Read CNN’s Fast Facts about the Korean War. July 27,2017, marks 64 years since the signing of the armistice agreement that ended the fighting.
North Korea wants reunification under communist rule.
Other Facts: The first war in which the United Nations played a role. When asked to send military aid to South Korea,16 countries sent troops and 41 sent equipment or aid. China fought on the side of North Korea, and the Soviet Union sent them military equipment.
The US sent about 90% of the troops that were sent to aid South Korea.
The first war with battles between jet aircraft.
The US spent around $67 billion on the war.
The truce talks lasted two years and 17 days.
The casualty toll had been reported as 54,246 until June 2000, when the Pentagon acknowledged that a clerical error had included deaths outside the Korean War theater in the total.
There are 7,747 American soldiers still unaccounted for from the Korean War as of June 2017.
There has never been a peace treaty, so technically, the Korean War has never ended.
US Troops Statistics: Source: Dept. of Defense US Deaths: Hostile: 33,739 Non-Hostile: 2,835 Total In-Theatre: 36,574 US Wounded in Action — 103,284
Other Casualties by Country (killed and missing): Source: Encyclopedia Britannica South Korea — (217,000 military, 1,000,000 civilian) North Korea — (406,000 military, 600,000 civilian) China — (600,000 military)
Timeline: November 1947 — The United Nations General Assembly approves elections to be held throughout Korea to choose a provisional government for the entire county. The Soviet Union opposes this.
May 10,1948 — The people of South Korea elect a national assembly, setting up the government of the Republic of Korea. The north refuses to take part.
September 9,1948 — North Korean Communists establish the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
June 25,1950 — 135,000 soldiers from the communist North Korean People’s Army (NKPA) cross the 38th parallel and invade Republic of Korea (ROK).
June 25,1950 — The UN Security Council denounces North Korea’s actions and calls for a cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of the NKPA to the 38th parallel.
June 26,1950 — US President Harry S. Truman directs General Douglas MacArthur to evacuate American dependents from Korea and to assist the ROK Army.
June 30,1950 — Truman orders ground troops into action.
July 1950 — In the first month of the war, US soldiers kill significant numbers of Korean civilians under a bridge, near a village called No Gun Ri. It is unclear whether the soldiers were ordered to kill civilians or acted on their own.
July 5,1950 — For the first time since the end of World War II, US troops go into battle, at Osan, 30 miles south of Seoul. The first American casualty of the Korean War dies here, Private Kenneth Shadrick of West Virginia.
June 23,1951 — Jacob Malik, a Soviet delegate to the UN, proposes a cease-fire.
July 10,1951 — Truce talks begin at Kaesong.
October 25,1951 — Truce talks are moved to Panmunjom.
November 27,1951 — Both sides agree the existing battle lines would be the final dividing line between North and South Korea if a truce is reached in 30 days.
April 1952 — Truce talks are deadlocked over voluntary repatriation.
October 8,1952 — Truce talks are adjourned.
April 26,1953 — Truce talks are resumed, and the Communists agree to voluntary repatriation.
July 27,1953 — Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Chinese People’s Volunteers and the UN sign an armistice agreement. The Republic of Korea refuses to sign. However, hostilities cease within 12 hours. Terms of the armistice include creation of the demilitarized zone, the DMZ. Each side is 2,200 yards from a center point. The DMZ is patrolled by both sides at all times.
2007-present — The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency posts news releases online about recently accounted for service members’ remains.