Talk:Korean claim to Tsushima Island

Visa vs recognition
Beside 90 day visa with a US passport. Tsushima Island historically belonged to Korean Peninsula. Yes, Koreans have lived in the Island of Tsushima along before Japanese. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Korwikipedia (talk • contribs) 11:01, 25 December 2016 (UTC)

A US citizen is entitled to a 90 day visa with a US passport. To renew the visa for another 90 days. You must leave the country and re-enter. The ferry ride to Tsushima is the cheapest route, and very common. That means that Korea accepts Tsushima as part of Japan.

This article is too Japanese biased
The reason why the South Korean government does not claim ownership of Tsushima Island is because of the issue of ownership of Liancourt Rocks. Historically, Historically, Tsushima Island was also ruled by Korea. Therefore, I remove 'Korean nationalism' Category. Mureungdowon (talk) 09:35, 14 March 2023 (UTC)

Citation needed tagging seems spurious
> "Sanguozhi, the official historical records of the Three Kingdoms period of China (220–280 A.D.) written in the third century, recorded that the island was an ancient country of Wa (Japan).[citation needed]"

This reads like someone added a citation needed tag to the citation itself. --Nidaana (talk) 17:35, 1 November 2023 (UTC)