Breaking...North Korea says seriously considering plan to strike Guam

Discussion in 'Politics' started by vanzandt, Aug 8, 2017.

  1. vanzandt

    vanzandt

  2. fhl

    fhl

    [​IMG]
     
    Piptaker and jem like this.
  3. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    G'damn; this fat piece of shit is just what Trump needs to stay in power. Can't he give us at least 6 months before he starts blathering bs?
     
    jem likes this.
  4. jem

    jem

    this is tailored made for trump to become a war time president.
    i don't like that at all. for many reasons.
    from the danger to the politics.

    he should work to get his promises done... and if the establish Repubs fail he should see they get replaced.




     
  5. I'm plenty old enough to remember the Cold War. We're getting pretty friggin close here. I would not want to be in Seoul if this goes parabolic. Shit hits the fan we won't be worrying about Russian conspiracy theories or which bathroom the tranny is going to use. Trump and crew need to tighten up, forget the bold rhetoric, handle this on the QT. Not the time to be trash talking.
     
    Clubber Lang likes this.
  6. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark


    ***FACT CHECK***

    N Korea built and successfully tested their first nuke under bush.Their first successful ICBM came six months after Trump was in office.
     
  7. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    Trump is the one who inflamed this situation and got us to this point when he immediately came into office threatening N Korea.If a major war breaks out the blood of millions are on the hands of republican voters.I guess all those dead innocent Iraqis wasn't enough.
     
    Last edited: Aug 9, 2017
  8. kandlekid

    kandlekid

    Well, the key is not to "threaten" the "idyllic, peaceful and benevolent" DPRK. The key is to threaten Kim Jong Un personally.
     
  9. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...87ae4b0449ed506602b?ncid=inblnkushpmg00000009

    Trump’s Warning To North Korea Called ‘Exactly Wrong’ And ‘Reckless’

    “That is about the stupidest and most dangerous statement I have ever heard an American president make.”

    By Matt Ferner



    President Donald Trump issued a stark warning to North Korea on Tuesday promising to unleash “fire, fury and, frankly, power, the likes of which this world has never seen before” if the country continues to escalate its threats against the U.S.

    “North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States,” Trump said Tuesday in a short statement to reporters before a meeting on the national opioid crisis. “They will be met with fire and fury like the world has never seen. [North Korean leader Kim Jong Un] has been very threatening beyond a normal state.”

    Trump’s remarks at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, only add tension to an already dangerous standoff with North Korea, several experts who spoke to HuffPost warned. Over the years, the U.S. has attempted to prevent the growth of North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and development of missile technology at various times using sanctions, diplomacy and the threat of military action. But nothing has fully obstructed the nation’s advancements.

    “That is about the stupidest and most dangerous statement I have ever heard an American president make,” John Mecklin, editor-in-chief of Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, said to HuffPost. The Bulletin created the “Doomsday Clock,” a symbolic representation of humanity’s proximity to apocalyptic destruction.

    Trump’s remarks followed reports Tuesday from NBC News and The Washington Post that North Korea has developed a nuclear warhead small enough to fit inside one of its long-range missiles.

    The successful miniaturization of a nuclear weapon would mark a major advancement for North Korea’s nuclear program. While U.S. intelligence officials do not know whether North Korea has tested the miniaturized warhead yet, the reports come on the heels of two recent successful test-launches of intercontinental ballistic missiles that could reach the U.S.

    Trump’s remarks closely followed fierce rhetoric from Pyongyang in response to new international sanctions against the isolated communist nation. “Should the U.S. pounce upon the DPRK with military force at last, the DPRK is ready to teach the U.S. a severe lesson with its strategic nuclear force,” Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said in a statement, using the acronym for the official name, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

    While North Korea’s strong language came as no surprise ― Kim has put out countless declarations of war against the U.S. throughout the years ― Mecklin argues that Trump’s response of heightened rhetoric is “exactly backwards.”

    “It’s exactly wrong. It increases the likelihood of nuclear war. And those kind of threats are just not something an American president should make,” Mecklin said.

    In January, Mecklin’s group moved the Doomsday Clock’s minute hand 30 seconds closer to midnight ― the hour symbolizing global catastrophe. The minute hand is now at 2½ minutes to midnight, closer than it has been since 1953, when it hit 2 minutes following the testing of hydrogen bombs by both the U.S. and the Soviet Union. Trump’s comments on nuclear arms and climate issues were among the factors the group took into consideration in advancing the clock this year.

    MIT linguistics professor emeritus and renowned foreign policy critic Noam Chomsky agreed with Mecklin’s assessment. “Trump’s statement is extremely dangerous,” Chomsky said. According to the professor, the only reasonable approach the U.S. should take with North Korea is to “pursue the negotiating option put forth by China and North Korea, based on North Korea’s freezing its nuclear and weapons programs and the U.S. ending threatening military maneuvers on North Korea’s borders,” and then seek to move forward from there.
     
  10. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    http://www.businessinsider.com/north-korea-miniaturized-nuclear-warhead-missile-2017-8


    US intelligence: North Korea can now fit nuclear warheads on missiles and may have 60 bombs

    A confidential US intelligence report reviewed by The Washington Post concluded that North Korea had made a breakthrough and could now build nuclear bombs small enough to fit on missiles.

    The intelligence community "assesses North Korea has produced nuclear weapons for ballistic missile delivery, to include delivery by ICBM-class missiles," a portion of the assessment reads, according to The Post.

    A separate report had said the US calculated that North Korea had 60 nuclear devices, according to The Post — a huge increase over experts' previous assessments.

    In the event of a military conflict, the US would attempt to destroy or seize all North Korea's weapons, so 60 targets would represent an incredibly difficult task.

    Analysts have long suspected North Korea could make a small-enough device to launch atop a missile, but this is the first known internal government document to acknowledge the technology.

    In March 2016, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un posed in front of a silver ball that North Korean propaganda called a miniaturized nuclear warhead, but analysts doubted the isolated regime's ability to construct such a device.

    North Korea has recently been improving its missile program by leaps and bounds, twice demonstrating in July a missile that could strike the US mainland.

    President Donald Trump has increasingly focused on North Korea, and the US succeeded last week in bringing together all 15 members of the UN Security Council to impose tough sanctions on Pyongyang.

    However, experts told Business Insider the sanctions would not curb North Korea's missile programs, and it seems more likely that the US must rely on nuclear deterrence to check an increasingly capable Kim regime.
     
    #10     Aug 9, 2017