Japan Victory
  • Joseon and Ming victory
King Seonjo
Ming-Manchu War
(1618–1683)
Ming dynasty
 Joseon Dynasty
Kumul Khanate
Turfan Khanate
Manchus Defeat Gwanghaegun
First Manchu invasion of Korea
(1627)
 Joseon Dynasty Later Jin Dynasty Defeat
  • Was spurred by actions of Mao Wenlong, a Ming commander who operated off islands of Korea.
King Injo
Second Manchu invasion of Korea
(1636–1637)
 Joseon Dynasty Qing Dynasty Defeat
  • Brought forth the idea of Punitive North Expedition in Joseon.
King Injo
Sino-Russian border conflicts
(1652–1689)
China
 Joseon Dynasty
Russia
Cossacks
Victory King Hyojong
French campaign against Korea
(1866)
 Joseon Dynasty  France French withdrawal
  • Spurred by Joseon's execution of French Catholic priests on the same year.
Heungseon Daewongun
United States expedition to Korea
(1871)
 Joseon Dynasty  United States American withdrawal
  • Spurred by Joseon's unknown treatment of the American merchant ship General Sherman.
Heungseon Daewongun
Ganghwa Island incident
(1875)
 Joseon Dynasty  Japan Defeat King Gojong
Imo Incident
(1882)
 Joseon Dynasty Korean military dissidents, mostly from the Central Defense Command Victory
  • Spurred by Central Defense Command receiving significantly worse treatment compared to the newly established "Byolkigun".
King Gojong
Gapsin Coup
(1884)
 Joseon Dynasty
Supported by
China
Reformist Faction
Supported by
 Japan
Gapsin Coup overthrown
  • Resulted in Chinese dominance within Korean politics.
King Gojong
Donghak Peasant Revolution
(1894–1895)
 Joseon Dynasty Donghak Peasant's Army Victory King Gojong

Korean Empire: 1897–1910

Conflict Korean Empire and its allies Opponents Results Emperor of Korean Empire
Korean Empire
Korean invasion of Manchuria
(1902)
 Korea  China Victory
  • Korean settlers and soldiers moved into Southern Manchuria as the Qing Dynasty weakened
Emperor Gwangmu
Eulsa Righteous War
(1905)
 Korea  Japan Defeat Emperor Gwangmu
Jeungmi Righteous War
(1907)
 Korea  Japan Defeat
  • Reaction to the forced dissolution of the Korean Imperial Army.
Emperor Yunghui
Great Korean Militia Roundup Campaign
(1909)
 Korea  Japan Defeat
  • Most battles were around the Southern Korea region of Jeolla.
Emperor Yunghui

North Korea: 1948–present

Conflict North Korea and its allies Opponents Results North Korean
losses
Leader of North Korea
Military Civilian
North Korea
Korean War
(1950–1953)
 North Korea
 China
 Soviet Union
 South Korea
United Nations Command
Stalemate
215,000–
350,000
1,550,000
Vlora Incident
(1961-1968)
 Soviet Union
 North Korea[5]
Warsaw Pact
 Albania Defeat
Unknown
Unknown
Simba Rebellion
(1964)
Simba Rebels
Military advisors:
 Cuba
 Tanganyika
 Soviet Union
 China
 North Korea
 Congo-Léopoldville
Combat support:
 Belgium
 United States
Defeat (limited involvement)
  • Rebellion defeated.
Unknown
None
Communist insurgency in Thailand
(1965–1983)
Communist Party of Thailand
Pathet Lao[9][10]

Khmer Rouge (until 1978)[9][10]
Malayan Communist Party
Weapons and advisors
 North Vietnam (until 1976)
 Vietnam (from 1976)
 China
 Soviet Union
 North Korea[9]

 Thailand
 Taiwan (until 1967)
 United States[9]
 Malaysia
Defeat (limited involvement)
  • Defeat of communist insurgency.
Unknown
~120
Vietnam War
(1967–1969)[a]
 North Vietnam
Viet Cong
Laos Pathet Lao
Khmer Rouge
 China
 Soviet Union
 North Korea
 South Vietnam
 United States
 South Korea
 Australia
 New Zealand
 Laos
Cambodia Cambodia
Cambodia Khmer Republic
 Thailand
Victory (in 1975)
None
Korean DMZ Conflict
(1966–1969)
 North Korea  South Korea
 United States
Defeat
  • North Korean failure to instigate an armed insurgency in South Korea
2,871
Unknown
1971 JVP insurrection
(1971)
JVP
 North Korea[12][13]
Supported by:
Ba'athist Iraq ASBPI[14][15]
CCP (Maoist) (alleged)[16]
 Ceylon Defeat
  • Rebel leaders captured and remaining members surrender.
  • Ceylonese government reestablishes control over entire island.
  • Expulsion of North Korean diplomats.
Unknown killed
Several arrested
Unknown
Yom Kippur War
(1973)
 Egypt
 Syria
 Jordan
 Iraq
 Algeria
 Morocco
 Tunisia
 Cuba
 North Korea[17][18]
 Israel Defeat[19]
Ethiopian Civil War
(1974–1991)
Derg (1974–1987)
Ethiopia (1987–1991)
 Cuba
 North Korea
EPRP
TPLF
MEISON (from 1977)
EPDM
EDU
EPLF
Defeat
Unknown
None
Angolan Civil War
(1975–2002)
MPLA
SWAPO
MK
 Cuba (1975–91)
 East Germany (1975–89)
 Soviet Union (1975–89)[23]
 North Korea[24]
EO (1992–95)
UNITA
FNLA
FLEC
 South Africa (1975–89)
 Zaire (1975)[25]
Victory (by 1992)
  • Withdrawal of all foreign forces in 1989
  • Transition towards a multiparty political system in 1991/92
  • Dissolution of the armed forces of FNLA
  • Participation of UNITA and FNLA, as political parties, in the new political system, from 1991/92 onwards, but civil war continues
  • Jonas Savimbi killed in 2002
  • Immediate peace agreement and dissolution of the armed forces of UNITA in 2002
  • Resistance of FLEC continued beyond 2002
Unknown
Unknown
Ugandan Bush War
(1980–1986)
Uganda UNLA
 Tanzania (until 1985)
 North Korea
Uganda NRA Defeat
700
Unknown
1982 Ethiopian–Somali Border War
(1982)
Ethiopia
Puntland SSDF
Supported by:
 Cuba[26]
 South Yemen[26]
 North Korea[26]
 Somalia
Supported by:
 United States[26][27]
Defeat (limited involvement)
Unknown
Unknown
Sri Lankan Civil War
(1983–2009)
Tamil Tigers
Supported by:
 North Korea (from 1997)[28][29]
 Eritrea[30][31][32]
 Sri Lanka
 India
Defeat (limited involvement)
Unknown
Unknown
1987–1989 JVP insurrection
(1987–1989)
JVP

Support:
 Soviet Union[33][b]
 North Korea[34]
 Cuba[35]
PLOTE (until 1988)[36][37]
 Iraq[38]

 Sri Lanka
 India
Military support for Sri Lanka:
 Israel[39]
 Pakistan[39]
 South Africa
 United Kingdom
 United States
Defeat (limited involvement)
  • Emergency conditions in South-western and Central provinces lifted.
  • Insurgency declined following the fall of the Eastern bloc.
Unknown
Unknown
United States invasion of Panama
(1989–1990)
 Panama

Supported by:
 Cuba[40]
 Soviet Union[40]
 Nicaragua[40]
 Libya[40]
 North Korea[40]

 United States
 Panamanian Opposition
Defeat (limited involvement)
Unknown
Unknown
Yemeni Civil War
(1994)
South Yemen
Supported by:
 Saudi Arabia[41]: 82 
 Iraq[41]: 82 
 Libya[41]: 82 
 North Korea[41]: 82 [42]
North Yemen
Jihadists[43]
Supported by:
 United States[44]
 Egypt[42]
Defeat (limited involvement)
2 killed in action
4 captured and executed by Jihadist
Unknown
Battle of Amami-Ōshima
(2001)
 North Korea  Japan Defeat
  • North Korean naval trawler sunk[45]
15[46]
1 naval trawler sunk[47]
None
2006 Lebanon War  Hezbollah
Amal Movement
Lebanese Communist Party
PFLP-GC
 Lebanon
Supported by:
 North Korea
 Iran
 Syria
 Israel Stalemate (limited involvement)
  • Ceasefire through UNSC Resolution 1701.
  • Introduction of the Lebanese Army and the reinforcement of UNIFIL in South Lebanon.
Unknown
Unknown
First Libyan Civil War
(2011)
 Libya
 Belarus
 Zimbabwe
Foreign mercenaries[48][49][50][51][52]
Minor border clashes:
Darfur rebels[53]

Weapons and advisors:
 North Korea[54]
 Algeria[55]
 Cuba[56]
 Venezuela[57]
 China (until 12 September)[58][59]
 Russia (until 1 September)[58]
 Mozambique

Anti-Gaddafi forces
 Qatar
Enforcing UNSC Resolution 1973:

 NATO

Other countries:
 Sweden
 Jordan[60]
 United Arab Emirates[61]
 Lebanon
 Saudi Arabia[62][63]
Minor border clashes:
 Tunisia
Arms suppliers:
 Egypt
 Moldova[64]
  Switzerland[65]
 Morocco
Other support:
 Botswana
 Peru
 Ethiopia

Defeat (limited involvement)
Unknown
Unknown
Yemeni Civil War
(2015–present)
Supreme Political Council Hadi government

Saudi-led coalition
 Saudi Arabia[81]
 United Arab Emirates[82]
 Senegal[83]
 Sudan[84][85]
 Morocco[86]
 Qatar[84] (2015–17)[87]
Academi security contractors[88][89][90][91]

Under 1,000 troops:

United States Green Berets[92][93]
France French Army Special Forces Command[94][95][96]
Al-Qaeda[97][98][99]
Academi


Southern Transitional Council (from 2017)[104]
Tareq Saleh forces (from 2017)[105][106]


Ansar al-Sharia


Islamic State ISIL-YP[111][112]

Ongoing
Unknown
Unknown
2023 Israel–Hamas war
(2023–present)
 Hamas
Supported by:
 Israel
Supported by:
Ongoing
  • North Korea sends weapons to Iranian proxy groups.
Unknown
Unknown

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ "The Veritable Records of King Sejong". Retrieved 20 January 2021. 左議政朴訔啓: "左軍節制使朴實 對馬島敗軍時所(護)〔獲〕 漢人 宋官童等十一名, 備知我師見敗之狀, 不可解送中國, 以見我國之弱。Left State Councilor Bak Eun advised, "Eleven Chinese people including Song Guantong, who were freed when Bak Sil, commander of the Left Army, was defeated in Tsushima Island, know much about the situation in which our troops were defeated. [They] should not be sent to China under escort, because that would reveal our country's weakness [to China]."
  2. ^ "The Veritable Records of King Sejong". esillok.history.go.kr. Retrieved 18 July 2021. 仇里安曰: "本島之屬於慶尙道, 己之所不知, 戒道豈能獨知乎? 必是妄言也。 … 對馬島, 日本邊境。攻對馬島, 是攻本國也 Kyūrian said, "I did not know about our island's subordination to Gyeongsang Province. How could [Shin] Kaidō alone have known? This surely was reckless talk. … Tsushima is on the Japanese frontier, thus an attack on Tsushima is an attack on Japan.
  3. ^ "朝鮮世宗實錄4卷1年7月9日" Annals of King Sejong Vol.4 July 9 [1]
  4. ^ Seoh, M.S. (1969). "A Brief Documentary Survey of Japanese Pirate Activities in Korea in the 13 th—15 th Centuries". Journal of Korean Studies (1969-1971). 1 (1): 23–39. ISSN 0022-2127. JSTOR 23849476.
  5. ^ Hotham, Oliver (2019-08-15). "Comrades disunited: North Korea and the Soviet-Albanian split". NK News - North Korea News. Retrieved 2023-02-10.
  6. ^ Low, Alfred D. (1976). The Sino-Soviet dispute : an analysis of the polemics. Rutherford, New Jersey: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 0-8386-1479-5. OCLC 2225938.
  7. ^ says, yp Xhixh (2022-02-14). ""Shqiptarët tentuan t'i merrnin të 12 nëndetëset!" Zbardhet dokumenti sekret i arkivave sovjetike: Si dështoi plani që baza t'i kalonte Traktatit të Varshavës". Gazeta Tema. Retrieved 2022-12-21.
  8. ^ "Zbulohet plani i Rusisë për pushtimin e Shqipërisë" (in Albanian). Retrieved 2023-02-08.
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  10. ^ a b "Anatomy of a Counterinsurgency Victory" (PDF). January 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 March 2018. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
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  12. ^ "The story of a North Korea-backed rebellion in Sri Lanka – NK News – North Korea News". 10 October 2017.
  13. ^ "North Korea's role in Sri Lanka". 12 March 2014.
  14. ^ History of the JVP (People's Liberation Front - Sri Lanka): 1965-1994 (First ed.). Battaramulla: Niyamuwa Publiacations. 2014. ISBN 978-955-8696-39-2.
  15. ^ Sri Lanka the years of Terror. p. 59
  16. ^ "Unknown". divaina.com.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ Smith, Terence (1973-10-18). "Hundreds of Tanks Clash in a Struggle for Suez Area". The New York Times. "North Korea has decided to give military assistance to Egypt and Syria, its press agency [...] said today."
  18. ^ Smith, Hedrick (1973-10-19). "Flow of Soviet Jews Is Undimished". The New York Times. "[...] Premier Kim Il Sung of North Korea had met with the Egyptian and Syrian ambassadors in Pyonyang to inform them of his Government's decision 'to give material assistance including military aid to Syria and Egypt.' [...] [This] lends credence to the [US] Defence Department's report that North Korean pilots were flying missions for Cairo."
  19. ^ References:
  20. ^ a b Nicolle, David & Cooper, Tom: Arab MiG-19 and MiG-21 units in combat.
  21. ^ a b Aloni, Shlomo: Arab–Israeli Air Wars, 1947–82.
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  26. ^ a b c d "The History Guy: Ethiopia-Somalia Wars and Conflicts".
  27. ^ "Somalia SOMALIA'S DIFFICULT DECADE, 1980–90 – Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics, Political System". www.workmall.com.
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  34. ^ "TheSundayNews: Protesters shot dead at Indo-Lanka opposition". Archived from the original on 2020-10-09. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
  35. ^ Our times great Fidel, අපේ කාලයේ ආදර්ශය ෆිදෙල්. Niyamuva Publications. p. 1. ISBN 9789558696200
  36. ^ Gunaratna, (1993) p. 133
  37. ^ Sri Lanka: The Years Terror. p. 141.
  38. ^ Gunaratna, Rohan (1990), p. 22
  39. ^ a b Indian Intervention in Sri Lanka: Role of Indian Agencies. p. 23.
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  44. ^ Embassy of Yemen – Yemeni-American relations Archived 2015-07-09 at the Wayback Machine, "[In mid-nineties...] Washington demonstrated favorable intentions concerning Yemen. That became evident when the U.S. fully supported the Yemeni unity against the failed Separatist attempt in the summer of 1994."
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  70. ^ See:
  71. ^ See:
  72. ^ "North Korea's Balancing Act in the Persian Gulf". The Huffington Post. 17 August 2015. Archived from the original on 17 August 2015. Retrieved 17 August 2015. North Korea's military support for Houthi rebels in Yemen is the latest manifestation of its support for anti-American forces.
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