China IS the solution to this. IF China said to North Korea knock off the BS or we're coming down there and visit in force. You'd see NK with it's tail between it's legs.
NK gets the majority of everything it imports from China. China closes it's border and NK runs out of everything very shortly. And they can't even think about starting trouble. A five million man army sounds large. But they would have to resort to clubs and knives after about a week and that is what would be the only things NOT out of ammo.
China wants to show their statesmanship (and exercise their power). This is the time and place.
2006-10-10 04:15:56
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answer #1
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answered by namsaev 6
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I don't know if you're trying to be funny or not. One of the most dangerous and unpredictable dictators in the world has nuclear weapons and you're worried about a sports game? It's possible there wont be a bloody Beijing next year or anywhere else for that matter.
2006-10-10 10:58:17
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answer #2
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answered by E=MC2 3
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China & North Korea are ALLIES!!!!!!!!
China is pulling the strings of North Korea in its bellicose, nuclear-armed defiance of the United States, reports the latest issue of G2 Bulletin, the online, subscription intelligence resource created by Joseph Farah, the founder of WorldNetDaily.
"North Korea is a small neighbor to China," says the report. "It could not be threatening the U.S. with nuclear missiles, as it is, without at least China's tacit support. Clearly, North Korea and China are allies. The Chinese want Taiwan. The North Koreans want South Korea. The only nation preventing both goals is the U.S."
As late as Friday, a top North Korean official warned the United States again that it now had the capability of hitting the world's lone superpower with intercontinental ballistic missiles armed with nuclear warheads.
G2 Bulletin reports that a secret deal between Washington and Beijing calls for China not to veto a new U.N. resolution authorizing force on Iraq in return for a pledge from Washington not to attack North Korea.
Though China knows the U.S. is not going to launch a pre-emptive strike against North Korea without provocation and the U.S. knows China is not going to veto the U.N. resolution, G2 Bulletin's source says this agreement is a way for Beijing to let the West know that Pyongyang is part of its geo-strategic orbit by acting as its protectorate as well as assuming a higher profile internationally.
"Could it be North Korea is not so much a 'rogue' state, as U.S. diplomats describe it, as it is a strategic ally of China?" asks G2 Bulletin.
North Korea's Kim Jong-Il visited both Moscow and Beijing in the last half of 2002, the report points out. Jiang Zemin and Vladimir Putin both visited Kim in Pyongyang last year, too.
"China and North Korea negotiated expanded trade agreements – very one-sided agreements because North Korea has nothing China needs," reports G2 Bulletin. "Meanwhile, Russia and North Korea prepared the new Friendship and Cooperation Treaty, and North Korea got greater access to Russian weaponry. In the context of those meetings and those agreements, North Korea hardly looks like a rogue state at all. It looks more like a significant component of a growing Russian-Chinese alliance."
U.S. officials are concerned that North Korea could export plutonium from its nuclear weapons program, as well as weapon-design data, to Iran and other Middle East nations willing to pay for it. In the worst-case scenario, the Koreans move forward with the production of nuclear bombs and then stockpile enough to have a surplus for sale to the highest bidders.
What can be done about this? Precious little, say G2 Bulletin intelligence sources.
"North Korea is already thought to have the ability of hitting U.S. West Coast targets with nuclear missiles," the report says. "Recently, a North Korean warhead from a test-fire was reportedly found in Alaska. Should the U.S launch a pre-emptive strike on North Korea's nuclear facilities, it would have no defense against a limited nuclear attack. The U.S. has no missile defense system."
In addition, North Korea also threatens to launch a conventional invasion of South Korea, a war that could cost the U.S. tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of casualties.
"It seems China, and Russia, don't have much to lose in backing North Korea's bellicose stand against the U.S." concludes G2 Bulletin. "Not much to lose and, perhaps, plenty to gain."
2006-10-10 10:59:05
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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the koreans have only tested a small prototype.
we have loads of the real thing. ready to go.
the evil emperor george has more.
and confusius alone knows how many the chinks have got.
so you are right...fcuk it let concentrate on a ball game.
2006-10-10 12:06:02
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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if North korea go against us that is too harmful too much us can take action against N korea its confirm
2006-10-10 11:34:40
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answer #5
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answered by name of spritual tantra horr0r 3
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If there is anyone that stands to make a profit from it, it will happen. People put money over politics everytime.
2006-10-10 11:03:34
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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