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Bush's Tough-Talkin' Korean Bungle

By Robert Parry, Consortium News. Posted October 11, 2006.


In 2002, Bush put North Korea on a list of potential targets for U.S. nuclear weapons. It's no surprise, then, that Kim Jong Il has responded by creating a threat of his own.

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Months before 9/11 and the "global war on terror" -- and two years before the Iraq War -- George W. Bush tested out his tough-talkin' diplomacy on communist North Korea. Bush combined harsh rhetoric and intimidating tactics to demonstrate to Pyongyang that there was a swaggering new sheriff in town.

In his first weeks in office, Bush cast aside the Clinton administration's delicate negotiations that had hemmed in North Korea's nuclear ambitions. The new president then brushed aside worries of Secretary of State Colin Powell and South Korean President Kim Dae Jung about dangerous consequences from a confrontation.

At a March 2001 summit, Bush rejected Kim Dae Jung's détente strategy for dealing with North Korea, a humiliation for both Kim, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, and Powell, who wanted to continue pursuing the negotiation track. Instead, Bush cut off nuclear talks with North Korea and stepped up spending on a "Star Wars" missile shield.

After the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, Bush got tougher still, vowing to "rid the world of evil" and listing North Korea as part of the "axis of evil."

More substantively, Bush sent to Congress a "nuclear posture review," which laid out future U.S. strategy for deploying nuclear weapons. Leaked in 2002, the so-called NPR put North Korea on a list of potential targets for U.S. nuclear weapons.

The Bush administration also discussed lowering the threshold for the use of U.S. nuclear weapons by making low-yield tactical nukes available for some battlefield situations.

By putting North Korea on the nuclear target list, Bush reversed President Clinton's commitment against targeting non-nuclear states with nuclear weapons. Clinton's idea was that a U.S. promise not to nuke non-nuclear states would reduce their incentives for joining the nuclear club.

But to Bush and his neoconservative advisers, Clinton's assurance that non-nuclear states wouldn't be nuked was just another example of Clinton's appeasement of U.S. adversaries. By contrast, Bush was determined to bring these "evil" states to their knees.

In March 2002, however, Pyongyang signaled how it would react, warning of "strong countermeasures" against Bush's nuclear policy shifts.

North Korea accused the Bush administration of "an inhuman plan to spark a global nuclear arms race" and warned that it would "not remain a passive onlooker" after being put on the Pentagon's list of nuclear targets.

A commentary by the official Korean Central News Agency cited Bush's threat in the context of the U.S. nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945.

"If the U.S. intends to mount a nuclear attack on any part of the D.P.R.K. (North Korea) just as it did on Hiroshima, it is grossly mistaken," the communiqué read.

In March 2002, the New York Times reported that "North Korea threatened ... to withdraw from the [1994 nuclear suspension] agreement if the Bush administration persisted with what North Korea called a 'hard-line' policy that differed from the Clinton administration's approach. North Korea also renewed its complaints against delays in construction of two nuclear reactors promised in the 1994 agreement to fulfill its energy needs." (NYT, March 14, 2002)

The North Koreans were telegraphing how they would respond to Bush's nuclear saber-rattling. They would create a nuclear threat of their own.

But Bush was in no mood to seek accommodation with North Korea. During one lectern-pounding tirade before congressional Republicans in May 2002, Bush denounced North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il as a "pygmy" and "a spoiled child at a dinner table," Newsweek magazine reported.

Clearly, North Korea was on Bush's menu for "regime change," but it wasn't the first course. The "Bush Doctrine" of preemptive wars was to have its first test in Iraq, where Saddam Hussein, along with his two sons and top associates, would face elimination.

Worrying signs

By early July 2002, U.S. intelligence agencies had picked up evidence that North Korea had acquired key equipment for enriching uranium.

"On Sept. 12, [2002], the same day Mr. Bush addressed the U.N. about the dangers posed by Iraq, the president met quietly in New York with Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to brief him on the U.S. intelligence findings about North Korea," the Wall Street Journal reported. (WSJ, Oct. 18, 2002)

In early October 2002, U.S. diplomats confronted Pyongyang with this evidence and were surprised when North Korean leaders admitted that they were working on building nuclear weapons.

Despite North Korea's public warnings seven months earlier, official Washington was stunned. Many analysts puzzled over what might have caused Pyongyang to violate its earlier promises about suspending its nuclear program and then admit to it. Bush formally canceled the 1994 agreement.

For its part, North Korea issued a press release at the United Nations on Oct. 25, 2002, explaining its reasoning. The statement cited both Bush's "axis of evil" rhetoric and the administration's decision to target North Korea for a possible preemptive nuclear strike.

"This was a clear declaration of war against the D.P.R.K. as it totally nullified" the 1994 agreement, the North Korean statement read. "Nobody would be so naïve as to think that the D.P.R.K. would sit idle under such a situation. ... The D.P.R.K., which values sovereignty more than life, was left with no other proper answer to the U.S. behaving so arrogantly and impertinently."

Bush's supporters blamed North Korea's defiance on Clinton, arguing that his 1994 agreement to stop North Korea's nuclear program was too weak. According to aides, Bush said he would never go down the path of compromise that Clinton followed. North Korea "would not be rewarded for bad behavior," Bush aides told reporters. (NYT, Oct. 26, 2002)

Amid Bush's stratospheric poll numbers in fall 2002, few Washington voices dared challenge the Bush administration's finger-pointing at Clinton.

Iraq lesson

What then happened in Iraq only reinforced North Korea's thinking. Despite Saddam Hussein's assurances that he had no weapons of mass destruction and his granting permission to U.N. inspectors to search any suspicious site, Bush simply ignored the U.N.'s negative findings and invaded anyway on March 19, 2003.

Within three weeks, U.S. forces routed the overmatched Iraqi army and toppled Hussein's government. Later, Hussein's two sons were hunted down and killed by U.S. troops, and the Iraqi dictator was captured.

Humiliating photos of Hussein being examined by doctors and sitting in his underwear were distributed around the world. He was then put on trial in Iraq -- rather than before an international tribunal at The Hague -- so the proceedings could end with his execution by hanging, an expected outcome that Bush relished.

The war's consequences for Iraqis over the past three years also have been horrific. Tens of thousands of Iraqis -- men, women and children -- have died; the once-prosperous country has sunk into chaos and poverty; ethnic cleansing and a bloody civil war have begun.

While Bush may have intended the Iraq war to be an object lesson about the futility of defying his will, some American adversaries learned something else -- that disarmament and cooperation with the United Nations are for suckers.

After all, Hussein had complied with U.N. demands for eliminating his stockpiles of unconventional weapons and had forsaken active development of nuclear weapons. He even agreed to unfettered U.N. inspections.

Hussein's reward was to see his two sons killed, his country ravaged, and the almost certain end of his own life coming as he dangles from the end of a rope, rather than his request that he die before a firing squad.

So, instead of cowering before Bush and his Doctrine, North Korea pressed ahead with its nuclear program, claiming to have detonated a small nuclear device on Oct. 9.

U.S. reaction

Bush responded to the news with more threats and more tough rhetoric, calling the explosion a "provocative act" and "a threat to international peace and security."

For their part, Democrats argued that Bush's Iraq war had distracted the United States from addressing the worse threat from North Korea.

"What it tells you is that we started at the wrong end of the 'axis of evil'" said former Democratic Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia. "We started with the least dangerous of the countries, Iraq, and we knew it at the time. And now we have to deal with that." (NYT, Oct. 10, 2006)

Another lesson that could be drawn from Bush's cowboy rhetoric is that tough-talkin' diplomacy may play well with loudmouth TV pundits, newspaper columnists and radio hosts. But it doesn't necessarily serve America's national security interests very well.

In a Consortiumnews.com story entitled "Deeper Into the Big Muddy," published nearly four years ago on Oct. 27, 2002, I wrote:

"As world leaders have known for centuries, belligerent words and bellicose actions can have real consequences. Sometimes, potential enemies take hostile gestures more seriously than they are meant and events spiral out of control. That's what appears to have happened with North Korea's nuclear bomb program. ...

"Potential enemies may come to think that the best way to protect their nations against Bush's unilateralist policies and threats of invasions is to quickly add a nuclear bomb or two to the arsenal."

In the past four years, Bush's tough-talkin' diplomacy has led the United States ever deeper -- now neck deep -- into the "big muddy."

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See more stories tagged with: bush, foreign, policy, north, korea, nuclear, president, diplomacy, bomb, threat, arms, kim, dae, jung

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book is "Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq."

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uncanny
Posted by: rsaxto on Oct 11, 2006 1:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bushies have an uncanny knack of doing the wrong thing in all circumstances with all issues. They have created more death instead of less. They have created more nuke countries instead of less. They have created more lies and propaganda instead of less. They made the New Orleans disaster worse instead of less. They have made global warming worse instead of less. They have poisoned America more instead of less. They have made people more afraid instead of less. They have made oil prices higher instead of less. They made cars more gas guzzling instead less. Get these incompetant morons out of office sooner instead of later.

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» uncanny - that appeasment got us here! Posted by: Conservasaurus
'Hey Bush dude!: Read Kim Jong Ill's Army centered thought'
Posted by: Bobsays on Oct 11, 2006 3:43 AM   
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I bought it last year from some of Kim's flunkies while on a work trip in Asia. It details exactly what he' s up to, how he sees the world and why he will push the US to the wall on this.

Problem is this: Bush don't read books. In fact, US military decision makers don't read the books of their enemies and thus make the same strategic mistakes over and over again. Just like in the Vietnam War, when US commanders wouldn't pick up Mao's Red Book to even learn what the Vietcong were up to, we have idiot decision makers jumping into conflict blind to how their enemies see things.

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And McCain supports the Bush/Limbaughian idea of letting NK build WMDs just like Pakistan !
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 11, 2006 4:59 AM   
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As Georges Santayana said..sickofsleaze
Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com on Oct 11, 2006 5:33 AM   
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Those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Tho Bush has a BS in history, he not only didn't learn anything, he is charting a new course in wrong. At risk of being called a Commie sympathizer, Bush pushed both North Korea and Iran into their accelerated nuke program. They are only doing what any country would when faced with a madman like Bush. Bully Bush is making a bad situation worse every time he opens his mouth

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sickofsleaze
Posted by: ladybug1@carrollsweb.com on Oct 11, 2006 6:30 AM   
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Just read on Yahoo! that Rice says US will not invade Korea. Of course we won't, Bush will just bomb it to bugdust.

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» RE: sickofsleaze Posted by: symcokid
Why They Want Nukes
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 11, 2006 6:42 AM   
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No, at this point the USA will not invade North Korea. An air bursting nuclear bomb over Seoul or Tokyo from North Korea would be the likely result. Millions would die. The USA clearly knows this and even Rice herself has said the USA will not invade. So you see now why they want nukes?

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Let's think this through, people
Posted by: Jesse on Oct 11, 2006 7:00 AM   
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First, there is no solid evidence that the DPRK even has nukes--there is a very real possibility they are just posturing.

Second, let's assume they do have them. What does that get them? Well, perhaps a guarantee that the US won't invade. Remember, within living memory they have had a war with the US, and it didn't go all that well for us or for them. But beyond that, there is no realistic scenario I can think of where the DPRK "wins" a war or conflict with anyone else, nukes or no.

Why not? Look at it this way: I will assume everything the administration(s) have said about the DPRK is true, so the country is

a) starving (lots of evidence for this)
b) has no allies (even the Chinese have distanced themselves)
c) has to resort to selling drugs to finance its government (a pretty poor method because a modern military is not cheap)
d) has no real clue about the outside world (jury's out on that one)

Now, the North Koreans have tried to buy various kinds of military hardware from different nations, which means they don't make it at home. Think on that for a minute. If a war of any kind starts on the Korean peninsula, who will sell vital parts to the DPRK? How will they fuel their trucks, and feed the army for more than a short time? Tanks don't go anywhere minus the gas. And if the above four statements are true, the Koreans would not last long in any war with anybody, especially a well-trained South Korean army, plus 30,000 US troops, with essentially unlimited fuel supplies and better food. Remember, the DPRK would be in the position of invader and wouldn't be running a guerilla campaign. And they would not likely be greeted with flowers.

Oh yeah-- the last time there was a war the Chinese helped Kim Jong Il's dad out. This time they won't.

Now, you say "The DPRK's Leader is nuts and will use nukes on everyone around" Maybe. But that assumes he is so daft that he cares nothing for personal survival. He has demonstrated, I think, that he is anything but. His moves are all quite rational, when looked at from the standpoint of preventing a US invasion.

DPRK fires one off at South Korea and Pyongyang is a sheet of glass. DPRK fires one at Japan and the same thing happens. Is there any realistic scenario where Kim wins? He doesn't have the ability to fire anything at the US, and doesn't really have the ability to project power much beyond his borders either. A missile doesn't cut it when the other guy has an aircraft carrier fleet (the US) and can ship troops to your door when you cannot do the same to him.

The NRA always tells us that if everyone had a concealed weapons there would be no gun deaths because no one would dare shoot. OK, lets take that logic to nukes. If everyone has them, wouldn't everyone be more polite, as it were? George Orwell posited something similar more than 50 years ago.

In any case, the real problem with the Bush administration is just that—not thinking things through. And for those who shout “appeasement” – exactly what were we appeasing the DPRK with? It isn’t like they got billions in aid—more like a few million at most—and it isn’t like they got a lot of technological help (nuclear technology is, in many ways, essentially public information. Of course, building a weapon is not that simple, but the basic theories and physics are available to everyone). Nor is their military or diplomatic position a whit better than 4 years ago—if anything it’s worse because the Chinese have basically told them off.

So what have we got? What exactly can the DPRK threaten anyone with? I don't see much, unless Kim Jong Il is suidcidal.

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The Equation for North Korea
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 11, 2006 7:35 AM   
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There is pretty solid evidence that North Korea has nukes as strong seismographic activity had indicated an underground nuclear explosion in North Korea. Next, the USA downplays the strength of the explosion to perhaps half a kiloton, but other countries, including Russia, say the explosion was really closer to 5 or 6 kilotons. There is a very real possibility then that the USA is saying the explosion was "small" by nuclear standards because it does not want to appear to be giving "respect" to North Korea or further strengthen the North's bargaining position. Next, it is very easy for the North to hold hostage the populations of South Korea and Japan. They don't have to possess a missle capable of hitting the US mainland to do this at all. Lastly, Bush has shown that it is necessary for countries to possess nuclear bombs if they are going to prevent US pressure or an invasion. Iraq did not have them and was invaded, Iran is desperately trying to develop them to forestall US pressure and a probable invasion. Bush therefore has accelerated the desire and drive for nations to acquire WMD's. In this respect, the North's posession of nukes is a defensive measure. As for being "suicidal," in behavior, the North Koreans have probably calculated well what they need to do to extract "concessions," such as food and supplies from other countries. The best way to deal with them then is to engage them. But, another failure of the Bush regime, the attempt to isolate the North only drives her to more provocative behaviors.

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Bush will do nothing in Korea
Posted by: james2021 on Oct 11, 2006 8:31 AM   
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And why, The have no OIL, no way for Halliburton to make more millions, so Nothing will be done. Bush is too busy planning on invading Iran who does have OIL, and lots of it. OIL is what motivates this administration, If you have it, we will take it. The new bumper sticker, You got OIL, we got Troops.

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» RE: Bush will do nothing in Korea Posted by: Kenneth E. Madrulli
World War W
Posted by: rwa on Oct 11, 2006 11:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
by Michael Carmichael

North Korea’s detonation of a nuclear device reveals the latest failure of the foreign policy of the George W. Bush and Richard Cheney administration. When Bush and Cheney took office in January 2001, they inherited mature negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang designed to achieve the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons. At that time, Bush and Cheney took the momentously wrong decision to abandon the non-proliferation negotiations with North Korea that had been in place for six years in the vain hope that the regime of Kim Jong-Il would be nice, do the right thing and decide voluntarily not to develop nuclear weapons.

Bush, Cheney, Rice and Rumsfeld followed this same pattern in developing their foreign policy for the Middle East. They inherited advanced peace negotiations between the Barak government of Israel and the Palestinian Authority, but the Bush-Cheney White House chose, instead, to abandon the Middle East peace process. The results? 9/11, 7/7, the Madrid and Bali bombings and two wars between Israel, the Palestinians and Hizbullah.

Still unable to bring themselves to exercise diplomacy, the Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld-Rice administration is now preparing to broaden America’s military activities in the Middle East in anticipation of a wider, more engulfing and, perhaps, even global war - World War W...

...George W. Bush’s presidency is deeply unpopular in America, and it is disastrously unpopular throughout the rest of the world. Faced with the probability that Bush will lose power through the midterm elections, the Republicans have been grasping at straws in pursuit of their neoconservative vision of a muscular and aggressive America on a permanent war footing in hot pursuit of the dreams of full-blooded military glory of PNAC. These Republican neoconservatives have a fifth column of support inside the Democratic Party. Headed by Al From, a man who is at once a confirmed neocon and a zealous Zionist, the Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) supports the policy agenda of PNAC hook, line and sinker.

Worse. At the head of the Democratic Party’s campaign to regain a majority in the House of Representatives we find a belligerent bully of a Congressman, Rahm Emanuel. Even though it is the official position of his party to withdraw and disengage from Bush’s unpopular war in Iraq, Rahm Emanuel still grants interviews to reassert his support for the war to topple Saddam Hussein even though the war is now recognized as America’s gift to those who long for the growth of terrorism in the Middle East. Frequently described as “obnoxious” by his colleagues, Congressman Emanuel rules his official party position as head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) with an iron fist.

On the global stage, the increasingly ominous scenario unfolding against a backdrop of the US war in Iraq is dark and getting darker. Not only is America moving much more military hardware into the theatre, a constellation of its allies in NATO are moving heavy hardware into the Eastern Mediterranean where they will be in position to cheque any potential retaliation by Syria or Hizbullah against Israel in the wake of a US assault on Iran.

Last week, Condoleezza Rice learned, perhaps, for the first time in her life - that American policy for the Middle East should not be predicated on bogus fears about Iran and Iraq but on Israel and its persistent historical denial of human rights to the Palestinians, a travesty of justice that is now entering its seventh decade.

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Capstan
Posted by: Klaxton on Oct 11, 2006 11:49 AM   
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I can think of a couple of things North Korea can do with their nuclear weapons which would cause us a lot of grief but potentially do them no harm.

One is to sell them to terrorist organizations and non-nuclear government which are hostile to us. This would not be very unusual since North Korea already sells its weapons systems to those groups.

The other scenario would be to smuggle an a-bomb into the US and plant it in a US city. No missile neccessary, and it might even be hard to tell where it came from therefore no retaliation.

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» RE: Capstan Posted by: rwa
george233
Posted by: george233 on Oct 11, 2006 12:07 PM   
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North Koreas Kim Jon bought "The Bomb"from Pakistan. In November 2001 BBC Television Newsnight team received a phone call from a top level US intelligence agent regarding a "BACK OFF"directive. This call was two months after the Pentagon and World Trade Centre atrocities. The agents were told to hunt the bad guys.
However they were told to BACK OFF certain others one being Dr.A.Q.Khan the "Father" of Pakistans atomic bomb.To raise cash for Pakistans programme he sold copies of his information on the bomb to Libya and North Korea along with materials for a substantial sum some of which went into his own pockets.Dr Khan was also attempting to persuade India to test the bomb.
The Bush team pulled back from investigating due to the Saudi Arabia connections, the billions required for the bomb development was funded by the Saudis. They had originally secretly funded Saddam Hussain in his nuclear ambitions and they moved their money to Dr. Khans lab in Pakistan. The trail was allowed to cool down as the agents were told to back off the Saudis.
In November 2001 the BBC aired the information and this was also printed in the London Guardian. Two years later on February 11th 2004 Bush showed "Shock and Horror"
on learning Dr. Khan had traded in fissionable material !!
Dr. Khan`s actions were confirmed in 2004 by one of his customers, Muammar Gaddafi NO LESS!! The trade embargo was lifted when he shut down his bomb programme also British Petroleum were granted exclusive drilling rights!!
While Bush was entertaining King Saudi Abdullah and kissing dictator Musharrafs butt Dr. Khan gave all his secrets to the fruitcake Kim. The reason the agents missed this transaction is that they were hard at work ignoring the Saudi moneytrail.
We are now in2006 and are fearing the consequenses of Bush`s idiocy. Kim is unwrapping his present and the shit is about to hit the fan

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what good is an anonymous attack?
Posted by: Klaxton on Oct 11, 2006 2:15 PM   
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That's a good question, but then what good was the destruction of the World Trade Center? Obviously it throws your enemies into a self-destructive disarray and weakens them in many ways. If Bin Laden had been able to conceal his involvement in 9/11 he would still be sitting in his airconditioned command center in Afghanistan and have hatched a few more plots.

But for North Korea all they really have to do now is threaten to sell bombs to any of the many groups who have a fanatical hatred of the US or threaten to blow up a US city with an implanted bomb. Then we either nuke them preemptively or make concessions. What would you do?

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Its Bushes fault
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Oct 11, 2006 2:41 PM   
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Wake up nothing EVERYTHING that goes badly is Bush's fault. Albright and the Clinton elite were more actually, and even directly,complicit in N.Korea gaining nukes, but, that being said N.Korea was likely to develope them anyway since once technology exists its hard to contain it. Now I realise that many on Alternet yearn for the idealistic, socialist state that Great Leader/Father provides for his family in N.Korea but the US options are limited. We need China to step up as they have more influence over N.Korea as the US is tainted from its involvement in the UN-inspired Korean War.

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IT'S BUSHES "AXIS OF EVIL" ROUTINE AT FAULT
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 11, 2006 5:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When Clinton was President his administration was engaging North Korea and the Inspectors were still going in. It was when Bush came into power that North Korea became "THE AXIS OF EVIL." Henceforth, North Korea kicked nuke development into high gear. Seeing Iraq invaded and threats against Iran by Bush, they perceived they had no choice. As for "socialism," I am not sure what exactly North Korea's government is, it does not seem like socialism to me, it seems like fascism. For socialism, you need to look to Scandanavia and Western Europe. Regardless, you cannot escape the fact, North Korea's nukes are a by-product of Bushes policy of pre-emtive wars. Nukes are the only way for a country to defend itself now. Even if it is run by a kook.

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North Korea's Tactical Nuclear Weapons
Posted by: Jersey Devil on Oct 11, 2006 5:44 PM   
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The media is talking about how small the North Korean Nuke was without realizing that it is a suitcase bomb aka a tactical Nuclear Weapon. If King George the Foolish chose to attack North Korea first, then they will have every legal right to strike back in defense of their country. Shouldn't we start wondering which major American city would be struck on behalf of King George. Any volunteers out there who want to take one for George W. Bush's ego?

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Bush helped persuda N Korea to develop nukes
Posted by: sofla100 on Oct 12, 2006 3:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is this, once again blame Clinton time? Yes, we know conservatives, Clinton is responsible for the Iraq war, Iran nukes, previously high gas prices, Venezuela, Iran and Dick Cheney's bad days. IN FACT, the list is endless. But, here is the truth, Clinton engaged North Korea, was going to make N Korea dependent on the USA and the West, and in so doing give them lots of incentives to not develop nukes. GW's plan, talk about invading Iran, invade Iraq, make the USA's reputation the worst in the world it has been in 50 years, and hence persudade N Korea to develop nukes.

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