Treaty of Kaesong (Revolutionary Front)

The Treaty of Kaesong, also known as the Peace Treaty of Kaesong Province, was the peace treaty that ended the fighting during the Korean War. The terms of the treaty stipulated that the two Koreas; North and South, should respect the independence of the other and enforced the establishment of a demilitarised zone on the 38th Parallel. It also created the independent State of Jeju through clause 6 of the treaty.

The signing of the treaty was held in Kaesong Province, South Korea. The result ended up in large amounts of anger and frustration in the South, especially by the military, that they hadn't been able to completely unify the Korean Peninsular, which led to a coup against the Syngman regime in January 1951. In the North, elements of the Korean People's Army including the last members of the Independent Regiments, staged an attempted coup against the government in Pyongyang, for the same reason as it happened in the South.

Clauses
TBA