North Korea launched a missile that crashed into the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan on Monday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said Tuesday.
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North Korea launched a missile that crashed into the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan on Monday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said Tuesday.
cstaylor wrote:Report: North Korea Launches MissileNorth Korea launched a missile that crashed into the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan on Monday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said Tuesday.
cstaylor wrote:What would you have the United States do?
GuyJean wrote:WTF!? 200,000 troops in the Middle East hunting for 'possible' WMDs, while Fat Bastard's firing missiles towards Japan.
cstaylor wrote:These committee things take time.
Big Booger wrote:Lamers,
Still trying to get attention...
UPDATE: N. Korea launches missile
Posted 2/24/2003 7:57 PM
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —]fired an anti-ship missile [/u]that landed in the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan on Monday, a South Korean Defense Ministry official said.
The Seoul government was investigating whether Monday's launch was a test of a new missile or whether it was the firing of an old missile as part of the North Korean military's ongoing winter training, said the official, who asked to be identified only as Maj. Chun.
Big Booger wrote:Amazing how they always miss....
Reuters AlertNet - 11:33am JST
The US State Department confirmed on Monday that North
Korea fired an anti-ship cruise missile into the Sea of Japan in what was ... A State Department official described it as a "a periodic event" and said it appeared to be part of North Korean winter training exercises.
GuyJean wrote:cstaylor wrote:These committee things take time.
I know.. We live in Japan, remember.![]()
Laxity About Korean Missile Upsets Japanese
News that defense agencies failed to warn premier or Cabinet of Pyongyang's planned test points to weakness in government system.
LA Times / February 26, 2003
...Experts say the issue speaks to a broader problem endemic to many Japanese organizations, in which fuzzy lines of responsibility, territoriality and a lack of urgency serve to undermine once-vaunted Japanese management systems.
In recent years, Japan has been hit by scandals involving everything from tainted milk and beef to spilled radioactive material and cover-ups in various industries, including its auto sector. The scandals have undermined people's pride in Japanese quality and organizations.
...Part of the problem, said analysts, is that Japan has no clearly defined North Korea policy. Although recent concern about Japanese abducted by North Korea has hardened popular opinion, the government remains hesitant about acting in any way that might provoke the North, these analysts said.
There's also a cultural tendency in Japan to downplay the unpleasant, added Katagata, which undermines the nation's ability to face and prepare for real danger.
"We have a proverb: 'You forget the hotness once it passes your throat,' " he said.
Taro Toporific wrote:GuyJean wrote:I know.. We live in Japan, remember.cstaylor wrote:These committee things take time.![]()
The LA Times had a great piece on this (reg. required)...
Watch the Japan factor
...nations south of the Korea-Japan high-tension line are right to be concerned about what impact persistent North Korean missile shots can have on martial thinking among Japan's nationalist elite. Military expenditure of about US$40 billion (S$69 billion) a year already places Japan fourth in the world in defence spending, according to one estimate. So much for the Article 9 constitutional restraint on maintaining a fighting capability.
Two weeks ago, Japanese Defence Minister Shigeru Ishiba warned that his country would use force 'as a self-defence measure' if it had evidence North Korea would attack with ballistic missiles. While jingoistic public figures, such as Tokyo governor Shintaro Ishihara, are one with the wartime generation in arguing for an assertive defence posture...
Liberal Party leader Ichiro Ozawa, ordinarily level-headed, has said Japan could counter any China threat by producing 'three to four thousand nuclear warheads' from its many commercial reactors' plutonium waste. Even Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda is on record as saying the Constitution did not prevent Japan from acquiring nuclear weapons. In this darkening atmosphere, Japan's ongoing normalisation process with North Korea, which received a boost when Mr Koizumi visited Pyongyang last September, is all but frozen again after a dozen years of fitful attempts. Unless the slide is arrested, and quickly, the deepening distrust between the two countries would be a nagging worry to most other Asian nations.
cstaylor wrote:Report: North Korea Launches Missile
N.Korea Tested Booster for Taepodong Missile-Report
Thu February 27, 2003 07:39 PM ET
TOKYO (Reuters) - North Korea tested a rocket booster for a Taepodong ballistic missile at a launch site on the country's east coast in January, a major Japanese newspaper reported on Friday, quoting Japanese and U.S. government sources.
The mass-circulation Yomiuri Shimbun daily quoted Japanese government sources as saying that Pyongyang had not yet started to assemble the engine and main body for the missile.
The paper said U.S. satellite photos and other intelligence reports indicated that North Korea had built a roof over the launch pad in an apparent attempt to prevent surveillance.
cstaylor wrote:Report: North Korea Launches Missile
Korea jets tried to kidnap spyplane crew, says America
March 10, 2003 / World News / The Times, UK
PENTAGON officials believe that North Korean fighter pilots were trying to capture the crew of an American spyplane that they intercepted last weekend.
Rather than the interception being a chance encounter in international airspace, US military officials now think that the jets had been sent on a well-planned mission to force the surveillance aircraft to land in North Korea, where its crew would have been seized....
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