For decades, the United States government referred to the Korean War as the “Korean Conflict”, because the U.S. Congress never made a constitutional declaration of war on Korea, participating instead as part of a United Nations operation.
Now I see, with the 50th anniversary of that war past, that the U.S. government refers to the event as the “Korean War”. What changed? Sure, logic tells us that it was always a war in the military sense. But how was the political hurdle and constitutional issue jumped?