WorldSnap – Geopolitics , Global Power Plays and International

Why Korea Remains the World’s Frozen Flashpoint

22 min · 25. juni 2026
episode Why Korea Remains the World’s Frozen Flashpoint cover

Description

More than seventy years after the Korean War stopped, the conflict has never truly ended. The guns fell silent in 1953, but no peace treaty was ever signed. Today, the Korean Peninsula remains one of the world’s most dangerous flashpoints, where North Korea’s nuclear weapons, South Korea’s vulnerability, U.S. alliance commitments, China’s security fears, Japan’s anxiety, and Russia’s ambitions all collide. In this episode, we explore why Korea is not just a regional issue, but a global security dilemma frozen in time. From the DMZ and Seoul’s geography to nuclear deterrence and great-power rivalry, this is the story of a war that became a system — quiet, tense, and always one crisis away from shaking the world.

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49 episodes

episode Why Korea Remains the World’s Frozen Flashpoint artwork

Why Korea Remains the World’s Frozen Flashpoint

More than seventy years after the Korean War stopped, the conflict has never truly ended. The guns fell silent in 1953, but no peace treaty was ever signed. Today, the Korean Peninsula remains one of the world’s most dangerous flashpoints, where North Korea’s nuclear weapons, South Korea’s vulnerability, U.S. alliance commitments, China’s security fears, Japan’s anxiety, and Russia’s ambitions all collide. In this episode, we explore why Korea is not just a regional issue, but a global security dilemma frozen in time. From the DMZ and Seoul’s geography to nuclear deterrence and great-power rivalry, this is the story of a war that became a system — quiet, tense, and always one crisis away from shaking the world.

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