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North Korea Continues Aggressive Actions

Posted by Booman, Booman Tribune at 3:26 PM on May 27, 2009.


One of the costs of committing troops to Iraq and Afghanistan is that we don't have the resources to effectively deal with this.

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When the U.S. military tries to explain the difficulty of using force to stop North Korea's development of nuclear weapons, the oddly poetic phrase it turns to is the "tyranny of proximity."

The phrase, which has been in the lexicon of the U.S. forces in South Korea for years, stems from the imposing array of conventional artillery that the North Koreans have dug into the hills just north of the demilitarized zone, a mere 30 miles from this capital city of 12 million. The nightmare scenario is that if the United States opts for a more forceful approach to curb North Korea's nuclear ambitions, the communist regime would retaliate not only against the 38,000 American troops stationed in South Korea, but also against South Korea itself...

...Estimates of the damage that could be inflicted by a North Korean attack range from bad to apocalyptic. Lee Yang Ho, defense minister during a similar nuclear crisis in 1994, said one computer simulation conducted during his term projected 1 million dead, including thousands of Americans.

"It is assumed that if the United States were to strike North Korea that the North Koreans would fight back," Lee said. "All industry would be destroyed, gas stations, power plants. This is such a densely populated area that even if North Korean artillery were not very accurate, anyplace you would hit there would be huge numbers of casualties."

U.S. military experts who have contemplated strikes on North Korea agree.

The current disagreement is caused by South Korea's decision to join in international efforts to prevent North Korea from importing or exporting nuclear technology. Given North Korea's desperate need for revenue of any type and their aggressive nuclear weapons program (they detonated a nuclear bomb last week), there is no country on Earth more likely to sell nuclear material to a terrorist organization (knowingly or unknowingly). Because Seoul cannot be protected from attack, we cannot take any military action against North Korea unless we are willing to see hundreds of thousands killed on our side alone.

If war broke out not from our choosing, but from some irrational act of the extremely paranoid and potentially unstable North Korean government, we would be woefully undermanned. And it is not unthinkable that any such conflict could go nuclear. The problem of North Korean behavior is not one of our making, but our unpreparedness is a direct result of the decision to wage the War on Terror as a war of invasion and occupation of foreign lands. We cannot wind down Iraq fast enough, and our surge in Afghanistan needs to be carefully evaluated with the threat of North Korea in mind.

Digg!

Tagged as: iraq, obama, military, afghanistan, north korea

Booman is the proprietor of the Booman Tribune.


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Note to "Booman"... (and AlterNet)
Posted by: Quannah on May 27, 2009 5:31 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is the second story in as many days that you have basically plagiarized work in your articles.

Yesterday, it was a story about Karl Rove's criticism of Sonia Sotomayor, with information on Rove that was lifted directly, word-for-word from wikipedia. No citation was given.

And now this story.

The first part of the story was lifted, word-for-word from Bloomberg news without citation given to them.

The second part of the article lifted directly from an L.A. Times story. No citation.

This is shoddy journalism. It's appalling to me, that someone who is being paid to write and post articles is not actually WRITING the article, but copying and pasting from other sources... without citing those sources.

The writers who do the work deserve to be given the credit for their work.

I will stop reading Booman's posted articles if this doesn't stop. It's completely unprofessional and anybody writing, whether on the internet or in other media, should be respectful of intellectual property.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Boo-hoo-hoo Posted by: cdmsr
In addition to Quannah pointing out your plagiarism...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on May 27, 2009 9:38 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...I'd point your blatant ignorance in quoting a source this stupid:

...North Korea threatened a military response to South Korean participation in a U.S.-led program to seize weapons of mass destruction...

Could alternet please at least look at the bullshit you're spewing, and at least post interesting opinion pieces instead of pretending you:

a) give a shit while selling "a web site about sex that treats you like a grown up*"

b) understand anything about current events?

There are plenty of folks with interesting opinions writing interesting pieces, regardless of their veracity. It makes for entertaining reading, or what progressive sites are good at. Stick with the program.

Thanks!

* going to credit the ad beside this post as alternet's tacit endorsement of carnal nation. Hello. Credit?

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» RE: "the ad beside this post" Posted by: RedAaron
WAR
Posted by: Chase Z on May 28, 2009 4:11 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This matter is cause of hunger in power and wealth. There will be no mre peace at all for the fact that nations are trying to be more competitive than the other which means noise! Daniel Hauser and his mother, Colleen Hauser, may have gone to Mexico to seek alternative treatments for his Hodgkins lymphoma, in lieu of chemotherapy. It probably took a few faxless payday loans to cover the trip. They've been urged by some not to get conventional treatment, but to try herbal remedies such as Essiac, by the Nemenhah Band Native American Spiritual group, and Essiac proponent and Hodgkins survivor Billy Best. (Best overcame the disease through alternative means.) There is a 95% chance of survival if Daniel undergoes chemotherapy. Granted, the treatment takes a lot of instant cash, but it almost guarantees that Daniel Hauser will live.

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Here we go again!!
Posted by: Jaipurr on May 28, 2009 4:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So the USA armed forces are too committed elsewhere, to address potential conflict in Korea?
Oh Boy! does all this sound familiar? - What the fuck right has the USA anyway, to be nvolved in any "conflict" in Korea, or any country other than its own? Here we go again - presumably to, once again, defend that lying bullshit known as "DEMOCRACY!!" When will this bloody country keep out of other people's countries and let them fuck up their own affairs! Has we learned NOTHING from Vietnam, Iraq, etc., etc.

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let China deal with it
Posted by: grmartin on May 28, 2009 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
China coddles nasty neighbours like N. Korea and Burma, maybe they should deal with the problems this encourages. The US approach is, as usual, not working.

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otto
Posted by: otto on May 28, 2009 5:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
point made...North Korea has been acting in an offensive way. But the whole process wasn't helped by Bush's rhetoric from the beginning, calling them "the axis of evil".

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US INVOLVEMENT IN MAINTAINING NORTH/SOUTH CONFLICT
Posted by: fma7 on May 28, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we look into the history of the us separation of korea and smashing of people's attemps at unification by the us government once again we see it is us with our murderous policies and intereststhat has created this present situation. why is it ok for the usa to set it's own client regimes with nuclear weapons. How come we are not sanctioning Israel with its rogue nuclear program outside of any governing body? Hypocrisy anyone?

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Bodyguard Of China
Posted by: melpol on May 28, 2009 8:10 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A North Korean army of over a million highly trained soldiers protects the Chinese border.They exist only as a buffer zone army. Unification of the Korean peninsular would move thousands of American forces to the Yalu River. They could quickly over throw the Chinese Communist government. China will never let its neighbor unify with the South. North korea is its bodyguard.

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» RE: Bodyguard Of China Posted by: laoma
Defend North Korea against U.S./U.N. imperialism!
Posted by: RedAaron on May 28, 2009 8:33 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
North Korea needs nuclear weapons in order to deter attack by the militarily far superior forces that threaten it without having to continue to divert a large portion of its resources to its own military. And North Koreans remember the destruction visited on their country, North and South, by U.S. aerial terrorists in 1950-1953.

While North Korea is perhaps capable of building a few nuclear weapons as a deterrent to imperialist attack, the U.S. has been violating the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty by not only not decreasing the aggressive potential of its own nuclear arsenal but increasing that potential by developing new, smaller, battlefield nukes such as "bunker busters".

It is the United Snakes of AmeriKKKa and its partner, Israel, that should be subjected to sanctions and embargo, not North Korea or Iran. But, given the existing power relations, such justified sanctions will probably have to take a form of asymmetric warfare that the world's real terrorists will denounce as "terrorism".

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How is this "alternative" news?
Posted by: daniel347x on May 28, 2009 9:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How is this story, suggesting only the need for military preparedness and a military response to the issues in North and South Korea, and alternative news story?

"AlterNet" officially advertises itself, and unofficially promotes itself with dozens of social cues every day, as an "alternative" media source.

This article, like many others, is a stark example of why, a long time ago, I ceased benefiting from AlterNet as an alternative media source.

If the New York Times is an alternative media source, then AlterNet is also an alternative media source, because this article could easily have appeared in the New York Times. If it had, it would not have been considered by almost anyone to be a progressive piece.

Dan Nissenbaum

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got a stupid observation here...
Posted by: ellie on May 28, 2009 12:21 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
nuke holding or making countries are taunting this administration to see what kind of reaction they get, kind of seeing if the class bully is still the bully after having their classroom or school changed...

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North korea, a paper tiger.
Posted by: IRIQUOIS227 on May 28, 2009 6:51 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
North Korea doesn't require any attention. In fact, by given it air time and other forms of media is putting a large light on a small rodent. They pose no military threat. In terms of Nukes, I'm sure the jews have plenty with that kind of range. Why give them the air time?

tedbohne

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This is all about...
Posted by: Quannah on May 28, 2009 9:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
political theater for North Korean consumption, and absolutely nothing to do with the "threat" from North Korea.

They are working out a succession plan in North Korea, Kim Jung Il being gravely ill, or, for all we know, he could already be dead. They want to show the North Korean people that they are still strong, and that the military are in control, and they can't be pushed around by the rest of the world.

They want to show the rest of the world that they aren't going to be pushed around, and they can enter any new negotiations from a position of strength, from their point of view.

Those same fear-mongering, war-mongering right-wing lunatics are the ones pushing the whole "threat" meme, and it's despicable.

North Korea poses no more threat now than it ever has. Smoke and mirrors. Political theater. Nothing more.

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