• Changing RCF's index page, please click on "Forums" to access the forums.

North Korea says Nuke Tests Target the US

Do Not Sell My Personal Information
This is just bluster by the DPRK to bring about international pressure to force American concessions and aid. Businesses around the world are actively investing in South Korea and China and the last thing they want to see is a destabilizing nuclear war that would likely wipe out Seoul completely, devastate millions, and drive countless refugees into China and South Korea.

American foreign policy is driven by corporate interest; so you'll see concessions coming soon.
 
I haven't chimed in on this yet.

Just a minute ago the BBC ran a panorama special using sectret footage shot on an 8 day student trip using an undercover reporter (how a middle-aged man got through the security checks i'll never know) any way its worth watching just to appreciate how incredibly desolate and poor acountry it is and how much those poor people and subjected to awful propaganda via PA 24/7. Check it out it will be on various pirate places etc.. possibly even BBCA.

As far as nuclear war is concerned its called mutually assured destruction for a reason, He is crazy but surely his prevailing aim is that of all powerful men, maintain power. Killing his country is not a good strategy
 
Dennis Rodman, peacemaker

Wait...

What?

http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2013/04/15/dennis-rodman-now-an-fbi-informant-on-north-korea/

Dennis Rodman Now An FBI Informant On North Korea
April 15, 2013 9:44 AM

After a successful stay in the Communist country in February, where he was filming a documentary for HBO, Rodman told the Miami Herald he’s been approached by the FBI to work as an informant on North Korean activity.

“I have been contacted by the FBI and I met with them. They wanted to know what went on and who’s really in charge in North Korea,” Rodman said.

While in North Korea, Rodman called Kim Jong-un “a friend for life” and now said he’s been invited back to North Korea in August.

“I’m not a total idiot,” Rodman said. “I know what Kim Jong-un is threatening to do regarding his military muscle. I hope it doesn’t happen because America will take whatever actions to protect America and our allies.”


So what can Rodman do to help?

“I do think, you know, that we have to talk to people who want to cause us harm so hopefully they won’t,” he said. “I’ve been talking to folks for years who don’t get what I’m about but that’s cool, because once they walk away they like me.

I might be able to keep folks’ heads cool. We all going to find a way to get along and keep peace. Peace and love is where it is at, Lesley.”
 
Who the hell is Lesley?

leslie_nielsen.jpg
 
HOME > AP > TOP NEWS

Updated: 8:14 p.m. Friday, April 26, 2013 | Posted: 8:13 p.m. Friday, April 26, 2013

NKorea says it will indict American citizen

The Associated Press
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea says it will soon indict an American detained for alleged hostile acts against the country.

A report from the official Korean Central News Agency on Saturday didn't say when Kenneth Bae's trial will occur.

Bae's indictment comes amid high tension between Pyongyang and Washington, with North Korea intensifying its war rhetoric against the United States and South Korea.

Bae is the sixth American detained in North Korea since 2009. U.S. citizens detained in North Korea often have been released following visits by high-profile Americans, including former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter.

A North Korean official earlier told The Associated Press that Bae will likely get a harsh punishment — possibly the death penalty — for an alleged attempt to overthrow Pyongyang's government.

Copyright The Associated Press

http://www.kirotv.com/news/ap/top-news/nkorea-says-it-will-indict-american-citizen/nXZJ6/

Shit guys.
 
Won't happen. If and I mean a BIG IF they were stupid enough to order his execution, he'd be removed from the country within 24 hours of the announcement.

I guarantee you, if they were stupid enough to execute the man, we wouldn't do anything about it. It isn't that we couldn't. It's that the South Koreans would be furious if we started a war over one man, who shouldn't have been there in the first place. As somone who lives in a possible blast zone, I seriously question why this guy Bae was in the DPRK at all? As an American, he should've known what to expect.
 
I guarantee you, if they were stupid enough to execute the man, we wouldn't do anything about it. It isn't that we couldn't. It's that the South Koreans would be furious if we started a war over one man, who shouldn't have been there in the first place. As somone who lives in a possible blast zone, I seriously question why this guy Bae was in the DPRK at all? As an American, he should've known what to expect.

There wouldn't have to be a war started over one man, though. I was surprised to see your name attached to this post. We wouldn't do anything about it? Really? You don't honestly believe that. Obama would be crucified if he sat on his hands after an execution like this. The Country would demand swift retribution.

Maybe Bae had some seriously poor judgement, but that's no reason to dismiss such a potentially volatile situation. You don't sweep it under the rug.

We wouldn't have to start a "war" but I guarantee there would be a hammer dropped on these idiots. you don't let something like that just get swept under the rug.
 
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a7154272-b702-11e2-a249-00144feabdc0.html

Bank of China stops business with North Korean bank
May 7, 2013 1:28 pm By Simon Rabinovitch in Beijing and Simon Mundy in Seoul

The Bank of China has stopped doing business with a large North Korean bank, falling into line with a US-led sanctions push to restrict funding for Pyongyang’s nuclear programme.

The decision to close the bank account follows an increase in tensions on the Korean peninsula and may be a sign that Beijing is willing to place more pressure on Pyongyang.

The US Treasury hit the Foreign Trade Bank, North Korea’s main foreign exchange bank, with sanctions in March, saying it was “a key financial node” in North Korea’s nuclear and missile proliferation activities. The bank had not been named among the institutions targeted for asset freezes by expanded UN Security Council sanctions introduced in January and March.

Other countries such as Japan and Australia have since joined the US in applying sanctions against Foreign Trade Bank, but co-operation from banks in China, North Korea’s closest economic partner, is essential in the efforts to choke off cash flows.

A drive to “put pressure on Beijing to pressure Pyongyang” needs to be at the heart of Washington’s policy on North Korea, according to Kurt Campbell, until February the US assistant secretary of state for east Asia.

“Bank of China has sent North Korea’s Foreign Trade Bank a notice that it has closed its account and has also halted all fund transfers related to this account,” Bank of China said on Tuesday. It declined to provide any details about how much money was affected or the timing of the move.


Bank of China is the country’s biggest bank for foreign exchange transactions, so the account closure could hurt the North Korean institution. But the impact is likely to be minimal unless imposed across the board by all Chinese banks because other institutions, including small regional entities, are also capable of handling foreign currency deals.

“This is part of a ratcheting up of pressure but with very clear limits. This is part of making North Korea feel some limited pain in an attempt to get them back to talks,” said Stephanie Kleine-Ahlbrandt, northeast Asia director at the International Crisis Group.

The move by Bank of China may also reflect risk management by the bank itself rather than bigger diplomatic motives. The US Treasury had warned financial institutions around the world to be wary of the risks of doing business with Foreign Trade Bank.

In 2006 after the US imposed sanctions on Banco Delta Asia, a Macau bank that held North Korean funds, Bank of China responded in similar fashion by freezing North Korean-related assets at its Macau branch.

China is by far North Korea’s most important formal ally, and overwhelmingly its biggest trading partner. Yet the alliance, which dates back to the Korean war, has long been strained. Analysts say that Pyongyang has persistently refused Chinese attempts to encourage it to emulate Beijing’s sweeping economic reforms, and China has grown increasingly alarmed by the regional security implications of North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme.

Earlier this year Beijing endorsed two sets of new UN Security Council sanctions against Pyongyang, following its long-range rocket launch in December and nuclear bomb test in February. Last month China’s President Xi Jinping said that “no country should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gains” – a comment widely interpreted as a rebuke of North Korea.

Many Chinese businesses maintain close trading relationships with North Korea, giving the country access to vital commodities and hard cash.
 
There wouldn't have to be a war started over one man, though. I was surprised to see your name attached to this post. We wouldn't do anything about it? Really? You don't honestly believe that. Obama would be crucified if he sat on his hands after an execution like this. The Country would demand swift retribution.

Maybe Bae had some seriously poor judgement, but that's no reason to dismiss such a potentially volatile situation. You don't sweep it under the rug.

We wouldn't have to start a "war" but I guarantee there would be a hammer dropped on these idiots. you don't let something like that just get swept under the rug.

What would we do? What could we do that would not evoke a response against the South Koreans?

Knowing Obama, I don't think he would do anything but increase sanctions, and that's the truth. Maybe another President, sure. Bush? Certainly. But Obama is very careful and strategic when it comes to the use of force. He would not risk an all-out confrontation for one man who, for all intents and purposes, should not have been there to begin with.

Also it is unlike that the United States would have international support to rescue, or get retribution against the DPRK, for a single individual captured on their side of the border. There are many interests involved in this situation, financially, that do not want to see escalation of tensions between North and South Korea.
 
Last edited:

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Video

Episode 3-14: "Time for Playoff Vengeance on Mickey"

Rubber Rim Job Podcast Spotify

Episode 3:14: " Time for Playoff Vengeance on Mickey."
Top