The U.S. armed forces in Japan will carry out night landing practice (NLP) of fighters in mid-January in preparation for a possible confrontation with North Korea
http://mdn.mainichi.co.jp/news/20021228p2a00m0fp005000c.html
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The U.S. armed forces in Japan will carry out night landing practice (NLP) of fighters in mid-January in preparation for a possible confrontation with North Korea
Steve Bildermann wrote:This is very unnerving. Very unnerving indeed.
Maciamo wrote: Let's hope NK doesn't atomized Tokyo in retaliation.
just buzzed Tohoku.
South Korea, underscoring differences with the United States, said Monday that pressure and isolation would not persuade communist North Korea to halt its nuclear brinkmanship.
``Pressure and isolation have never been successful with communist countries -- Cuba is one example,'' Kim told his cabinet, according to remarks published by the presidential Blue House.
This time, many younger South Koreans, whose memories are of steadily rising affluence instead of the hardships of the Korean War, believe that Korean blood is thicker than political ideology.
Asked about a nuclear threat to this affluent society, he replied: "They wouldn't attack South Korea with it. It is not for attack, but for defense.
On Dec. 19, it was largely voters in their 20's and 30's who overwhelmingly elected as president Roh Moo Hyun, a 56-year-old liberal who advocates a relationship with North Korea based on aid, trade and dialogue. As soon as the election was over, North Korea moved to free its nuclear program from international controls
Earlier in the day, President-elect Roh met with the protest leaders, hoping to turn off the anti-American movement that helped him win the election. "I earnestly appeal to you to stop the candlelight demonstrations," he said, adding, "You should not demand a U.S. surrender." Protest leaders said they would continue to organize protests.
Far from fearing war, some South Koreans believe they can benefit from North Korea's nuclear weapons development if and when the two countries reunify their peninsula.
While many in the South view the North's moves to restart its nuclear facilities as a threat to their safety, a number of mostly young people admire their communist neighbor's technical know-how and defiance toward the United States
``I don't oppose North Korea having nuclear weapons because ultimately the weapons will protect the whole Korean Peninsula,'' said Joon Kim, a worker at a telecommunications company in Seoul. The Koreas were divided at the end of World War II by U.S. and Soviet troops.
``Having nuclear weapons gives a lot of leverage in negotiations with other countries,'' Kim said.
``North Korea is not threatening us with its nuclear weapons program, and I can understand why North Korea is acting the way they are now because they have nothing to rely on,'' said Kim Eun-suk, a teacher.
``They are being driven into a corner by the United States, so what else can they do?'' she said.
Thousands of South Koreans have joined recent candlelit protests against the U.S. military following the deaths of two South Korean girls struck by a U.S. military vehicle on a training mission. However, protests against North Korea's nuclear development have drawn fewer than 100 people, most of them elderly.
The Japanese were described as secretive, narrow-minded egoists with no moral code or international outlook, and may be secretly developing nuclear weapons, in an analysis of the country's psyche written by Britain's departing ambassador to Tokyo in 1972.
Maciamo wrote:When one reflects on the present situation, one comes with the following elements :
- The last major earthquake in Tokyo was in 1923. Catastophic earthquakes happen in average once every 70 years
<snip>
- The economy might crash at any time, while banks should already be bankrupt. Is Japan going to lose its world-class savings ? What about combining this to the earthquake in waiting ? Tokyo flattened and the world economy sink with it ! (for Japan possess lots of US$ in bonds, stocks and other investments).
All together sounds bad though.....
Instead of merely going to the U.N. for bold finger-wagging, President Bush should order a drawdown of U.S. troops in South Korea, where they are now reviled and serve only as hostages to the North. Let Koreans pursue bold dialogues with each other
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