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A Brief Introduction to the 70th Anniversary of the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea
The War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, also known as the Movement to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea or the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, was a part of the Korean War that broke out in the early 1950s. It only refers to the stage of Chinese people's Volunteer Army's participation in the war, and also includes the mass movement of the Korean people to support the Korean people in their fight against American aggression.

1950, 10 In July, the "Korean People's Movement Committee to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea in Taiwan Province Province and North China" was established, and the movement to resist US aggression and aid Korea began. On June+10, 5438, Chinese people's Volunteer Army went to the DPRK to fight and started the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea.

In the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea, the volunteers received the full support of the China People's Liberation Army and the cooperation of the Eastern Group headed by the Soviet Union. The victory of the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea ended in July 1953.

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195 1 At the end of the year, after consultations between China and the DPRK, the prisoners of war of the United Nations Army were managed by volunteers, and the prisoners of war of the South Korean Army were managed by the Korean People's Army.

The United States refused to discuss the principle of determining the repatriation of prisoners of war first and put forward the principle of "voluntary repatriation". It advocates one-on-one exchange of prisoners of war who choose to repatriate. After the exchange, the remaining prisoners of war of one side were exchanged with foreign civilians detained by the other side and civilians who chose to repatriate, and all prisoners of war who did not choose to repatriate were released as civilians.

In order to prove that a large number of prisoners of war were unwilling to repatriate, the United States carried out so-called "screening" activities in prison camps, using agents of the Kuomintang in South Korea and Taiwan Province Province to illegally force North Korean prisoners of war to write bloody books, cover their fingerprints with blood, tattoo them, and even kill them, so as to force them to refuse to repatriate.