CONTENTS
Foreword = ⅲ
Preface = ⅵ
Contents = ⅶ
Figure and Tables = ⅸ
Contributors = ⅹ
Part Ⅰ. Causes and Process of the Korean War = 1
A Review on The Causes of Korean War in the Light of New Documents / Soh, Jin-chul = 3
Ⅰ. Foreword = 3
Ⅱ. Who 'Initiated' the Korean War? = 4
Ⅲ. Why Did the Communists Invade South Korea after China? = 8
Ⅳ. Why Did the Communists Chose 'June 25, 1950'? = 19
Ⅴ. Why Did Nosaka Sanjo and Party Leaders Flee to Beijing? = 24
Ⅵ. Conclusion = 29
The United States, the Korean Intervention of June 1950, and the Role of the United Nations in the War That Followed / William W. Stueck = 31
Chinese Intervention and "Communist Bloc" Cooperation in the Korean War / Jian Chen = 51
Ⅰ = 52
Ⅱ = 59
Ⅲ = 63
Ⅳ = 65
Ⅴ = 74
Ⅵ = 79
Part Ⅱ. Retrospect and Lessons of the Korean War = 83
Conducting the Korean War and Its Lessons / Ohn, Chang-Il = 85
Ⅰ. South Korean Peace versus North Korean Peace Gesture = 85
Ⅱ. The Fightings : Defense, Counteroffensive, and Stalemate = 91
Ⅲ. There Was A Substitute for Victory = 100
Ⅳ. Lessons Reflected = 108
The Korean Armistice Talks : Divergent Negotiating Strategies? / James I. Matray = 111
Part Ⅲ. Ways to Overcome Legacies of the Korean War = 137
Searching for Ways to Overcome Differences of Both Koreas' Ideological and Regime Characteristics / Vadim Tkachenko = 139
Ⅰ. Security and Sovereignty = 141
Ⅱ. Phenomenon of stability in the North = 148
Ⅲ. Coexistence, Rapprochement, Unification = 152
Ⅳ. Conclusion = 157
Searching for Ways to Overcome Differences of Economic Systems in Two Koreas / Shigemura Toshimitsu = 161
Ⅰ. A Perspective on North Korea = 161
Ⅱ. Charaterstics of North Korean Political Economy = 166
Ⅲ. Opening up without reform = 167
Ⅳ. Kim Dae-jung's Sunshine Policy = 169
Ⅴ. South and North Korea Summit = 171
Values and Social Integration in Korea and Germany, before and after Re-Unification : Searching for Ways to Recover Homogeneity of the Korean People / Heiner Meulemann = 173
Ⅰ. Values in South Korea and West Germany before unification = 175
Ⅱ. Value developments in Germany after unification = 187
Ⅲ. Heterogeneity and the prospects of homogenization = 196
Part Ⅳ. Beyond the Armistice Regime on the Korean Peninsula = 203
Both Koreas' Policies to Build a Peace Regime on the Korean Peninsula / Yu, Suk-ryul = 205
Ⅰ. INTRODUCTION = 205
Ⅱ. BOTH KOREA'S ATTITUDES TOWARD THE PEACE REGIME = 206
Ⅲ. NORTH KOREA'S POLICY FOR BUILDING A PEACE REGIME ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA = 208
Ⅳ. SOUTH KOREA'S POLICY FOR BUILDING A PEACE REGIME ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA = 215
Ⅴ. INTER-KOREAN DIALOGUES AND EXCHANGES = 221
Ⅵ. CONCLUSION = 226
The Roles of U.S. and Japan in Constructing a Peace Regime on the Korean Peninsula / Scott Snyder = 229
Ⅰ. U.S. and Japanese Roles in Moving Beyond the Armistice = 231
Ⅱ. The Challenge of the Historical Legacy : U.S. and Japanese Roles in Overcoming Latent Historical Rivalries in East Asia = 233
Ⅲ. Countering Potential Conflicts of the Future : How to Prevent U.S.-China Confrontation = 235
Ⅳ. Conclusion = 238
The Roles of China and Russia in Constructing a Peace Regime on the Korean Peninsula / Chu, Shu-long = 241
Ⅰ. The Chinese Role = 241
Ⅱ. The Russian Role = 255
Appendix = 263
Keynote Speech(Delivered on April 27, 2000) / Park,Tae-joon[Prime Minister of R.O.K] = 265
Luncheon Speech(Delivered on April 28, 2000) / Ban, Ki-moon[Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade, R.O.K] = 267
Dinner Speech(Delivered on April 28, 2000) / Cho, Seong-tae[Minister of Defense, R.O.K.] = 271