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M4arc
07-06-06, 09:00
I'm surprised we haven't had a North Korea thread yet.

This has the potential to get very ugly considering Russia and China are basically giving them a free pass and not putting any pressure on their buddy Kim.


SEOUL, South Korea - A defiant
North Korea on Thursday threatened to test-fire more missiles and warned of even stronger action if opponents of the tests put pressure on the country, amid signs of further activity at the reclusive regime's launch sites.
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In a bid to coordinate strategy,
President Bush held separate telephone talks with the leaders of Japan,
South Korea and China on North Korea.

The further show of bravado by Pyongyang came amid intense diplomatic jockeying by the United States and its allies to prod the
U.N. Security Council to take stern action against the North's seven missile tests Wednesday.

In its first statement on the launches, North Korea's Foreign Ministry insisted the communist state had the right to test its missiles and argued the weapons were needed for defense.

"The successful missile launches were part of our military's regular military drills to strengthen self-defense," said the statement, which was carried by the state-run Korean Central News Agency. "As a sovereign country, this is our legal right and we are not bound by any international law or bilateral or multilateral agreements."

The statement did not mention the apparent failure of the most advanced missile it tested, the long-range Taepodong-2, which security officials say aborted less than a minute after takeoff.

The ministry also appeared to confirm mounting fears in South Korea that the North was preparing for further launches. South Korean officials said intelligence showed continued activity at Northern missile sites, though at least one official said another launch was not imminent.

The Bush administration dismissed North Korea's threat to test more missiles.

"We're certainly not going to overreact ... to these wild statements out of Pyongyang and North Korea," said Undersecretary of State R. Nicholas Burns. "We've seen them before."

Pyongyang vowed to retaliate against efforts to interfere with the launches, but it did not specify what it would do.

"Our military will continue with missile launch drills in the future as part of efforts to strengthen self-defense deterrent. If anyone intends to dispute or add pressure about this, we will have to take stronger physical actions in other forms," the statement said.

At the
United Nations, splits emerged among the critics of the North's testing program. China, the North's closest ally, and Russia, which has been trying to re-establish Soviet-era ties with Pyongyang, said only diplomacy could halt North Korea's nuclear and rocket development programs.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned against threatening North Korea with sanctions, saying this would provoke a hostile response from Pyongyang.

"We call for a balanced position because attempts to immediately talk of threats will provoke threats in return from North Korea, as has happened before," Lavrov said in Moscow. "Then, in any case, you have to return to negotiations, but already in a much tenser atmosphere."

Japan, within range of North Korean missiles, circulated a U.N. Security Council resolution Wednesday that would ban any country from transferring funds, material and technology that could be used in North Korea's missile and weapons of mass destruction programs.

China and Russia countered that they favor a weaker council statement without any threat of sanctions. Both countries hold veto power on the council.

Council experts were to meet again Thursday morning and council ambassadors may then meet in the afternoon to review progress, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the session was closed.

Japanese officials said Tokyo and Washington agreed to push for sanctions against Pyongyang, while South Korean officials said they agreed only to cooperate in diplomacy, with no mention of punishing North Korea. No details of the conversation between Bush and Chinese President
Hu Jintao were released in a brief dispatch carried by the official Xinhua News Agency.

Chief U.S. nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill was to head to the region this week. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice also planned to visit South Korea in late July for talks on North Korea, South Korea's Foreign Ministry said.

In addition, China's Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei will travel to North Korea next week to urge a return to the stalled six-party nuclear disarmament talks, the ministry said.

The report also said that Wu had proposed bilateral U.S.-North Korean talks, and said the missile launches were probably in reaction to a U.S. crackdown on alleged North Korean counterfeiting, money-laundering and other wrongdoing.

The missiles, all of which apparently fell harmlessly into the sea, provoked international condemnation, the convening of an emergency meeting of the Security Council and calls in Japan for economic sanctions. Japan's ruling party was set to give rapid consideration to a bill to impose the sanctions, but the measure would not be implemented until a fall session of parliament.

South Korean media reported Thursday, meanwhile, that North Korea has three or four more missiles on launch pads and ready for firing. The North has also barred people from sailing into some areas off the coast until July 11 in a possible sign of preparations for additional launches, Chosun Ilbo newspaper said.

South Korea's National Intelligence Service "is closely watching the situation by keeping in mind that North Korea could fire a missile after repairing a technical defect," Choi Jun-taek, a senior official at the agency, told the National Assembly, according to agency spokesman Choi Jae-kun. The spokesman, however, said another missile test isn't imminent, adding it will take time for the country to repair the glitches.

The Japanese government also said there were no immediate signs of long-range missile launch.

Despite the rise in tensions, South Korean officials said they had no plans to abandon their strategy of trying to forge stronger ties with Pyongyang. While Seoul condemned the missile tests, it has also called for "patient dialogue" rather than sanctions in response.

Bush has urged world leaders to stand united in demanding that North Korea give up its nuclear weapons program, saying the communist nation remains a threat even though its long-range missile faltered. The U.S. administration said North Korea's barrage of seven test missiles further walled off the reclusive nation from the rest of the world.

"One thing we have learned is that the rocket didn't stay up very long and tumbled into the sea, which doesn't, frankly, diminish my desire to solve this problem," Bush said.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060706/ap_on_re_as/nkorea_missiles

Nathan_Bell
07-06-06, 15:33
Need to develope a better drop vehicle for
http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/app5/moab.html

and then start hitting their missiles on their launch pads.

Ice Cream Man
07-06-06, 18:16
Japan, within range of North Korean missiles, circulated a U.N. Security Council resolution Wednesday that would ban any country from transferring funds, material and technology that could be used in North Korea's missile and weapons of mass destruction programs.

China and Russia countered that they favor a weaker council statement without any threat of sanctions. Both countries hold veto power on the council.


This part of the article explains the whole stance as far as China and Russia goes because, they are the ones that have been selling North Korea all the materials for the missles and the nuclear technology.

I don't think any of this will stop unless we or Japan takes action or China and Russia puts pressure on them to stop.

Cyclic240B
07-10-06, 22:28
bahhh, they are broke as it is, let'm keep firing them off. A few thousand launches later and they might be where we were in.....1955. Now if one is steady tracking towards an American piece of realestate, shoot it down, if one of them hits "US", nuke'm. :D

M4arc
07-11-06, 13:48
bahhh, they are broke as it is, let'm keep firing them off. A few thousand launches later and they might be where we were in.....1955. Now if one is steady tracking towards an American piece of realestate, shoot it down, if one of them hits "US", nuke'm. :D

More importantly than protecting ourselves in this matter is how we react and protect our friends in the area, like Japan.

If we can't prove to them that they can rely on us to protect them they will lose faith in us.