Participants of a Moscow meeting of the foreign ministers of anti-Hitler coalition countries decide the fate of Korea after its liberation from Japanese occupation.

The meeting takes place on 16-26 December. Based on its outcome, a declaration is published and consists of seven sections:

1. Preparation of peace treaties with the satellite countries of Nazi Germany (Italy, Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, and Finland);

2. Creation of the Far Eastern Commission and the Union Council for Japan;

3-6. Post-war settlement of affairs in Korea, China, Romania, and Bulgaria;

7. Establishment of a UN commission for the control of nuclear energy.

The resolution on Korea causes widespread dissatisfaction within the country, which was liberated from Japanese occupation by Soviet and American troops. The occupation lasted from 1910 to 1945, and during this period, more or less all significant posts in Korea were occupied by the Japanese.

The victorious states don’t trust the local provisional government, deciding on “tutelage” for Korea. The resolution actually divides the country into a pro-American South and a pro-Soviet North, which will ultimately led to the Korean War of 1950-1953. This cemented the division of the nation, something that has yet to be resolved.

Source:

A communiqué of the interim meeting of the foreign ministers of the United States, the UK the USSR. Moscow, December 16-26, 1945.

The Avalon project.