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Chinese Pianist Plays Propaganda Tune at White House

Guess the non-aligned Indians don't understand the concept of having allies.

Yes, it was called Korean war, yet it was fought mainly between US of A and China, must be baffling for you......

The Korean peninsula was ruled by Japan from 1910 until the end of World War II. Following the surrender of Japan in 1945, American administrators divided the peninsula along the 38th Parallel, with United States troops occupying the southern part and Soviet troops occupying the northern part.[29]
The failure to hold free elections throughout the Korean Peninsula in 1948 deepened the division between the two sides, and the North established a Communist government. The 38th Parallel increasingly became a political border between the two Koreas. Although reunification negotiations continued in the months preceding the war, tension intensified. Cross-border skirmishes and raids at the 38th Parallel persisted. The situation escalated into open warfare when North Korean forces invaded South Korea on 25 June 1950.[30] It was the first significant armed conflict of the Cold War.[31]




Is this piece of information from an alternate universe? Is there an alternate timeline and history for the Korean conflict? How and why did the Chinese get involved?
 
Self deleted.....not worth adressing


hahahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa :lol:

illiteracy is terrible

western army and japs never conquer china, we fight till victory:china: unlike some country :lol:

china is the 4 major allies in WW2 the major force of japs army are fighting with us 1931 to 1945. we win:china:

20070811232714494.jpg


that's why we are the big dog in UN
 
The Korean peninsula was ruled by Japan from 1910 until the end of World War II. Following the surrender of Japan in 1945, American administrators divided the peninsula along the 38th Parallel, with United States troops occupying the southern part and Soviet troops occupying the northern part.[29]
The failure to hold free elections throughout the Korean Peninsula in 1948 deepened the division between the two sides, and the North established a Communist government. The 38th Parallel increasingly became a political border between the two Koreas. Although reunification negotiations continued in the months preceding the war, tension intensified. Cross-border skirmishes and raids at the 38th Parallel persisted. The situation escalated into open warfare when North Korean forces invaded South Korea on 25 June 1950.[30] It was the first significant armed conflict of the Cold War.[31]




Is this piece of information from an alternate universe? Is there an alternate timeline and history for the Korean conflict? How and why did the Chinese get involved?

man, goole is great, but please use it to the full extent.

When South Korea was nearly annexed, US first got involved, they pushed north korea army back to 38th parallel, that was when China warned them not to go further or we would intervene, before that, there was not a single chinese soldier on korean soil. McArthur called Maos bluffing and marched beyond the 38th parallel, then came the PLA.

I wonder when you read a book, do you always stop after the first chapter?
 
This is in yet another attempt to raise gubbi the buddy's nerve:


Shangganling.jpg


Battle on Shangganling Mountain is a 1956 Chinese war film. It is also known as Shangganling Battle.

The film depicts the Battle of Triangle Hill during the Korean War.[1].

Battle on Shangganling Mountain follows a group of Chinese People's Volunteer Army soldiers who are blocked in the Triangle Hill complex for several days. Short of both food and water, they hold their ground until the relief troops arrive. Directed by Sha Meng and Lin Shan, the cast included Gao Baocheng, Xu Linge, and Liu Yuru. The film was shot in Changchun.

Battle on Shangganling Mountain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Battle of Triangle Hill, also known as Operation Showdown or the Shangganling Campaign (simplified Chinese: 上甘岭战役; pinyin: Shàng Gān Lǐng Zhàn Yì),[nb 3] was a protracted military engagement during the Korean War. The main combatants were two United Nations infantry divisions, with additional support from the United States Air Force, against elements of the 15th and 12th Corps[nb 2] of the People's Republic of China. The battle was part of American attempts to gain control of "The Iron Triangle", and took place from October 14 – November 25, 1952.

The immediate American objective was Triangle Hill (38°19′17″N 127°27′52″E / 38.32139°N 127.46444°E / 38.32139; 127.46444Coordinates: 38°19′17″N 127°27′52″E / 38.32139°N 127.46444°E / 38.32139; 127.46444), a forested ridge of high ground 2 kilometers (1.2 mi) north of Kimhwa near the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). The hill was occupied by the veterans of the People's Volunteer Army's 15th Corps. Over the course of nearly a month, substantial American and South Korean forces made repeated attempts to capture Triangle Hill and the adjacent Sniper Ridge. Despite clear superiority in artillery and aircraft, escalating American and South Korean casualties resulted in the attack being halted after 42 days of fighting, with Chinese forces regaining their original positions.

...

The Battle of Triangle Hill was the biggest and bloodiest contest of 1952.[11] After 42 days of heavy fighting, the Eighth Army had failed to gain the two hill masses that were its original goal.[82] For the Chinese, on the other hand, not only did the 15th Corps stop the UN attacks at Triangle Hill, the assaults conducted by the 44th Division on the Pyongyang front also resulted in Jackson Heights' capture on November 30.[83] Although the Chinese had suffered 11,500 casualties with many units decimated during the battle, its ability to sustain such losses had slowly exhausted the US Eighth Army over two months of attrition.[58] The PVA High Command viewed the victory as vindication that attrition was an effective strategy against the UN forces,[84] while the Chinese became more aggressive on the armistice negotiation and the battlefield.[85] Meanwhile, the high UN casualties forced Clark to suspend any upcoming offensive operations involving more than one battalion, effectively preventing any major UN offensives for the rest of the war.[86][87] General Clark and US President Harry S. Truman later confided that the battle was a serious blow to the UN morale.[84] As for the South Koreans, the modest UN gain on Sniper Ridge had convinced them that the South Korean armed forces were now capable of conducting independent offensive operations,[1] even through the American advisers were less than impressed with their performance during the course of the battle.[84]

Despite its impact and scale, the Battle of Triangle Hill is one of the least known episodes of the Korean War within the Western media.[84] :lol: But for the Chinese, this costly victory presented an opportunity to promote the value of endurance and sacrifice.[9] The valor demonstrated by the Chinese soldiers at Triangle Hill was repeatedly glorified in various forms of media, including several major motion pictures.[88] Qin Jiwei was also celebrated as the hero of Shangganling and eventually rose to become the Minister of Defense and the Vice Chairman of the National People's Congress.[89][90] The 15th Corps became one of the most prestigious units within the PLA, and the PLAAF selected the 15th Corps to become China's first airborne corps in 1961.[91] It remains the most elite corps-size unit in China today.[92]

Battle of Triangle Hill - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

By finishing reading the two wikis, gubbi the buddy, you should now know that the Chinese are fundamentally different from the Indians. :bounce:

BTW, I just goolged for 38°19′17″N 127°27′52″E, it seems still belong to N. Korea and is in the north of 38 parallel.
 
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Chinese Pianist Plays Propaganda Tune at White House

US humiliated in eyes of Chinese by song used to inspire anti-Americanism






The Nerve!!

And so childish. And yet they all wonder why the rest of the world is so wary about Chinese growth?

See
http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-affairs/90390-cia-social-engineering-via-nwos.html

"The CIA's cultural campaigns created the prototype for today's seemingly apolitical intellectuals, academics, and artists who are divorced from popular struggles and whose worth rises with their distance from the working classes and their proximity to prestigious foundations. The CIA role model of the successful professional is the ideological gatekeeper, excluding critical intellectuals who write about class struggle, class exploitation and U.S. imperialism -- "ideological" not "objective" categories, or so they are told."

Then came along Lang Lang.

MUAHAHAHAHAHA :partay: :china:
 
haha..worst come back ever..try again but this time be on topic.

No need when your post are as useless like a deaf man trying to listen to his mp3.

After all who wants to read a post on a person that has hatred towards a particular religion...exactly it was you who went off topic I was just putting an examples of American prejudice on China including other things.
And here you are going into childish tantrum LOL
@r$£ licking can give you such disease but then with these idiotic comment you're coming out with then I understand. :cheesy: :rofl:

I let you continue with your ar** licking but remember America is great back stabber
BTW get some English lesson its obvious you can't comprehend anything.
 
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