The Armistice: A War Without End
Why the Korean War never officially ended and how the armistice shapes the peninsula's politics to this day.
Armistice, Not Peace
The Korean Armistice Agreement, signed on July 27, 1953, halted fighting but did not end the war. It was signed by the UN Command, North Korea, and China — South Korea's President Syngman Rhee refused to sign, objecting to anything short of unification. Technically, the two Koreas remain at war.
The armistice established the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), a 250-kilometer-long, 4-kilometer-wide buffer zone that is paradoxically one of the most heavily militarized borders on Earth. Panmunjom, the 'truce village' straddling the border, is where inter-Korean and US-DPRK negotiations periodically take place.