ChatterBank1 min ago
Is It An Obligation Of The Civilised World To Resolve The Nk Issue?
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/bl ogs-ech ochambe rs-2559 7324
Not normally one to interfere but I think the civilised world will at some point have to deal with this barbaric regime.
Not normally one to interfere but I think the civilised world will at some point have to deal with this barbaric regime.
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It concludes that the story is unlikely to be true.
He is a despot, but there are others around the globe. People in North Korea might read of Ametican torture camps in Cuba and conclude that is a barbaric regime.
Unless North Korea genuinely becomes a threat to the west or its neighbours, then we should do nothing militarily. Sanctions, Banning trade is all we can o.
It concludes that the story is unlikely to be true.
He is a despot, but there are others around the globe. People in North Korea might read of Ametican torture camps in Cuba and conclude that is a barbaric regime.
Unless North Korea genuinely becomes a threat to the west or its neighbours, then we should do nothing militarily. Sanctions, Banning trade is all we can o.
So you think it's an obligation in the civilised world to resolve an maniac dictator in a small part of the world but not to address poverty hunger and foul water which is a problem throughout the world?
Isn't this the problem with right wingers?
All very keen to get involved with military action until soldiers actually start getting killed then they start screaming 'bring the boys back home'
All very keen to justify it by the suffereing of civillians but don't want to know unless the charity is delivered by aircraft carrier
I'd suggest that North Korea should be way down our priority list of doing good in the world
Note the point in the article about China getting bored with them
Leave them alone and isolated and they'll eventually collapse just like Russia did
Isn't this the problem with right wingers?
All very keen to get involved with military action until soldiers actually start getting killed then they start screaming 'bring the boys back home'
All very keen to justify it by the suffereing of civillians but don't want to know unless the charity is delivered by aircraft carrier
I'd suggest that North Korea should be way down our priority list of doing good in the world
Note the point in the article about China getting bored with them
Leave them alone and isolated and they'll eventually collapse just like Russia did
I fear that their population is so heavily indoctrinated that they would fight every step of the way, if anyone attempted to 'liberate' them, much as the Vietnamese did and, even then, the line between civilian and uniformed Viet Kong was (apparently) somewhat blurry.
Then again, if their own soldiers are deserting and trying to get into China unnoticed, then maybe there's hope for their sanity yet
http:// english .chosun .com/si te/data /html_d ir/2013 /03/22/ 2013032 200809. html
Note: China keeps catching civilian defectors (even when they've got as far as Thailand) as well as deserting soldiers and, sad to say, just sends them back to the regime where they will, presumably be gulag-ed or killed. :-(
Then again, if their own soldiers are deserting and trying to get into China unnoticed, then maybe there's hope for their sanity yet
http://
Note: China keeps catching civilian defectors (even when they've got as far as Thailand) as well as deserting soldiers and, sad to say, just sends them back to the regime where they will, presumably be gulag-ed or killed. :-(
Short of an all out war declared on NK by the rest of the world, it is difficult to see what options we would have in "dealing with this barbaric regime" apart from doing what we do now, which is diplomacy. Stuffing the mouths of the leadership with gold, basically, working on China to bring their influence to bear, and hoping against hope that the regime implodes before they send up the nukes.
Hard as they try, the days of isolationism of the regime are gradually eroding, and the more they erode, the more the foundations of the regime become eroded.
As for the man being fed to the dogs story - I suppose it is a nice ironic twist over the usual Korean/Dog story, which usually is centred on the dogs feeding the man :)
Hard as they try, the days of isolationism of the regime are gradually eroding, and the more they erode, the more the foundations of the regime become eroded.
As for the man being fed to the dogs story - I suppose it is a nice ironic twist over the usual Korean/Dog story, which usually is centred on the dogs feeding the man :)
We ignore North Korea at our peril. Have people forgotten the Korean War ?
This Kim Ping Pong chap is a complete dangerous nutcase, but he is at the head of a country that may have nuclear weapons, and certainly has huge conventional weapons capability. The country is so backward and unstable, he may use them any day now. I think the West should be very observant indeed !
This Kim Ping Pong chap is a complete dangerous nutcase, but he is at the head of a country that may have nuclear weapons, and certainly has huge conventional weapons capability. The country is so backward and unstable, he may use them any day now. I think the West should be very observant indeed !
LG...When I was a teenager, I used to work with a chap that had fought in the Korean War, and he always resented that as far as most people were concerned, it was the Forgotten War. He was in the Glosters. He told some pretty horrible stories about his time there. He is dead now but he would be pleased that the KW is now taken more seriously.
A very nasty little war it would seem, and as the two sides are still at logger-heads, not resolved even now. its easy to laugh as the antics of Ping Pong but he's a dangerous chap all the same.
By the way, i don't believe the dogs story at all....it just sounds a tad too melodramatic to me.
A very nasty little war it would seem, and as the two sides are still at logger-heads, not resolved even now. its easy to laugh as the antics of Ping Pong but he's a dangerous chap all the same.
By the way, i don't believe the dogs story at all....it just sounds a tad too melodramatic to me.
The details of the Gloucesters stand on what became known as Glosters Hill during the Battle of Imjin River makes for sobering reading. From all accounts, a truly heroic resistance against overwhelming forces which ultimately blunted the Chinese/NK attack on Seoul and caused it to lose impetus, allowing the UN/ROK to shore up their defensive lines.
Had the Chinese not intervened in the Korean War there would not now be a NK.
It was the NK who invaded the South and were pushed back by a UN force , but China then entered the war which turned it into a major conflct, and ended right back where it had started on the 38th parallel. China and to a lesser extent Russia have kept it there ever since. As long as they maintain that support nothing can be done. However should NK get the Nuke capability. I can't see Japan ( with US support ) standing back and doing nothing.
It's a similar situation in Iran and Syria . Russia and China are the key players.
I don't know who you think the civilised world is. The UN was set up in Oct '45 to prevent wars with little major success. Most of the worlds hot spots in 1945/50 are still with us today. The Korean War was the first time the 'civilised world ' intervened after being set up and the result was a stalemate, which has been the pattern ever since.
It was the NK who invaded the South and were pushed back by a UN force , but China then entered the war which turned it into a major conflct, and ended right back where it had started on the 38th parallel. China and to a lesser extent Russia have kept it there ever since. As long as they maintain that support nothing can be done. However should NK get the Nuke capability. I can't see Japan ( with US support ) standing back and doing nothing.
It's a similar situation in Iran and Syria . Russia and China are the key players.
I don't know who you think the civilised world is. The UN was set up in Oct '45 to prevent wars with little major success. Most of the worlds hot spots in 1945/50 are still with us today. The Korean War was the first time the 'civilised world ' intervened after being set up and the result was a stalemate, which has been the pattern ever since.
Of course it isn't. And given we are standing idly by with respect to Syria, convinced we are doing something useful by forcing Assad to decommission chemical weapons he might not ever have used again, while he uses conventional ones to commit genocide, what earthly likelihood is there that the "civilised world" would like to start a war against an isolated nuclear power??
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