Misplaced Pages

North Korea–United States relations: Revision history

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
View logs for this page (view filter log)
Filter revisionsshowhide
External tools:

For any version listed below, click on its date to view it. For more help, see Help:Page history and Help:Edit summary. (cur) = difference from current version, (prev) = difference from preceding version, m = minor edit, → = section edit, ← = automatic edit summary

(newest | oldest) View ( | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)

10 February 2024

26 January 2024

18 January 2024

1 January 2024

23 December 2023

18 December 2023

10 November 2023

22 October 2023

10 October 2023

1 October 2023

31 August 2023

21 August 2023

16 August 2023

30 July 2023

22 July 2023

19 July 2023

9 July 2023

15 June 2023

4 June 2023

30 May 2023

4 May 2023

10 April 2023

6 April 2023

3 April 2023

20 March 2023

  • curprev 09:3809:38, 20 March 2023 209.23.10.153 talk 147,857 bytes +150 No edit summary undo
  • curprev 09:3109:31, 20 March 2023 209.23.10.153 talk 147,707 bytes −69 The official information from the U.S. State Department shows that the U.S. just does not have diplomatic relations with North Korea, which does not mean that it does not recognize it as a sovereign state. The official country name of DPRK appears in various official documents of the U.S., just like the relationship between the U.S. and Iran or Afghanistan. , North Korea is internationally recognized as a sovereign state, and the absence of formal diplomatic relations with the government does no undo

19 March 2023

1 March 2023

26 February 2023

24 February 2023

(newest | oldest) View ( | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)