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On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 01:25:52 -0500, Pat Flannery wrote:
I think there's around a two-in-three chance that we are going to be in a nuclear war with North Korea inside of a year. I'm about to go to bed. It's always nice to read a cheerful note just before ;-) North Korea has so far demonstrated that they can neither launch a long-range missile nor detonate a nuclear weapon successfully. Who are you expecting to fire the first shot in the imminent nuclear war? Dale Where is Janet Reno when you need her? ![]() |
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![]() Dale wrote: I'm about to go to bed. It's always nice to read a cheerful note just before ;-) North Korea has so far demonstrated that they can neither launch a long-range missile nor detonate a nuclear weapon successfully. Who are you expecting to fire the first shot in the imminent nuclear war? Good night, and good luck. Sooner or later, this happens. The smoke came out of that particular brass lamp about the time Leo Slizard saw the phosphors on his display screen light up, and realized that H.G. Wells' story "The World Set Free" was a very profound, and terribly accurate, prophecy. I think we are about to head into that "great deal of trouble'" as Slizard called it. Pat |
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On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 03:57:37 -0700, Dale wrote:
On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 01:25:52 -0500, Pat Flannery wrote: I think there's around a two-in-three chance that we are going to be in a nuclear war with North Korea inside of a year. I'm about to go to bed. It's always nice to read a cheerful note just before ;-) North Korea has so far demonstrated that they can neither launch a long-range missile nor detonate a nuclear weapon successfully. Who are you expecting to fire the first shot in the imminent nuclear war? Dale Where is Janet Reno when you need her? ![]() So you think Kim is going to shoot himself in the foot, or worse? |
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On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 15:36:13 GMT, Alan Jones wrote:
So you think Kim is going to shoot himself in the foot, or worse? Oh, I don't know. He's managed to pretty much isolate himself himself from the rest of the world, save a few fellow nutters. The missile and nuclear programs can't be cheap, for a country as impoverished as North Korea is. I don't think we should ignore him- attention will probably pacify him a bit. I hope the cultural exchanges with the South can continue somehow. I think the solution will come from the North Korean people. I doubt they are a bunch of brainwashed robots. And the worse things get domestically, and the more irrational he becomes, the greater the chance some slightly more enlightened people in power will decide to get rid of him. He may well end up in some posh exile somewhere. Who knows? I just don't share Pat's notion that a nuclear war is coming soon. Should Kim lob a nuke off into the the Pacific with the intention of doing anybody harm, I suspect that a few days later North Korea will involuntarily become the 23rd (or 24th, depending on your view of Taiwan) province of China. And we won't say a thing. Dale |
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On Sun, 15 Oct 2006 23:32:19 -0700, Dale wrote:
I think the solution will come from the North Korean people. I doubt they are a bunch of brainwashed robots. The NK people in the military parade look robotic to me, or maybe just digitally created. And the worse things get domestically, and the more irrational he becomes, the greater the chance some slightly more enlightened people in power will decide to get rid of him. He may well end up in some posh exile somewhere. Who knows?\ I don't expect them to look at South Korea and say, "Yes, let's be a democracy". I don't expect Iran, et. al., to look at The Iraq democracy and say, "Yes, let's be like them." I just don't share Pat's notion that a nuclear war is coming soon. Should Kim lob a nuke off into the the Pacific with the intention of doing anybody harm, I suspect that a few days later North Korea will involuntarily become the 23rd (or 24th, depending on your view of Taiwan) province of China. And we won't say a thing. I think the US people would say, "Thank you very much." Dale |
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![]() Dale wrote: I just don't share Pat's notion that a nuclear war is coming soon. Should Kim lob a nuke off into the the Pacific with the intention of doing anybody harm, I suspect that a few days later North Korea will involuntarily become the 23rd (or 24th, depending on your view of Taiwan) province of China. And we won't say a thing. I'd be more concerned about him taking a potshot at our forces in South Korea or Japan rather than the U.S. itself. Pat |
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Dale wrote:
What would the PRC want with the slag heap that used to be called North Korea after Kim pops a nuke (even a failed strike on the ROK, Japan, or U.S. territory)? Because even a miss that results in a detonation will mean our bombers and missiles will fly in reprisal. 20 or so minutes for a Trident-II from the NorPac patrol area.....6-8 hours for a B-52 or B-2 from CONUS with bombs and ALCMs. Even if Kim doesn't know (or care) some of his generals no doubt do. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 19:05:10 -0500, "Matt Wiser"
wrote: Dale wrote: What would the PRC want with the slag heap that used to be called North Korea after Kim pops a nuke (even a failed strike on the ROK, Japan, or U.S. territory)? Because even a miss that results in a detonation will mean our bombers and missiles will fly in reprisal. 20 or so minutes for a Trident-II from the NorPac patrol area.....6-8 hours for a B-52 or B-2 from CONUS with bombs and ALCMs. Even if Kim doesn't know (or care) some of his generals no doubt do. I think the point was that the PRK would try to beat us to the punch, just to save us the trouble, and save themselves from that bigger problem. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 19:05:10 -0500, "Matt Wiser" wrote:
What would the PRC want with the slag heap that used to be called North Korea after Kim pops a nuke (even a failed strike on the ROK, Japan, or U.S. territory)? Because even a miss that results in a detonation will mean our bombers and missiles will fly in reprisal. 20 or so minutes for a Trident-II from the NorPac patrol area.....6-8 hours for a B-52 or B-2 from CONUS with bombs and ALCMs. Even if Kim doesn't know (or care) some of his generals no doubt do. Although that could be done to set an example to others who might be considering the same move, rational deterrence probably wouldn't have much effect on the irrational. Turning North Korea into glass would affect our nearby allies. Hell, the fallout would probably carry to my house, near Seattle. We already get pollution from China here. In addition to the environmental consequences, think about how easily such a response could be spun into making the US the bad guys. Assuming we are rational, I don't think we'd respond in that way. I guess that may be a big assumption ![]() I post OT too much as it is. I'll just leave it with that. Dale Did OM write "make love, not war"? Pat's right- the end must be near :-) |
#10
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![]() "Matt Wiser" wrote in message ... Dale wrote: What would the PRC want with the slag heap that used to be called North Korea after Kim pops a nuke (even a failed strike on the ROK, Japan, or U.S. territory)? Because even a miss that results in a detonation will mean our bombers and missiles will fly in reprisal. 20 or so minutes for a Trident-II from the NorPac patrol area.....6-8 hours for a B-52 or B-2 from CONUS with bombs and ALCMs. Even if Kim doesn't know (or care) some of his generals no doubt do. Nukes are like Douglas Adams's Supernova Bomb. The known consequences of setting the bomb off are always going to be worse than the unknown consequences of not setting it off. |
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