How Would United Korea Actually Work?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024
  • Will There Ever Be A United Korea?
    It's estimated that a United Korea would have the military might of the UK and Japan combined, pull in a GDP of around 5 trillion dollars, and hold the position of the world's 10th largest economy. They would be insanely strong, but for unification to be real, a lot of chess pieces would have to fall into place. And in this video, I'll be telling you what they exactly are.

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @andrewelie8687
    @andrewelie8687 11 месяцев назад +385

    I lived in (West) Germany in 1981 as a high school exchange student. At that time, the only ones, who truly believed in a German reunification were either those old enough to remember a time before the division and those, who lost assets in the east.
    I visited the country repeatedly throughout the 1980's: 1984, 1985, 1987 and 1989. In January 1989 I could feel "something different" in the air. At that time I worked for Lufthansa, the German airline. In late 1988, its leadership and that of Interflug, the East German airline met secretly in Dresden, and, agreed to various forms of cooperation, including year-round flights from Leipzig to various West German cities.

    • @porkchop7605
      @porkchop7605 11 месяцев назад +7

      160 likes no comments? lets fix that

    • @PleaseBanMePlease
      @PleaseBanMePlease 11 месяцев назад +2

      Nice pun lol.

    • @BrakeCoach
      @BrakeCoach 6 месяцев назад +3

      Yep. Its not the matter of who wants reunification or not, it can all be so sudden.

    • @dernochjungenoergler
      @dernochjungenoergler 14 дней назад

      the German reunification is still pending

  • @sammylee3690
    @sammylee3690 Год назад +781

    I would love there to be a united Korea. Unfortunately I think the political headwinds against it are far too great.

    • @wyattcole5452
      @wyattcole5452 Год назад +42

      There could’ve been a United Korea, but America intervened

    • @SuperCatacata
      @SuperCatacata Год назад +116

      ​​@@wyattcole5452Yeah, I'm sure the south wishes they were as "well off" as the north after China intervened. 😊

    • @xingchen9807
      @xingchen9807 Год назад +14

      ​@@SuperCatacata实际上,在美国制裁朝鲜之前,朝鲜的确比韩国GDP要高很多。

    • @kexusun3107
      @kexusun3107 Год назад +12

      yeah, you are right, people in both South and North Korea can not make decisions by themselves. @@SuperCatacata

    • @Modfet
      @Modfet Год назад +66

      @@xingchen9807 I'm glad that South Korean didn't have Tiananmem Square Incident like.. china!!

  • @sehyunkim2416
    @sehyunkim2416 11 месяцев назад +364

    One correction: the compulsory draft wil most definitely go on, probably for decades or a century, even after unification. If the United Korea's military became voluntary, the military will be dominated by Northern Koreans, as becoming a soldier would be the easiest and fastest way of gaining wealth and economic stability for the average Northern Korean. This would be a very dangerous trend, as the national identity of Northern and Souther Koreans are very different and most likely continue to be even after a couple generations, and be a potential threat.

    • @nexp6995
      @nexp6995 11 месяцев назад +21

      Very insightful, haven't even thought of it that way.

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад +8

      The problem is that most North and South Koreans might not want to be drafted. Conscription is not popular. After all, conscription in Germany was eventually suspended because they could fill the (smaller) German armed forces with volunteers. Ways to address the issue might be to limit the size of the united Korean forces, forbid them from having any biological, chemcial or nuclear weapons and leave a small force of US forces (no more than 20,000, say) in southern Korea until their presence was no longer required.

    • @DeyaViews
      @DeyaViews 11 месяцев назад +2

      I think the draft will also go on, but for different reasons: if they are intended to be neutral between the USA/Japan and China/Russia, they can't rely too much on military support of one against the other. They will share their only land borders with China and Russia, two incredibly militarily powerful states. I don't think they would make any overt moves like (further) militarizing their northern border, but not eliminating the draft would be subtle and effective enough to at least keep up some of their military strength as a small safety measure.

    • @ruffgook
      @ruffgook 11 месяцев назад +6

      no. conscription will exist because of geopolitics involving china and russia

    • @mxn1948
      @mxn1948 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ruffgook that by default means you think a united korea will not be neutral. since according to you, it views russia/china as a threat but not japan/us. as such a united korea will not come into being in the first place.

  • @Phantom-mg5cg
    @Phantom-mg5cg 11 месяцев назад +108

    I would like to see Korea reunited, but I think, even if the formal reunification happened today, it would take at least about half a century to become truly one nation. In Germany the differences between East and West are still very present, even though Germany is now reunited for over 30 years and the differences were by far not as big as they are in Korea.

    • @jsn14
      @jsn14 10 месяцев назад

      as a south korean i dont. this would be disaster. if we ever become unified, there will be huge war which involves China, US, Korea, possible Japan, Taiwan, Russia would take sides as well.

  • @ploopy0935
    @ploopy0935 Год назад +319

    I feel so bad for Korea as a whole country throughout history. They seem like they just wanted to do their own thing but kept getting colonized. Then, BOOM just as the world was about to become more progressive and peaceful they are forever spilt in two due to issues caused by those taking advantage of them and can’t reach their full potential now.

    • @loks117
      @loks117 Год назад

      i dont feel bad at all especially when i see many south korean arrogancy and insult toward our ethnicity and nationality (chinese). they should divided forever.

    • @------------------_
      @------------------_ Год назад +30

      Thx, as a korean I sometimes feel we have one of the worst histories possible

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Год назад

      u dont know mongolia. it has even more sh,itty history. split into 3 parts , 2 economically viable lands going to russia , 1 populous land going to china while mongolia exist underpopulated barren wasteland solely existing as buffer state while china f,ucks up their economy. @@------------------_

    • @Azusashusband
      @Azusashusband Год назад +31

      I mean if it helps they were actually only colonized once they were invaded a lot though and defended themselves until the modern era

    • @Azusashusband
      @Azusashusband Год назад

      @------------------_ definitely not true. Korea has 2 things going for it. Long lasting eras of peace (400 years for Goryeo) (500 for Joseon) *but* it was wayyyy too peaceful causing corruption and a slow descent into poordoom. You can kinda see it in the US right now. Its so peaceful and people are essentially just fighting each other. Its second thing is no matter what those damn koreans WILL survive like cockroaches (in a good way). Getting overrun by the Yan? How about coming back in multiples of Three. Getting nearly conquered by the Tang? How about realizing you hate the Tang more than each other and repelling them. The Mongols? Only ever succeeded in vassalization and that was after 8 whole invasions. 80 years later guess who pulled away? Japan? Got beat up by one guy. Oh they came back... oh... now its divided into 2 and one of them is notorious for its hermitness and the other has a lot of money.
      To be honest Korea actually has had a relatively peaceful history and IMO the worst enemy of the Koreans weren't the Chinese or the Japanese... but each other. (Being split apart over and over, rampant corruption)

  • @MissDatherinePierce
    @MissDatherinePierce 11 месяцев назад +35

    The social reunification is truly the greatest challenge. I was born after the fall of the Berlin wall and have a parent from either side. Germany was divided for 40 years and even now 34 years many older people still think in East-West-Dynamics. My father once said that when he was my age he thought it would take the same time they were split to grow back together. Now we have nearly reached this time and I honestly think it will be another one to two generations. And unlike North Koreans, most East Germans had a way to access West German TV etc. There was always a form of contact and a way to get information from the outside. If North and South Korea ever reunificate, they will face all these challenges by a thousand fold.

  • @uriels4097
    @uriels4097 Год назад +328

    I talked about that with some korean friends and some of them don't seems to be interrest about an unification, they just see the North as "poor and uneducated" people but also because they will have to spend a ton of money to modernize infractructures, educations, industries,.. After that they will probably have to build camp for the most "fanatic" communist who don't want to be part of a capitalist Korea

    • @suzerain_k
      @suzerain_k Год назад +89

      It's the attitude towards the people that count the most. West and East Germans felt equal to each other, likewise South and North Vietnam, which made it easier to unify. It's just that about 50 years have passed since the division and generations have come and go. Most North Koreans remain humble, while most South Koreans as they grew to be rich, they became more arrogant towards other asians. If Unification happened, current generation of North Koreans will suffer the most to discrimination and slavery-like treatment by the society and Chaebols. It will take decades after unification to have a semblance of unity in Korea.

    • @profile1172
      @profile1172 Год назад

      those korean friends of yours are dumb majority koreans still see reunification as the only way

    • @profile1172
      @profile1172 Год назад +34

      @@suzerain_k literally west and east germans have a difference. lack of this knowledge makes your opinion worthless

    • @sejanus855
      @sejanus855 Год назад +36

      ​@@profile1172
      They have a difference but not a nearly as big one as North and South Korea. Especially because family contacts in the East and West still were allowed. As well as the exchange of goods and information. People in the east knew that they lived much worse lives, that's one of the reasons they started to pressure the government for change. And the People in the whole of modern Germany still felt as one people. It simply isn't the same. We make jokes about the east being underdeveloped and that nobody wants to go there while the East makes their jokes as well but which idiot really still feels as if this is true? Almost no one. If you want to move to the east then just go, you'd probably catch more shit from your friends if you as a person from Munich would want to move to Berlin lmao. Or if anyone from beautiful cities would say they'd move to Frankfurt. But even then who would actually care, it's all just jokes and slight biases, which exist in countries which weren't even split as well

    • @speedy01247
      @speedy01247 Год назад +17

      ​@@profile1172yeah the East Germans are actually somewhat annoyed by the fact that it was not so much a unification of east and west but more the West annexing the east, removing everything the east did regardless of if it was good or bad. (Yeah the East was an authoritarian regime, but there were positive aspects of it as well)
      Note most probably don't care but some do, that's what I mean not that every east German feels angry just that there is a population who does care.

  • @s9ka972
    @s9ka972 Год назад +70

    1945-1950 A period that saw rise of many countries divided and problems persist to this day .
    South Korea - North Korea
    India- Pakistan
    Israel --Palestine

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Год назад

      Merica and Ruyia messed up the world 🌎

    • @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music
      @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music Год назад +8

      A period known as decolonization.

    • @Benjamin_ireland
      @Benjamin_ireland Год назад +9

      Don’t forget the divide of East, and west Germany. If anything, I think north and South Korea is the east and west Germany of this generation.

    • @thecultofcaged
      @thecultofcaged Год назад

      Except for the fact that India and Israel are completely fabricated countries that were created by colonialism
      No wonder there are splits
      Heck it's surprising that India did not break up even more than it did only Bangladesh and Pakistan broke away
      Old inda before colonialism was made up of tons of small kingdoms

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 Год назад

      It’s because of the Cold War

  • @EmilyS-gk3st
    @EmilyS-gk3st Год назад +252

    It's amazing to realize that the oldest generation there may still remember a Korea before they divided.
    The Korean War happened in 1950.
    My parents were born in the 1960s.
    My grandparents were born early enough that they would've been kids during the Korean war. Some who are still alive of my grandparents' generation, if well taken care of, may have even been teenagers at that time.
    It must have taken some pretty intense brainwashing to convince those og North Koreans that there is nothing for them on the outside. But once those borders closed, whoever was very young children or born after that time wouldn't have known any different.

    • @TheAlrightyOne
      @TheAlrightyOne Год назад +45

      It might have been easier than you think. After the partition in 1945, both Koreas were dictatorships. However, while the North was a stable Soviet puppet run by a moderately popular dictator who had fought against the Japanese in WWII (Kim Il-Sung), the South was a dumpster fire. The Southern government was riddled with corruption. Most Koreans who served the Japanese in the South kept their jobs. The Southern dictator, I Seung-man, was extremely unpopular. There were tons of uprisings, and hundreds of thousands of Koreans were executed by the I Seung-man government. Most of the anti-Communist independence activists who had fled South ended up being assassinated by I Seung-man to ensure his grip on power. The economy was in the toilet.
      Closing off the North from the South in the 1940s and 1950s left the original North Koreans with the impression that the South was a corrupt dictatorship with universal poverty and a government that was barely more than a colonial administration for the United States. Until the 1970s, North Korea had a stronger economy.
      By the time the first dictator, I Seung-man, was overthrown in 1960, and the second dictator, Park Chung-hee, oversaw the South Korean economic miracle, North Korea was already closed off from the world. Although South Korea democratized in the 1980s and is highly developed and successful today, the image of South Korea as one of the worst places on Earth remains in the average North Korean's view of the world. Of course, nowadays this view is obtained via intense brainwashing, but for the original generation, it was more 50/50 brainwashing and reality.

    • @apollothefirst
      @apollothefirst Год назад +2

      My grandpa was born in Busan a few years before the end of the Japanese Occupation, same with my grandma in Daegu

    • @StekTM1
      @StekTM1 Год назад

      The US literally destroyed the entire country during the war. I'm pretty sure the people were very aware of what was outside.

    • @mimorisenpai8540
      @mimorisenpai8540 11 месяцев назад

      @@TheAlrightyOne well Kim I'll sung doing same with his fellow politicians, many communist thinker who fled to North got purged and in reality many of them fled to south

    • @mimorisenpai8540
      @mimorisenpai8540 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@TheAlrightyOne North Korea stronger economy mostly thanks to Soviet support

  • @raymonddodo
    @raymonddodo Год назад +312

    It has to be united. Thinking of half Korea has done till nowadays and imagine the United Korea can achieve for this world. Massive change. Technology, culture, art, music, science, construction, etc. Each every countries in the world must support them to be one.

    • @loks117
      @loks117 Год назад

      not going to happen. who going to rule united corea? no body know. kim jong un clearly dont want to gave on his power

    • @xumengyuan
      @xumengyuan Год назад +5

      Wat?

    • @ant647448336
      @ant647448336 Год назад

      China and Russia don't want the US and the West on their doorstep, which is why they tolerate the North.

    • @Toomanian
      @Toomanian Год назад

      I doubt adding North Korea would add much to what the South can achieve. 25 million half starving peasants with no useful skills that are going to be difficult to integrate won't add much

    • @koreanBaseballNerd
      @koreanBaseballNerd Год назад

      None of the south korean allies (japan, usa) and none of the north korean allies (china, russia) wants it to happen, and those ‘allies’ happen to be the most powerful countries in the world. If the world suddenly takes a turn and these power mongering countries start taking ethical decisions, unification might become a reality

  • @kimmyjohnny31
    @kimmyjohnny31 4 месяца назад +7

    Too many comments saying ‘the culture is too different between them.’ Seriously? Both are ethnically Korean, both use different words for Korea in their name (NK using Joseon), both speak the same language, and share the same history. It’s like saying Americans in the deep south are too culturally different to not be Americans due to the regional differences in the north. My ROKN grandfather who is now 89 still wants to go to Pyongyang to try the cold noodles there.

    • @Fluxwux
      @Fluxwux 3 месяца назад

      I think people are referring to that the culture of North Korea is like a massive cult indoctrinating and isolating you since the day you’re born, in classic socialist fashion erasing tons of traditional Korean culture and is also a weird Time Capsule stuck in the Cold War era that makes South Koreans seem like aliens from the future.
      NK is FAR more oppressive, totalitarian, isolated, lacking behind technologically and cult like compared to East Germany for example which also got to reunite much quicker and before society reached the modern IT-age - while many people also remembered what life was before the wall was built and thus easier to reconnect. Sparing them from too much cultural differences with West Germany. But even for Germany there has been big cultural and economic divisions between East and West still visible today - so take those problems in Germany and multiply them by a thousand, then you get Korean unification.

    • @rockboy360
      @rockboy360 7 дней назад

      You're completely ignoring the brainwashing and cultural isolation the North has had over almost 8 decades.
      They know nothing about the outside world but propaganda.
      They don't know any music, movies, tv, fashion, internet, social media, brands, businesses, nothing from the outside

  • @ArchOfWinter
    @ArchOfWinter Год назад +56

    Pseudo-unification would be better. A mini-European Union style government where both North and South retain powers within their won region. Slowly open up the boarders for visits, but not permanent relocations aside from the few elderlies with direct family ties. With global trade moving away from China, North Korea can easily snatch up deals with foreign companies to manufacture products with the help of the South. While the two militaries should scale back, it wouldn't be a bad idea to keep a shorten draft period and have service members train and serve together during the service time. There should be a NATO style command integration, but no need to fully unify the militaries. The Kim family can be converted to a dynasty, make them into royalties with symbolic powers which holds the North together while the transition takes place. If the Kim dynasty proof to be culturally and economically viable to keep, they can be turned into something like the British royals and make them into a tourism industry.
    The sense of a unified culture will grow if it is slowly nurtured over a century, just as how they were split in the past seventy years. Pushing it quickly would only get backlashed in both North and South.

    • @SOGONGDONG
      @SOGONGDONG Год назад

      I don't think the North Koreans would want the genocidal regime existing, even if they were to have no power at all

    • @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music
      @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music Год назад +12

      Some good ideas here, and some crazy ones.

    • @kssxssk
      @kssxssk Год назад

      From a South Korean perspective, the Kim dynasty has no historical significance. Rather, they are treated as war criminals who started the Korean War. Anyone who was educated and raised in the South would actively oppose the idea of spending taxpayer money on such a thing.

    • @Ruby-qf4dc
      @Ruby-qf4dc Год назад +7

      Unless China or Russia are willing to provide political guarantees to the Kims, reunification will never be complete. At least for now, China, Russia and North Korea have no desire to unify the two Koreas, and Japan does not want that to happen.

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 Год назад +4

      Good ideas, but that would require the US to leave both Japan and South Korea for that to ever happen

  • @mya_xo
    @mya_xo Год назад +59

    in a perfect world, you could say it could be possible, I mean whether northern or southern, these people are Korean after all. but honestly, I think the north and south are completely different worlds and it’s been like that for over 70 years, reunification is far out of reach for now atleast :(

    • @tomaip
      @tomaip Год назад

      @karaqakkzl lmao. Look in the mirror for Southeast Asian things. They don't know how to see Korean racism.

    • @thepunisher2988
      @thepunisher2988 11 месяцев назад

      That isn't necessarily a bad thing.

    • @priersackh
      @priersackh 11 месяцев назад

      ​@karaqakkzlagree, it is socially impossible. The south never really recognize the north as Korean. They only recognize themselves as Korean

  • @PrograError
    @PrograError Год назад +66

    IMO the only way it could work, is for the DPRK to level up. it would mean the region has to endure several more decades of the same old sabre rattling BS and threat of nukes and falling space bound vehicle cladding while over flying northern japan. at least if DPRK could level up to the point of 80's china after they opened up, at least we might have a chance...
    Germany was relatively on parity pre fall anyways, even with the huge burden...

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Год назад +19

      There is an idea that one way to destroy the North Korean regime would be to make the North Korean people prosperous. When the people reach a certain level of development and wealth they will overthrow the dictator because they will realize how terrible the Kim regime is. People who are completely destitute don't have it within their means to revolt. They are too busy trying to find food and not starve to death.

    • @Vapor817
      @Vapor817 Год назад +17

      @@Novusod that's probably why north korea stays poor

    • @sword_of_sanghelios
      @sword_of_sanghelios Год назад +7

      @@Novusod ccp china still exits for a reason then north korea would become new china

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Год назад

      Hehe😁

    • @Scere
      @Scere Год назад

      No. The way for it to happen is for the US to leave

  • @Cuyt24
    @Cuyt24 Год назад +52

    I thought about it like this, the South governs the North. It will be one country but two policies, and it will reunite in 30 years. South Koreans can move North, but North Koreans can't move south unless they have a specialized degree. Or to work in factorties or farm labor. South Korea already relies on migrant labor as South Korean youth are not interested is low skill jobs. SK builds up the North, brings them to the 21st century, a lot can be done in 30 years. And finally reunite when the North's economy is advanced and modernized as the South. South Korea when to a third world worn torn country to one of the richest counties in the world in 50 years.

    • @loks117
      @loks117 Год назад

      not possible, kim jong un will never abbadon his power. it have to be lead by kim jong un or dead.

    • @NoahSONG
      @NoahSONG 11 месяцев назад +2

      it will be a disaster, should've swallow the pain in the beginning, HK is also a disaster for both end, now big parts of the ppl hate each other (remember in the beginning they dont, N and S Korea are already hate each other), and I bet China is not going to choose this way any more. on the other hand, look how well Germany is doing.

    • @aira4739
      @aira4739 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@NoahSONGit is all because of UK brainwashing HKer, look at Macau

  • @Tobi-ln9xr
    @Tobi-ln9xr Год назад +13

    11:15 Not even "in the 60s“
    Up until the late 80s, the people didn’t believe in German reunification. Only when the people of East Germany started to rise up and the East German officials stopped to react, did the West German officials send the so-called "Kohl 10 points plan“ which ultimately paved the way for an economic union between West and East Germany and the German reunification.

  • @weisscreme
    @weisscreme Год назад +30

    All the logistics of Korea is conducted by planes and ships. In case of United Korea, we could easily import and exports goods by train, which reduces prices drastically, especially foods and resources. I think it will increase price competitiveness of products made by Korea companies, and it will affect positively to Korean economy.

    • @kacangajaib1563
      @kacangajaib1563 11 месяцев назад +4

      Hmm u trust logistic from China side?

    • @weisscreme
      @weisscreme 11 месяцев назад

      @@kacangajaib1563 I don't believe China, but I believe Russians

    • @rusticcloud3325
      @rusticcloud3325 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@kacangajaib1563 Why not

    • @tranquoccuong890-its-orge
      @tranquoccuong890-its-orge 11 месяцев назад

      trains and ships break even in mass goods transport weight load
      planes are either passenger transport or time-sensitive specialty goods

    • @Nabrolo
      @Nabrolo 11 месяцев назад

      China won't let Korea integrate into their system like that without concessions of removing American military hardware. Not sure if the Korean government would accept that.

  • @TheLukasDirector
    @TheLukasDirector 11 месяцев назад +3

    Great content and production value for such a small channel, you'll definitely get there!

  • @Nathan_Morgan_
    @Nathan_Morgan_ Год назад +22

    "Korean unification would be almost impossible"
    The olympic games :

    • @kenseitakesi4521
      @kenseitakesi4521 Год назад +2

      I'm funny how? I mean, funny like I'm a clown? I amuse you? I make you laugh? - united korea olympic team

    • @Nathan_Morgan_
      @Nathan_Morgan_ Год назад +1

      @@kenseitakesi4521 I'm sorry, is that sarcasm ?

    • @kenseitakesi4521
      @kenseitakesi4521 Год назад +2

      @@Nathan_Morgan_ yes it was

    • @Nathan_Morgan_
      @Nathan_Morgan_ Год назад +3

      @@kenseitakesi4521 Aight, sorry for asking. i didn't get the joke.

    • @forsociopoliticalstuff2629
      @forsociopoliticalstuff2629 Год назад

      A lot easier for an Olympic team to work together for the events than it would be for two countries like north and South Korea to unify properly.

  • @ven7165
    @ven7165 Год назад +45

    This is really good animation and sound design. I like the work you people (or is it one person? Thatd be impressive) do.
    Anyway, reunification very very unlikely. Many problems to solve.
    And reunification expensive. Its one half trying to bring up the other without losing anything.

  • @msptv6247
    @msptv6247 Год назад +37

    Union of Korea isn't impossible... but will take too long. Maybe I'd never see that happen in my lifetime.

  • @eva1das103
    @eva1das103 Год назад +85

    east germany still suffers to this day. it would be worse

    • @rafflesiaandfriends
      @rafflesiaandfriends Год назад +14

      That's more of a product of capitalism, the ones that get a head start often smother the ones behind them. I'm not sure the history why Germany chose capitalism over communism but they must have had a reason.

    • @sword_of_sanghelios
      @sword_of_sanghelios Год назад +1

      you are right

    • @ducki
      @ducki Год назад

      ​@@rafflesiaandfriends socialist east Germany shot children who tried to escape and cross the berlin wall

    • @onlyagermanguy
      @onlyagermanguy Год назад +3

      @@rafflesiaandfriends Communism tried a Revolution in Germany after ww1 and failed. What is that Question, when you mean modern Day Germany? West Germany (BRD) has a social Market Economiy (Rheinisch Capitalism) with a Parlementary Republic as it was the area Ocupited by France, Britain and the USA . East Germany (DDR) was a One Party Dictorship with a Planned Economiy. In 1989 when the Wall fell the BRD (Federal Republic Germany)annexed the DDR(German Democratic Republic). So no new State was formed. You are right the West had head start over the east but only because the East was held fown by Communism and a Dictorship the west prospered under Capitalism. Germany put massive amounts of Money into the East but the absulte Destruction of Culture, Religion, Aechitecture, Wealth and Industrie by the Soviets can't just be repaired

    • @strategicperson95
      @strategicperson95 Год назад

      ​@@rafflesiaandfriends oh yes the typical response and ignoring the real problem that hut East Germany before the wall fell.
      Communism stagnated the economy. Communism would have fallen in the 1960s if the USA wasn't keeping the USSR alive like giving it grain during their faminies.
      The irony is Communist nations still exist because Capitalist ones keep doing business with them. Without that extra cash influx and buisness knowhow from Capitalist investors, Communist regimes would have collapsed as quickly as they appeared.
      The USSR wouldn't have exisited under Lenin if we didn't give them food relief. Which Lenin abused.
      God damn Commies don't understand economics. But then again your still running with an idea still stuck in the 1800s mindset, of course you wouldn't understand.

  • @OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions
    @OpinionesDeJACCsOpinions Год назад +14

    I feel the best solution to unification is basically a reversed Hong Kong. Slowly integrating it into the rest of the Republic of Korea as an autonomous area with some international personality; this way some of the worse aspects of unification can be either avoided or at least mitigated somewhat.
    The biggest problem I see with my solution is it could definitely exacerbate the discrimination Northerns could face in such a scenario. Because, it would require having a different citizenship like Hong-Kongers have in the People's Republic of China. In some ways it's almost colonial, but the point would be to slowly build a democratic society and increase the living standards without directly affecting the rest of the Republic of Korea.
    I based some aspects of my idea on how the EU primes non-members to be able to join it later down the line. Plus, seeing that even Germany has had difficulty reuniting its east even though East Germany was a LOT more economically viable than North Korea is! Anyway, it'll take decades but the EU expansion has shown good results for the most part. The biggest difference being that the Republic of Korea is a unitary state so eventually the North would lose its autonomous status as it becomes ever more integrated as just another part of the Republic of Korea; unless Seoul decides to allow it keep some autonomy as times goes.🤔🤷‍♂️

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Год назад

      It'll definitely be a gargantuan task no matter how one looks at it! East Germany is probably the best example that South Korea has to their conundrum of trying to unify with North Korea.

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад

      The problem is that East Germany basically collapsed overnight once the borders opened in 1989 so any thought of a gradual reunification of Germany (as was envisaged at first) had to be quickly abandoned and I can see that happening in North Korea in that the fall of the North Korean regime could lead to an avalanche of refugees south, not to mention the nightmare of securing North Korea's biological, chemical and nuclear arsenal so that they didn't fall into the wrong hands. East Germany never had any such weapons so that was not a factor in Germany.

  • @jokerofmorocco
    @jokerofmorocco Год назад +37

    I think in order for Korea to be united, they'd have to be separated like having a "One Country, Two Systems" like what China and Hong Kong was supposed to be and have two separate federal governments and there would be restrictions in migration (otherwise every North Korean would flock to the South). While they'd share a common defense, foreign policy and internationally be seen as one country.

    • @dathunderman4
      @dathunderman4 Год назад +2

      Lol so basically nothing changes

    • @jokerofmorocco
      @jokerofmorocco Год назад +11

      @@dathunderman4 Actually a lot would change. North and South Korea today have no economic relations with each other and are closed off from each other. If North and South Korea would have a federal government like I mentioned. South Korea would benefit would resources from the North and cheap labor while North Korea would benefit from economic development. Samsung would be able to easily dominate the phone industry with using cheap North Korean labor

    • @MewDenise
      @MewDenise 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah and that for sure is going great... not

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад +6

      It doesn't always work like that. Many Germans in 1989 thought that German reunification would happen over several years, stage by stage, but the collapse of the East German economy once the borders were reopened meant that a rapid reunification became necessary. I could see the North Korean economy imploding like that once the Kim regime was gone.

    • @chriswelch9328
      @chriswelch9328 11 месяцев назад

      Or 1 leader, 2 sovereign countries. But this leader would have to be unified to Russia and the U.S.
      Kim also had his brother assassinated, if I recall. So there shouldn’t be a successor after Kim. It’s going to take an outside force to get rid of him, quite violently without question. Something not even their police force would be able to stop.
      Which would require a unification between Russia and the U.S.

  • @winstonzhou4595
    @winstonzhou4595 Год назад +74

    but the thing with these unifications is that you can't just sum everything up: sometimes stuff from both countries work great together and stats skyrocket, and other aspects don't do well and the results won't be as impressive as if you just add everything together.

    • @winstonzhou4595
      @winstonzhou4595 Год назад +3

      oh, and to anyone saying that north korea will united the peninsula, that's just not gonna happen.

  • @DarkshadowXD63
    @DarkshadowXD63 Год назад +8

    I think its far to late for unification. South Korea has advanced so far ahead of the North that unification would be a hindrance more than a benefit. Unlike East and West Germany where the idea for unification never died. I forsee Korea always being two separate countries even if the Kim regime is toppled.

  • @minTwin
    @minTwin 11 месяцев назад +1

    There are some points I definitely agree with and disagree with regarding this topic, but I appreciate you making content about this subject.

  • @edvinmester5228
    @edvinmester5228 10 месяцев назад +2

    Even though I have nothing to do with Asia in general, or Korea in particular I feel like this would be one of the best things that can happen in this century! It would make me extremely happy to see one nation united after so many years, thanks to the cold War games of big players!

  • @rayhem
    @rayhem 10 месяцев назад +1

    every day, koreans who remember the time before the war, people who were seperated from their siblings and children and friends, pass away from old age. and will never get to have the chance to see the country reunited again. so heartbreaking.

  • @BrandonUveges
    @BrandonUveges 11 месяцев назад +3

    The only way Korea ever unites is if the US finally acknowledges the damage it caused as a result of its policies from 1945 to today, ends economic sanctions and leaves the peninsula.

  • @saber2802
    @saber2802 Год назад +7

    I think the best way to reunite the pair would be to harken to shared cultural ties and heritage

  • @raroreren
    @raroreren 10 месяцев назад +3

    i hope i get to see united korea in my life time

  • @user-jc62a7v28
    @user-jc62a7v28 Год назад +14

    단기적으로 보면 힘들지만 장기적으로는 좋다

  • @SundayTalksYT
    @SundayTalksYT Год назад +11

    Nice video! Love the editing and very informative. Keep it up! -YeetLogic

  • @NguyenTran-mf9gj
    @NguyenTran-mf9gj Год назад +16

    Sad that the people who share the same history, speak the same language and also being the same ethnic have to live in division due to foreign interests 😔

    • @user-pporigi
      @user-pporigi Год назад +5

      Yeah, unfortunately the neighboring countries that are responsible want to continue to keep the two Koreas separate.

    • @jhonklan3794
      @jhonklan3794 11 месяцев назад +2

      It was not "foreign" interests. The South Koreans didn't want to live under dictatorial communism. It was Korean interest to be free.

  • @joshuaychung
    @joshuaychung Год назад +3

    So the demilitarized zone is not around the 38th parallel. The line, as you can see, is not straight because it is the cease fire / military demarcation line that was drawn when the cease fire was announced at the end of Korean War, which is still going technically.

  • @josetheclassicstarwarsfan8514
    @josetheclassicstarwarsfan8514 Год назад +19

    One day, Korea will unify!

  • @EroUsagiSama
    @EroUsagiSama 11 месяцев назад +2

    Why does this video assumes that Korea can only reunify as a US colony? The country could absolutely unite as a free and independent nation.

  • @philipyie5494
    @philipyie5494 Год назад +120

    As Korean, I really wish that united Korea to become real.

    • @tae-whankim9821
      @tae-whankim9821 Год назад +1

      @@metal_fusion That would be up to them

    • @philipyie5494
      @philipyie5494 Год назад +2

      @metal_fusion Its chinese problem. So its their job to handle that case. China claims that Taiwan is also their territory, but I do not think so. Currently they also have 2 chinese goverments like Korea.

    • @Nanderld
      @Nanderld Год назад +1

      꿈깨자 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @philipyie5494
      @philipyie5494 Год назад +6

      @@Nanderld 도움안되면 가만히나 있자

    • @eugene6463
      @eugene6463 Год назад

      fuck no I don't 😂 just 25 millions of homeless and that's it

  • @goonerdoy
    @goonerdoy 11 месяцев назад

    Good vid bro!

  • @conanedogawa2998
    @conanedogawa2998 11 месяцев назад +8

    It’s hard to imagine a unified Korea since its already about 75 years since separation. But i would love to see North Korea to open up to the world, to be able to explore, and be free from their borders.

    • @EroUsagiSama
      @EroUsagiSama 11 месяцев назад

      North Korea is open to the world, it's the world that closed itself from North Korea through a series of sanctions. They can lift those sanctions any time, if they want to, the ball isn't in the hands of Koreans.

  • @samuelgibson780
    @samuelgibson780 11 месяцев назад

    Very informative stuff! Thanks.

  • @waedidmyhandlechange
    @waedidmyhandlechange Год назад +7

    You would have to undo decades of animosity and brainwashing fostered by both sides. I'd imagine that would be a nightmare.

  • @topper1958
    @topper1958 Год назад +10

    Reunification would spark a humanitarian crisis that would pale the reunification of Germany. Millions of starving people racing to the south would overwhelmed the south.

    • @youngsong2254
      @youngsong2254 Год назад

      Yes, at the beginning of their arrival. But, they would work very hard and united Korea would soon become to one of richest countries

    • @thecommentatorofreallynoth9966
      @thecommentatorofreallynoth9966 2 месяца назад

      ​@@youngsong2254 I'm not so sure. The one thing North Korea has is housing and fairly dense cities and a robust heavy industry. They probably will need border control, and other administration.

  • @thedemonlord8685
    @thedemonlord8685 10 месяцев назад +1

    Assuming it was a south korea that won...

  • @0080ff
    @0080ff Год назад +27

    I think chance of being unified is pretty grim. With the current state of South Korean population going into unprecedented low, S. Korea will no longer have economic power to support one of the poorest country in the world while trying to maintain stuff in South Korea.

    • @davidyang5187
      @davidyang5187 11 месяцев назад

      One important thing to note is that SK's population being so low means they lack cheap labor. NK will provide that with many young men/women willing to work for minimum wage just like the current foreign nationals in SK. There is a reason why government is drastically increasing the number of visas given to foreigners from poor country and even trying to come up with ways to give them path to citizenship

    • @0080ff
      @0080ff 10 месяцев назад

      @@davidyang5187 That is a fair point. I don't deny that they will "eventually" provide south a bricklayer workforce, but that will take many decades before they are fully merge into SK. And SK's current younger generation will provide that bridge. So surely, immigrants can provide some bricklayer works, but they are not permanent. and I don't think SK is mature and sufficient enough to embrace multicultural community yet.

  • @TaiwanN0-1
    @TaiwanN0-1 11 месяцев назад +1

    For some scenarios of unification in canny version, Korean government should restrict public access into Northern provinces around 15 to 20 years for stabilizing and building infastructures, and investments to make those regions capable for producing GDP, then slowly merge with southern provinces.

  • @April2058
    @April2058 Год назад +74

    Reunification must happen. A United Korea would certainly be a game changer on the world stage. However the uncertainty and what process would lead to a United Korea is a real unknown

    • @IcanseeeverythingwhatyouDohere
      @IcanseeeverythingwhatyouDohere Год назад +9

      Never gonna happen Kim Jong Un doenst like a normal regular life as a korean citizen lol

    • @danhtran6401
      @danhtran6401 Год назад +6

      Yeah ..not going to happen...Kim will not hand over his kingdom to the Democrats. They got too many hair cut styles and k pop is too sexy to handle....

    • @cipimari123yt
      @cipimari123yt Год назад +7

      I would support a United Korea under South Korean Control But not under North Korean Control

    • @IcanseeeverythingwhatyouDohere
      @IcanseeeverythingwhatyouDohere Год назад +1

      @@cipimari123yt never gonna happen man

    • @joshuabonilla3491
      @joshuabonilla3491 Год назад

      @@cipimari123ytKim has nukes if the north ever fell he would just nuke the south.

  • @wojtekpolska1013
    @wojtekpolska1013 11 месяцев назад +2

    honestly the only real way i could see a reunification happen, is if one day a new ruler who was put in power would decide to care about the people they rule over. but thats not gonna happen, all people from the kim dynasty grow up with the idea that they are the most important person in the country, and nobody else matters. why would they consider giving that up just so their subjects could have a better life

  • @poil8351
    @poil8351 Год назад +5

    eventually yes who knows how or what it will look like but i suspect it will happen suddenly and unexpectedly and be very rapid how ever it unfolds.

    • @asea1203
      @asea1203 Год назад

      That's usually how global events happen. They defy all predictions. That's why I also think it'll happen one day without any precursor

  • @TM-li7bl
    @TM-li7bl 10 месяцев назад +2

    China and Japan would not want this for obvious reason.
    It would be good for America too, I think.

    • @kalimacho1
      @kalimacho1 2 месяца назад

      China=want a buffer state
      Japan=Doesn't want strong united Korea

  • @youngsong2254
    @youngsong2254 Год назад +21

    I have been waiting for the unification of Korea. So I could move my father's grave to his home town where his parents, grand and great parents are in North. I was born in 1948 in a town near Pyoung-Yang and our family came to South when I was about one year old. My mother was born in Pyoung-Yang and went middle and high school in South. During the summer vacation, she enjoyed her time with friends, parents and relatives in Pyoung-Yang.
    103 years old when she passed away. Her dream was visiting her parents graves in North.
    It was sad that her dream never came.

    • @fckhaw1189
      @fckhaw1189 11 месяцев назад

      The reunification of Korea Peninsula will eventually happen but it will be North Korea reunifies South Korea, just like North Vietnam reunified with South Vietnam. China and Russia will not accept South Korea to reunify North Korea under South Korean rules. The reason is exactly the same as Ukraine for Russia. US military bases in South Korea are threatening both China and Russia.

  • @Sparticulous
    @Sparticulous Год назад +17

    South korea should certainly keep the norths nukes. That would provide tremendous leverage in diplomacy with enemies and allies

    • @tmartin34
      @tmartin34 Год назад

      I dont think so , nukes are very expensive to maintain and in case of South build up everything in north (that would be very costly) they simply would have money for nukes

    • @Sparticulous
      @Sparticulous Год назад

      @@tmartin34 noone needs to know whether they are actually maintained in working order. Just that they exist and might be usuable. Look at russia, i doubt most of their nuclear missiles are operational

    • @papastalin6816
      @papastalin6816 Год назад

      ​@@tmartin34 those nukes would be worth the cost to stem invasion from china and russia.

    • @stevens1041
      @stevens1041 Год назад +9

      Honestly, South Koreans could build better nukes rather than use substandard NK ones.

    • @Sparticulous
      @Sparticulous Год назад +1

      @@stevens1041 one thing about capitalism is you do what is cheaper and easier. Not better. Having the idea that you own nuclear weapons is better even if they barely function. If nuclear weapons get used, no nations stockpiles truly matter except usa, china, and russia

  • @grimreaper1430
    @grimreaper1430 Год назад +6

    “IT’S NOT GONNA HAPPEN!”
    Unless, even if, there’s a coup
    it still won’t happen.
    At best, southern colonial ruling.
    Geopolitically, China and Russia will
    not let it happen.
    Financially, it wouldn’t make sense
    for s.Korea.
    Culturally, both sides are so far apart
    in lifestyles.
    After 70 plus years of going in
    opposite directions, in every aspect,
    it would be like putting the Arabs and
    the Jews together and asking them to
    live on.

  • @voEovove
    @voEovove 11 месяцев назад +18

    From my Polish perspective, South Koreans are quite fortunate to have such an opportunity. With declining birthrates plaguing developed countries, you possess an entire nation composed entirely of brotherly people, with the same language and culture, that could help you elevate all of Korea and bring prosperity to all via unification. I hope that the current defacto demilitarization of Korea (transfer of both South Korea's and North Korea's stockpiles of munnitions and weapons aborad due to the war in Ukraine) is a solid stepping stone in the right direction. Trzymam za was kciuki.

    • @TheNobleFive
      @TheNobleFive 11 месяцев назад +1

      The cultures aren't similar.

    • @eloq7080
      @eloq7080 11 месяцев назад +4

      70years apart in modern history makes our culture very different from the north. The north is most likely to be stuck with old traditions, where in the south with accessable information to the world has changed so much. Heck, even South Korea 10 years ago is about 80% different to the current cultural norms because of the pace of development.

    • @voEovove
      @voEovove 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@eloq7080
      My country was partitioned for 123 years by 3 different empires, during which, Polish culture and language were suppressed. However, as you said, perhaps such a unification would be more troublesome in modern times.

    • @unquietthoughts
      @unquietthoughts 9 месяцев назад +1

      Something I fear about the reunification is the Korean version of widać zabory

    • @NswerfromMixxtopia-ei4pd
      @NswerfromMixxtopia-ei4pd 8 месяцев назад

      @@TheNobleFive Unless your talking about religion no. the cultures are the same

  • @jiyuhong5853
    @jiyuhong5853 Год назад +3

    We would first have to reach a true ceasfire instead of the current existing "temporary" ceasefire

  • @coffeecoupon9969
    @coffeecoupon9969 Год назад

    OMG 09:55 Company Commander about 10 years ago. good to see you again LoL

  • @Honsu_Takahashi
    @Honsu_Takahashi Год назад +3

    South korea is real because the flag is older than north korea

  • @scottttym
    @scottttym 11 месяцев назад +1

    You completely skipped over the fact that NK was a far better place to live until about 1985... That's a lot of history to skip over.

  • @slyninja4444
    @slyninja4444 Год назад +34

    Honestly, reunification would probably end up taking the form of a "One Country Two Systems" policy.
    That way the North would be able to build itself up without sucking too many resources away from the south. While also preserving a buffer with China.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Год назад +5

      The North couldn’t build itself up, though, without investment from the massive economy of the South- in order to build the infrastructure and power grid needed to develop to the South Korean standard
      I’m thinking most of that money, if not all, would come from private investment by South Korean Chaebol corporations like LG, Daewoo, Hanjin, Samsung, etc

    • @ytn00b3
      @ytn00b3 Год назад +1

      Probably not, most Koreans rejects two system approach. There's Unification ministry within S.Korea, they want gradual unification process but this too probably won't happen as Koreans can easily adopt.

  • @KevinRAAMAAAGE
    @KevinRAAMAAAGE Год назад +1

    The DMZ is like the wall of Jericho and it needs to come down

  • @fearenhyde8943
    @fearenhyde8943 Год назад +18

    The fact that some south Koreans discriminate agaisnt refugees from the north pisses me the hell off.

    • @DPRK24
      @DPRK24 Год назад +11

      They should at least be thankful that they accepted North Korean defectors, friend.😅

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Год назад

      South needs more kids. Increase childcare and education. Fix businesses. More cheap rent. Ban robots. 😆

    • @caiolima-l8f
      @caiolima-l8f Год назад

      ​@@DPRK24no

    • @user-wzzang
      @user-wzzang Год назад

      It's a rift.

  • @michaelwenk2234
    @michaelwenk2234 Год назад

    48th parallel, not 58th. Excellent video!

  • @rufustrukhin3894
    @rufustrukhin3894 Год назад +46

    The unification scenarios presented are flawed at best and miss the point. What the video describes is a list of preferred unification scenarios, not the realistic ones. Take for example the idea of Kim dynasty ending abruptly and a power struggle ensuing. The result of a such scenario wouldn't be a collapse of the North but instead a Chinese invasion of the North as CCP will never allow it to fall. A puppet regime will be installed and things will return to status-quo.
    Take another scenario - current leader or future leader feels that their popularity and support among general populous and general staff is falling dangerously low to the point where coup-d'etat is a possibility. They know from numerous examples, the most recent being Russia, that a war is always the quickest path to restoring once reputation. And with this in mind they declare war on the South and as a result completely occupy the peninsula as Japan lacks both the ability and will to influence the outcome and US is too slow and far away for a rapid response.
    The video fails to address the possibility of a Northern unification as it is deemed to no be able to - "...competently absorb the South's gigantic economic social and political structure" - missing the fact that the North would prioritize unification over economical gains and any preservation of sociopolitical structures. In the same vein the video fails to take in account and seriously consider actions of the global powers such as China occupying the North or US blocking Southern unification attempts in order to preserve the balance of power in the region.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Год назад

      if the DPRK collepse that way (Power struggle), I think it'd be like the Warsaw pact's self invasion. the USFK will just "stand" at the side dumbfounded, and can't do much. the only thing is the aggressive backchannels to ensure DPRK nuke safety.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Год назад +6

      There is no way the North would ever have the ability to occupy South Korea
      South Korea is far, far too advanced militarily and technologically for the North to ever try this again, as they did at the beginning of the Korean War… Even though the US is militarily allied with the South, they would not need us
      South Korea is every bit as developed as the US or a European country… The population is also way too large and independent-minded for Northern soldiers to ever hope to control
      The only advantage the North has is pure military manpower numbers, which doesn’t actually mean much in the modern era.
      And especially not when the troops are malnourished and don’t have any experience fighting an invasive war- North Korean troops are very young

    • @weomxd
      @weomxd Год назад +8

      The US would be too slow and far away for a rapid response? Did you forget about the 28,500 US troops stationed in South Korea? 🤣

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Год назад

      @@weomxd that's just a paper tiger to stem the tide until the real force comes round...
      ROK army and the USFK might work just enough to push back to prevent takeover of Seoul, DPRK with the rest of the "Beijing Pact" would likely push a lot harder...
      IMO 60% before the Han River in Seoul might get decimated, and the rest just heavily contested (that's presuming the arty strike is not as much of a wall of fire as they claimed.)

    • @Cuyt24
      @Cuyt24 Год назад +2

      The South has a better military, and the US has military bases in South Korea, Japan, and Guam. What an ignorant comment!

  • @pxrposewithnopurpose5801
    @pxrposewithnopurpose5801 10 месяцев назад +1

    wherever theres usa, soviet and britain is involved that place is fked

  • @alexrynne8261
    @alexrynne8261 Год назад +17

    U see, if North Korea is gonna invade the south, what are the north government going to tell their troops who they are invading. Don’t North Koreans think that there is only one Korea. Also imagine being a North Korean soldier marching into a southern city and seeing the incredible technology and lifestyle

    • @mightyx5441
      @mightyx5441 Год назад +5

      Do you know how follow the crowd works?

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 Год назад

      Sounds is Jetsons. Not is Forest Gump. 😆

    • @kssxssk
      @kssxssk Год назад

      Maybe after destroying everything with missiles, they will see nothing but ruins haha.....

    • @LucyKosaki
      @LucyKosaki 11 месяцев назад

      Of course they wouldnt call it invading. They would spread false information about how the south or the americans are planning an attack and they must act now to interveine and defend their country.

  • @kingofrannoch
    @kingofrannoch 2 месяца назад

    Can you imagine all the foreign companies jocking to get first dibs in developing north Korea? Electric, plumbing and heating companies? Like a shark tank battle

  • @feff1236
    @feff1236 Год назад +4

    north koreans have nukes thats why it still exists

  • @모배센세
    @모배센세 10 месяцев назад

    South Korea : We dont want it...
    North Korea : Me too....

  • @熊唯嘉
    @熊唯嘉 Год назад +10

    For a democratic, independent, and unified Korea, both régimes of the North and the South must fall.
    자주 통일 만세!

  • @멸공의_횃불
    @멸공의_횃불 Год назад +1

    38th parallel was the demarcation line before the Korean War

  • @M자탈모조병옥
    @M자탈모조병옥 Год назад +5

    We Koreans experienced colonial period in the beginning of 20th century, and succeeding division of the peninsula and fratricidal war is still prevailing every occasion in Korea. It's been almost 70 years since the permanent division of Korea and people in both South and North suffer from it. I hate foreigners talking about Korean reunification as a gossip so badly, for they haven't been caring about Korea's tragedy in 20th century.

  • @zephryus
    @zephryus Год назад +1

    long term, it could be a powerhouse due to the sheer size of north korea's natural resource deposits

  • @catto-m
    @catto-m Год назад +14

    1. As a Korean, we never wanted to be separated. It was the empires nearby (Soviets and now China and the USA) that divided us and keep doing so out of their own interests.
    2. People talk like South and North Korea are devoid of people and lack their own will, here on the video and in the comments.
    I would remind everyone that being reunified or not is up to the Korean people, NOT anybody else, geopolitics aside. We are NOT your pawns, rude foreigners.

    • @phillipholland6795
      @phillipholland6795 Год назад +4

      Unfortunately, you actually are a pawn of the U.S. I'm so sorry. I hope that can change.

    • @weomxd
      @weomxd Год назад

      How is Korea not a pawn of global politics? Korean people have no power in this matter.

    • @stevens1041
      @stevens1041 Год назад

      Facts

    • @loks117
      @loks117 Год назад

      you are right, we chinese will never let korea united. just keep the status quo of divided and weak korea. best for everyone, except maybe korea.

    • @백수가꿈-s1g
      @백수가꿈-s1g Год назад +1

      ​@@loks117너희 중국을 10조각으로 분할 시키는게 이 구역에서 벌어질 최종 시나리오야 뭔가 착각하고 있네 공부를 더 했으면 한다 이건 통일을 떠나서 한미일 공동 목표야 전세계가 노리는 최종 시나리오 그 중에서 남북통일은 그렇게 중요하지는 않아

  • @isobelduncan
    @isobelduncan 8 месяцев назад

    Waiting till circumstances are better for reunification does actually sound the best option.

  • @sickofit-12
    @sickofit-12 Год назад +23

    In the past, Goldman Sachs predicted that reunification of the two Koreas would overtake China's economic power, and most economic institutions predicted that Reunified Korea would overtake Japan and Germany When reunified, Korea can export to China and Europe by land and use North Korea's labor and resources

    • @FOLIPE
      @FOLIPE Год назад +5

      There's no way it will come close to China. Japan is also highly unlikely but not impossible, if it happened 20 years ago

    • @Azusashusband
      @Azusashusband Год назад +1

      ​@@FOLIPEjapan yeah in the long term china absolutely not lmao

    • @Ruby-qf4dc
      @Ruby-qf4dc Год назад

      GS overestimated it😂

    • @TimeTraveller010
      @TimeTraveller010 Год назад +1

      Why Japan highly unlikely? You're aware South Korea's micro chip industry on par with Japan? Hyundai and KIA are also excellent car manufacturers. Food-South Korea's influence on the palate is gaining more attention, in the West. This is personal preference; I prefer Korean food to Japanese, Korean's make food with soul! The most important ingredient in making food desirable.@@FOLIPE

    • @mxn1948
      @mxn1948 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@TimeTraveller010 because japan has more people.
      korea has some companies and technologies as good as japan but japan simply has more people.
      and its not like SK has better birth rates or anything, in fact it has worse birth rates than japan.
      as for china, Korea can forget about it lmao. they would literally have to have the highest GDP per capita in the world to reach what china has for GDP even today, never mind 10 years from now.

  • @Moutube911
    @Moutube911 6 месяцев назад +1

    One correction, not sea of japan. It is sea of east,,,,

  • @BlazeMaster
    @BlazeMaster Год назад +8

    I think it could happen in a proxy manner by having both North and South join a single trade organization and the North should allow access to foreign content. In my opinion lack of access to foreign media is actually the worst obstacle because North Korean don't even understand how the world functions, to be honest that's actually puts them at a disadvantage in case of war as well, their missiles aren't such a great deterrent as would interactions between people of different countries and the ability to use the global media to promote their narrative be, there is a reason China heavily invests in Global media content production. But to be honest its actually really is America's fault reunification at this moment might not be possible, had they tried a more lenient policy like what they did in Vietnam during the 1990's North Korea might be better integrated into the global economy instead the US tried to starve the country just because they did not get along with the Kim family.

    • @Emyrtemoc
      @Emyrtemoc Год назад

      Not true. DRPK starved themselves. They could've feed their own people with the money they borrowed instead they used all on nukes. That's why there were sanctions on them by several countries because they wouldn't pay back what they owe. It was bad business globally.

    • @kssxssk
      @kssxssk Год назад

      You are firmly mistaken. The reason there is no foreign media in North Korea is because the Kim family made it illegal, fearing that if their people had access to foreign media, they would expose the contradictions of the fake utopia they have brainwashed their people into. In fact, it is not uncommon for North Koreans to be executed for simply distributing foreign media. Nevertheless, the black market has allowed South Korean dramas and movies to flow through the country's border with China, which is somewhat positive.

  • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
    @JeremyIrwin-c8f Год назад +2

    Any reunification would involve a substantial reduction in military spending and the size of the armed forces - just as Germany went from a combined West-East armed forces of 670,000 personnel down to the maximum allowed of 370,000 for the united Germany (it is currently lower still, about 255,000 personnel) since there would no longer be any need for such levels of forces in a unified Korea.

    • @attilaabonyi8879
      @attilaabonyi8879 11 месяцев назад

      Ok but what about china?
      China wouldn't exactly like the idea of a democracy right on it's doorsstep which would mean escalating tensions, would't keeping a large force then make sense?

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад

      Not necessarily. If an united Korea (under South Korean rule) happened, then it's possible the US and united Korea could agree compromises with China like the US and West Germany did with the Soviet Union. For example, using German reunification as an example: (a) only Korean forces in what was North Korea (in the same way as only German forces are allowed in the former East Germany); (b) strict limits on the size of the united Korean military (just as the reunified Germany was limited to 370,000 military personnel); (c) the united Korea not to be allowed any biological, chemical or nuclear weapons (like the reunited Germany) and (d) a border treaty to be signed where the united Korea renounces any territorial claims on China (just as the reunited Germany did with Poland). Possibly also add a treaty clause stating that the US is limited to a maximum of say 20,000 troops in southern Korea. China might then prefer a stable, democratic, wealthy united Korea that doesn't test nuclear weapons or spit fire and brimstone like Kim Jong-Un does and which could be a valuable trade partner selling high quality goods to the Chinese market and vice versa. I could see how China's leaders might be glad to get rid of the almost-constant crisis that is North Korea.

    • @attilaabonyi8879
      @attilaabonyi8879 11 месяцев назад

      @@JeremyIrwin-c8f i don't know I mean look at taiwan, it is a democratic country (that is the last remnants of nationalist China) and there authority isn't really respected.
      Or how about ukraine it is also a democratic and gave up it's soviet stored nuclear weapons but is in a war with it's neighbour, russia, autocratic regimes usually aren't keen on letting democratic countries exist in fear of either setting an alternative example to their own people (and thus making them revolt) or they have internal problems and want an easy scape goat.

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад

      Whilst these are valid comments, I would argue that a key difference is that China views Taiwan as being Chinese and therefore has a territorial claim on Taiwan whereas the Chinese government do not claim Korea (whether North or South) as being part of the national Chinese territory and therefore have no territorial claims on Korea. With Ukraine, Russia is claiming the eastern parts of that country although some Russians are suggesting that Ukraine is properly part of Russia so there is a territorial claim there (totally spurious in my view).

  • @Kpals
    @Kpals Год назад +31

    Sea of Japan (X) -> East Sea (O)

    • @user-nc6yt9ho4v
      @user-nc6yt9ho4v Год назад +6

      sea of Korea

    • @kssxssk
      @kssxssk Год назад +1

      @@user-nc6yt9ho4v 그건 좀...;;

    • @njctboy
      @njctboy Год назад

      @@kssxssk
      똥해

    • @Roo-vy2cI
      @Roo-vy2cI Год назад +1

      맨날 일본한테 국제법 준수하라고 발작을 해대는 주제에 국제법적으로 아무 문제 없는 sea of japan은 왤케 물고 늘어지고 ㅈㄹ임?ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

    • @지나간외국인
      @지나간외국인 Год назад +2

      한국사람아니라서 그 이름이 왜 이렇게 집착을 하는지 모르겠음. 동해라는 이름이 그냥 지역위치기준으로 정하는 이름이고 고유명사아닌데… 일본도 중국도 대만도 미국도 다 동해가 있는데 sea of japan 동해라고 바꿔야한다면 전세계 다 동서남북해로 바꿔야 되겠죠? 그게 말이된다고 생각해요? 한국인의 입장으로 생각하지말고 외국인의 입장을 생각해보세요 바다이름은 구분을 하기위해 고유명사 무조건 써야합니다. 그게 일본해 아니더라도 그냥 East Sea는 말이안됩니다… East Korea Sea도 아니고 어디동쪽인지 알 수가 없잖아요

  • @맛집전문가
    @맛집전문가 Год назад +2

    We don't discriminate against North korean refugees.
    They usually settle down in korea and work hard, but few Chinese immigrants make trouble.
    North Korea shares the same language as South. We perfectly understand each other.
    They threatened with missile, but we all know it's bluffing.
    North needs strong propaganda to control the nation. Which happened to be missile.

    • @loks117
      @loks117 Год назад

      that chinese migrant are korean refugee that flee to china in world war 2. they are ethnic korean joseonjok in northeast china

  • @4ce5bf154
    @4ce5bf154 Год назад +28

    Imagine this scenario, twins got separated at birth into a wealthy loving house and the other into a poor abusive one. They grew up and both made new families, now try making their children be together and form a relationship, what do you think would happen? Just for the twins would be hard enough, their children would not even care to make it work. That's what's going on now with the north and south. The people that truly care about reunification are long gone and each new south generation cares less and less about the north.

  • @sawtooth808
    @sawtooth808 11 месяцев назад

    Oh, idk about a unified Korea getting rid of compulsory military service, Switzerland, Israel (bad example, I know) and Finland still have compulsory military service.

  • @jubmelahtes
    @jubmelahtes Год назад +11

    If SK where to simply absorbe NK then the countries will never truly be unified. Germany was only divided for 28 years and the differences between east and west are still there in several aspects. If they want a true unification then for better or worse both the north and south have to get closer and say rather work towards something closer to social democracy rather than fully one or the other.
    Who knows maybe that'd be beneficial to the population of a highly patriarchal cociety such as SK who struggle with a collapsing birth rate and the demographic issues that follows.

    • @exelrode
      @exelrode Год назад +1

      Also east german economy was much better than that of north korea, most people don't realise how bad things are north korea, they are truly a dystopian society and south korea just doesn't have the resources to manage the costs of reunification with North korea, considering that North korean population is about half of entire south korea and you would have a very difficult task of trying to upskill a largely uneducated, agrarian and rural north korean populace to find jobs in south korean society.
      And honestly how did he come up with the 5 trillion GDP figure is beyond me , just having large population doesn't mean having bigger GDP, Just look at brazil

    • @forsociopoliticalstuff2629
      @forsociopoliticalstuff2629 Год назад

      Problem is ironically just that. You’d have to make it so the former northern populations were unable to vote for a while (which for obvious reasons isn’t a morally good thing) or you risk the much younger on average former North Koreans overwhelmingly the collapsing southern population at the ballot box and potentially just creating the dprk all over again, just bigger.

    • @forsociopoliticalstuff2629
      @forsociopoliticalstuff2629 Год назад +1

      @@exelrodeif I remember correctly, wasn’t the East German economy the strongest (or second strongest) economy in the entirety of the Warsaw pact?

    • @exelrode
      @exelrode Год назад

      @@forsociopoliticalstuff2629well you won't have any disagreements from me on that. I just don't think there was any solid research done before they made this video

    • @exelrode
      @exelrode Год назад

      @@forsociopoliticalstuff2629 forget morality , it would be unconstitutional

  • @thecommentatorofreallynoth9966
    @thecommentatorofreallynoth9966 2 месяца назад

    Kaesong should just be a special adminstrative region that both sides can visit.

  • @Mmonk111
    @Mmonk111 Год назад +3

    0:19 Please correct "Sea of Japan" with "East Sea". You are talking about Korea, not Japan right?

    • @augth
      @augth Год назад +3

      In English it is called Sea of Japan

    • @usetgd
      @usetgd Год назад +1

      일본해가 국제 표준이라 그런 것 같습니다. 또 국제법상으로 해역을 어떻게 부르는지는 부르는 국가의 주권입니다.

  • @sarikahegde6561
    @sarikahegde6561 10 месяцев назад

    I would say it would be very difficult for unification because both countries grew up in opposite ideologies. Instead of reunification it would be best that they are separate but the kim regime has to fail and a new successor should be there who would open the borders to south so that free open trade, tourism, investment would be started between both countries.slowly NK starts to change and surely thrives towards development.

  • @action4newsinligme803
    @action4newsinligme803 11 месяцев назад +4

    3:20 Economically the two Koreas did not start at roughly the same place. The north was better off in many economic factors, with the majority of raw materials and industrial base. Without other factors intervening the north should have been the stronger part of the Korean peninsula

    • @EroUsagiSama
      @EroUsagiSama 11 месяцев назад

      Real. It lost it's upper hand after the fall of the USSR and the arduous march famine, made worse because on economical sanctions on oil and food.
      It's slowly getting better though, thanks to new deals with Russia and China. Living in the north will probably be much better than living in the south in around 10 years.

  • @impossible_iz_n0thing
    @impossible_iz_n0thing 15 дней назад

    it would be a bumpy ride down a difficult road but if anyone could do it, i think The Korean People could. The spirit of The People to come together & work to get up-to-speed with the current Times would be extremely fascinating to watch; it would be a spectacle of unprecedented inspiration.

  • @xenotiic8356
    @xenotiic8356 11 месяцев назад +3

    That was weird how there was no mention of there being a dictatorship in the south until the late 80s/early 90s.

    • @BrandonUveges
      @BrandonUveges 11 месяцев назад

      This video ignores all the important facts regarding North Koreas geopolitical situation. Why would they be honest and tell people that SK was an authoritarian country that imprisoned, killed, and censored it’s people by the tens of thousands from 48-91? Biggest problem today is ignorance and the potency of US propaganda.

    • @kzcciynk
      @kzcciynk 11 месяцев назад +1

      How is that even related to the video

  • @ekkolima
    @ekkolima Год назад +1

    Reunifying Korea sounds similar to Germany in after the fall of the wall.

    • @ZaiKerizm
      @ZaiKerizm Год назад

      No it’s not at least Germany situation was kinda okay both side didn’t have that drastic economic differences however Korea? It’s like force embracing brainwashed beggars

  • @2SSSR2
    @2SSSR2 Год назад +9

    Main problem here is that South is against unification as it would cost them a TON of money without any guarantees of back investment.
    But, on the other hand, when population collapse starts happening due to lack of children I can see the South pushing this forward as the North has bigger percentage of younger population than the South.

    • @weeguy52
      @weeguy52 Год назад

      If korea adopted the norths system, it would no doubt collapse, and North korea, i don't think, has a bigger percentage as we don't officially know and giving that so many die in NK because of disease,lack of nutriment and torture i doubt it

    • @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music
      @I_Have_The_Most_Japanese_Music Год назад

      NK will completely starve to death before people stop going to SK to become K-pop stars.

  • @albertlee4630
    @albertlee4630 7 месяцев назад +1

    Radical idea: A unified Korea with constitutional monarchy with the Kim family elevated to royal Head of State and President as Head of Government. Control of the army might be an issue, and a compromise could be that the royal family would have a private army to protect them, while the President is the head of the armed forces.
    Less radical idea: Form a Korean Union with free movement of people and single currency similar to the European Union, with each Korea staying as its own country. If the Kim regime falls, both Koreas could potentially unite as the same country, but by this time they should be economically and culturally integrated.

    • @JDFrank20Diaz
      @JDFrank20Diaz 3 месяца назад +1

      I had a Similar Idea The Reason I need the Kim Family there is to prevent Corruption from the South Korean Regime
      A Constitutional Monarchy can work Kim Family would have power but in name only while the South Korean Government aka Provisional Government Runs the Entire Unified County With a Prime Minister making the decisions also you get rid of Communism entirely which the United States would gladly expect
      The Kingdom Of Korea

    • @JoseonBall
      @JoseonBall 2 месяца назад

      If Korea ever becomes a monarchy I think it should be the relatives of the monarchy before the Japanese took over in 1910, not the Kims. They actually have a legitimate claim to the hypothetical throne

  • @Weaxer_Xane
    @Weaxer_Xane Год назад +6

    A unified Korea would be a complex and difficult task because the two parts of the country are very different. The Republic of Korea (South Korea) is a democracy with a capitalist market economy, while the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) is a dictatorship with a socialist planned economy.
    The political and economic integration of the two countries would be a lengthy process that would require significant investments and resources. A new system of government would have to be created that takes into account the needs and interests of both parts of the population. In addition, a new economic order would have to be developed that connects both systems.
    In addition, Korean reunification would also bring cultural and social challenges. Both countries have diverged greatly from each other over the past 70 years. The people of North Korea grew up with severely limited access to information and a different way of life than the people of South Korea.
    Despite the challenges, there are also arguments for Korean reunification. A unified Korea would be a democratic and prosperous country that could make an important contribution to stability and security in the region. It would also give the people of North Korea the opportunity to live freer and more self-determined lives.
    Here are some possible ways a unified Korea could work:
    A federal structure: A unified Korea could be divided into several regions, each with a degree of autonomy. This would take into account the different interests and needs of the population.
    A central government: Alternatively, a unified Korea could have a central government that would be responsible for all areas of public life. This would be a simpler solution, but could also lead to conflicts between the two parts of the country.
    In reality, a unified Korea will likely be a mix of both models. There could be a federal structure, but the central government would be responsible for some important areas such as defense and foreign policy.
    The exact shape of a unified Korea depends on many factors, including the political will of the two countries, the support of the international community and the willingness of the population to agree on a common goal.
    Below are some concrete steps that could be taken to prepare for the reunification of Korea:
    Normalization of relations between North and South Korea: This would enable cooperation in areas such as economics, trade and culture.
    Develop a common political and economic system: This would pave the way for complete reunification.
    Growing a new generation of Koreans who grew up in a unified Korea: This would help overcome the differences between the two parts of the country.
    The reunification of Korea is an ambitious goal, but one that can be achieved if the two countries and the international community work together.

    • @alberain
      @alberain Год назад

      AI?

    • @Weaxer_Xane
      @Weaxer_Xane Год назад +2

      ​​@@alberainWhat for "AI" actually, i said by the final solution the whole time 😑.

  • @bruv-_-7200
    @bruv-_-7200 Год назад +1

    0:11 is not the 38 parallel. It's called a demarcation line, 38 parallel no longer exist after the korean war erupted.

  • @JoshuaHLim
    @JoshuaHLim Год назад +7

    I don't think reunification should be all at once. I think South Korea should assimilate little land by land of North Korea in order to accomodate the North Koreans' needs slowly and gradually

    • @JeremyIrwin-c8f
      @JeremyIrwin-c8f 11 месяцев назад +1

      I don't see how that works. When Germany reunified, West Germany didn't take in Thuriniga, then Saxony, then Brandenburg and so on. It took in the whole of East Germany at once.

  • @AidanSuperStudios
    @AidanSuperStudios 3 месяца назад

    I would just want to see both sides finally settle there differences.

  • @johnchen2000
    @johnchen2000 Год назад +10

    Let’s not kid ourselves and think China and US would allow the Korean reunification to happen. Superpowers need buffer zones so it’s never up to North or South Koreans

    • @bluegold1026
      @bluegold1026 Год назад

      Not unless either China or the US collapse first. And it's looking real likely the PRC will collapse first.

  • @LUPATCHI
    @LUPATCHI 5 месяцев назад

    Large ammounts of information are missing from this video. The country wasn't just handed over and dived at the end of ww2. Theres alot more that went into that which is often and deliberately glossed over.

  • @Awakening_Sunshine
    @Awakening_Sunshine Год назад +5

    I don’t think North Korea will ever fall/reunite with the South unless the Chinese Communist Party falls. While North Korea isn’t exactly a puppet state of the Chinese regime, I think the CCP will do whatever it takes to maintain that buffer zone

    • @joeottoman6484
      @joeottoman6484 Год назад

      Whoever leads China will never allow korea to reunite until China surpass US and reconstruct the international order, it's nothing about ideology, but geography, for the national security of China.