Japanese protectorate Japan declared war on Russia to drive out Russian influence, while Korea declared to be neutral. Japan's victory in the
Russo-Japanese War, the
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1905 was agreed in which Korea became a
colony of Japan. Japanese officials increasingly controlled the national government but had little local presence, thereby allowing space for anti-Japanese activism by Korean nationalists. The new status failed because of a combination of diverse economic, historical, and emotional factors. Japan underestimated Korean nationalism and the hostility with which Koreans reacted against the modernizing programs which Japan was introducing. Emperor
Gojong, who did not accept the conclusion of this Treaty, dispatched secret envoys to the second
Hague Peace Conference in 1907 in order to denounce the conclusion of the treaty as compulsive and invalid, but no nation supported the envoys. In July, 1907, Japan imposed the
Japan–Korea Treaty of 1907 to gain full control of domestic affairs in Korea. It disbanded the army of the Korean Empire.
Itō Hirobumi took full control of Korea as
Resident-General of Korea. In 1909, Ito Hirobumi was assassinated by
An Jung-geun. The assassination of Prince Ito by Korean nationalists brought the protectorate to an end and led to outright annexation. On August 22, 1910, Japan officially annexed the Korean Empire by imposing the
Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty. One result of the protectorate was to demonstrate to the world that Japan was the strongest single power in the Far East. There was no significant opposition by any of the major powers.
Korea under Japanese rule During the
colonial and annexation period, more than 100,000 Koreans served in the
Imperial Japanese Army. These Korean men's military service was both voluntary and forced. Many Korean women were also sent to the war frontlines as "
comfort women" to serve the Imperial Japanese Army as prostitutes by the brokers, as were women from other areas of
Empire of Japan rule, including Japanese women.
Kim Il Sung led a
Korean independence movement, which was active in the border areas of China and Russia, particularly in areas with considerable ethnic Korean populations. Kim Il Sung joined the
Chinese Communist Party in 1931 and served in the Communist-led
Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army. Kim Il Sung's most famous victory occurred at the
Battle of Pochonbo in June 1937, when he led between 150 and 200 Korean and Chinese guerillas on a raid at the border town of
Pochon County. His force managed to take the outnumbered Japanese garrison by surprise and managed to occupy the town for a few hours or a day. Japanese accounts primarily dispute the notion that Kim led the raid himself, instead suggesting that
Choe Hyon led the raid instead. Kim founded North Korea, and his descendants have still not signed a peace treaty with Japan. The
Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea, led by (later) South Korea's first president
Syngman Rhee, moved from Shanghai to
Chongqing. Lee lobbied in the United States and was recognized by the South Korean administrator by
Douglas MacArthur. The Korean Provisional Government coordinated the armed resistance against the Japanese imperial army during the 1920s and 1930s, including the
Battle of Fengwudong in June 1920, the
Battle of Qingshanli in October 1920, and
Yoon Bong-Gil's assassination of Japanese officers in Shanghai in April 1932. Korean independence activists often fled to China, Russia and the United States, where they fomented plans to restore Korean sovereignty. Several notable examples include the inclusion of Koreans into the Republic of China's
Whampoa Military Academy, where many Koreans trained in military tactics and strategy. When Imperial Japan invaded China in 1937, sparking the
Second Sino-Japanese War, the Provisional Government relocated to
Chongqing and created the
Korean Liberation Army to fight alongside Chinese forces against Japan.Originally, the Republic of China placed the
Korean Liberation Army under the supreme authority of the commander-in-chief of the Chinese Army. The regulation was repealed in 1944, after the Provisional Government had improved its financial standing and achieved greater importance in the eyes of the Chinese government. The hundreds-strong KLA engaged in
guerrilla warfare actions against the Japanese throughout the Asian theater of war until Japanese surrender in 1945. Japanese control of Korea ended on September 9, 1945, when the Japanese
Governor-General of Korea signed the surrender document of the United States in Seoul.
Post World War II At the end of
World War II, Korea regained its independence after 35 years of
imperialist Japanese rule. Per the
Yalta Conference agreements,
Soviet forces accepted
surrender of Japanese forces in northern Korea above the
38th parallel, and
U.S. forces south of that line.
Korea was then divided into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) spheres. South Korea refused diplomatic and trade relations with Japan, using tensions with Japan to rally support for the South Korean government. The early ROK (Republic of Korea; South Korea) government derived its legitimacy from its opposition to Japan and North Korea, portraying South Korea as under threat from the North and South. The diplomatic relationship between Japan and South Korea was established in 1965, when the
Treaty on Basic Relations was signed; Japan subsequently recognized the
Republic of Korea (the official name of South Korea) as the only legitimate government on the
Korean Peninsula. As such,
North Korea does not have official diplomatic ties with Japan. == 21st century ==