It is unlikely that Mr. Obama will learn anything from this, but if he does, just a very quick lesson - everyone wants nuclear power, and when you agree they have that 'right' they change the discourse to their 'right' to a nuclear deterrent. Once achieved, they have offensive weapons.
And all your talk, all your dialogue accomplishes nothing.
The Obamessiah fans retort is obvious - no one in their right mind would risk nuclear annihilation by the US if their fired a weapon on the US.
Yes, except it isn't as clear as that simplistic position pretends.
It is doubtful if the US would nuke a country if they sent ONE missile. Obama / Carter and their following, would consider absorbing the attack and then taking the moral high road, leading the world in an effort to get rid of nuclear weapons.
And millions would be dead - millions that need not have died had the president stood up to a tyrant instead of singing kumbaya.
June 9, 2009
North Korea would use nuclear weapons in a "merciless offensive"
The Independent
By Associated Press
North Korea today said it would use nuclear weapons in a "merciless offensive" if provoked — its latest bellicose rhetoric apparently aimed at deterring any international punishment for its recent atomic test blast.
The tensions emanating from Pyongyang are beginning to hit nascent business ties with the South: a Seoul-based fur manufacturer became the first South Korean company to announce Monday it was pulling out of an industrial complex in the North's border town of Kaesong.
The complex, which opened in 2004, is a key symbol of rapprochement between the two Koreas but the goodwill is evaporating quickly in the wake of North Korea's nuclear test on May 25 and subsequent missile tests.
Pyongyang raised tensions a notch by reviving its rhetoric in a commentary in the state-run Minju Joson newspaper today.
"Our nuclear deterrent will be a strong defensive means...as well as a merciless offensive means to deal a just retaliatory strike to those who touch the country's dignity and sovereignty even a bit," said the commentary, carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.
It appeared to be the first time that North Korea referred to its nuclear arsenal as "offensive" in nature. Pyongyang has long claimed that its nuclear weapons program is a deterrent and only for self-defense against what it calls US attempts to invade it.
[Everyone wants a nuclear deterrent, and when they get it - suddenly they have offensive weapons. Interesting how that works.]
The tough talk came as South Korea and the US lead an effort at the UN Security Council to have the North punished for its nuclear test with tough sanctions.
Seoul's Yonhap news agency reported today that South Korea had doubled the number of naval ships around the disputed sea border with the North amid concern the communist neighbor could provoke an armed clash there — the scene of skirmishes in 1999 and 2002.
The Joint Chiefs of Staff declined to confirm the report, but said the North has not shown any unusual military moves.
Relations between the two Koreas have significantly worsened since a pro-US, conservative government took office in Seoul last year, advocating a tougher policy on the North. Since then, reconciliation talks have been cut off and all key joint projects except the factory park in Kaesong have been suspended.
Some 40,000 North Koreans are employed at the zone, making everything from electronics and watches to shoes and utensils, providing a major source of revenue for the cash-strapped North. The park combines South Korean technology and management expertise with cheap North Korean labor.
A total of 106 South Korean companies operate in the park. That number will go down by the end of the month when Skinnet, the fur-maker, completes its pullout.
A Skinnet company official said the decision was primarily over "security concerns" for its employees, and also because of a decline in orders from clients concerned over possible disruptions to operations amid the soaring tensions.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with reporters.
The industrial park's fate has been in doubt since last month when North Korea threatened to scrap all contracts on running the joint complex and said it would write new rules of its own and the South must accept them or pull out of the zone.
The companies have also been concerned by the detention of a South Korean man working at the complex by North Korean authorities since late March for allegedly denouncing the regime's political system.
The two sides are to hold talks on the fate of the park Thursday.
Intensifying its confrontation with the US, North Korea handed down 12-year prison terms to two detained American journalists on Monday.