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View Full Version : U.S. Carrier being sent to the Korean Penninsula




KEEF
04-09-2017, 12:48 PM
851136378461138944

CPUd
04-09-2017, 02:03 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPRfP_TEQ-g

GunnyFreedom
04-09-2017, 02:04 PM
Ron Paul On Steroids! MAGA! Wooters and such. World War friggin four, and all they want is more, more, MORE!

We shall bomb them on the beaches, we shall drone them on the landing grounds, we shall Hellfire and Predator them in the fields and in the streets, we shall bomb them in the hills, we shall shoot them in the head despite their white flags; they shall never surrender!

Dark_Horse_Rider
04-09-2017, 02:06 PM
it is well known NK is holding biological weapons, this could get messy

Zippyjuan
04-10-2017, 12:09 PM
North Korea wants nuclear weapons for exactly that reason- fear of an attack by the United States (nuclear weapon are a cheaper deterrent than building a well equipped conventional military). That and the perceived prestige of joining the exclusive "nuclear club". Even while having difficulties taking care of their own people.

This will not deter them.

Pizzo
04-10-2017, 12:24 PM
There goes that Ivanka again. Convincing poor little beta male Donald to do things he doesn't want to to. Poor fella.

shakey1
04-10-2017, 12:31 PM
Why stop at Syria, eh?

WTF????????????????

CPUd
04-10-2017, 12:38 PM
Well Dennis Rodman got fired from Celebrity Apprentice so all we can do now is bring in the big guns and de-escalate the shit out of them.

dean.engelhardt
04-10-2017, 01:10 PM
If Syria is an indicator, we should expect firing off $100,000,000 worth of missiles causing $50,000 damage and causing North Koreans delays to 24-48 hours.

Brian4Liberty
04-10-2017, 01:26 PM
They are going to take the nukes away from North Korea. Trump wants to play chicken with a suicide cult in NK.

Brian4Liberty
04-10-2017, 01:34 PM
Sucks to be a South Korean. NK probably can't deliver a nuke very far, but Seoul will be easy for them to take out.

But what's 10-20 million Koreans if it sends the world a message about babies in Syria. It's for the children.

shakey1
04-10-2017, 01:45 PM
The neocons aren't bothering to conceal their schizophrenia anymore... & Trump's just going along for the ride.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C6F8U_9WgAM5AGl.jpg

Brian4Liberty
04-10-2017, 03:47 PM
Why stop at Syria, eh?

WTF????????????????


The neocons aren't bothering to conceal their schizophrenia anymore... & Trump's just going along for the ride.


No schizophrenia involved. More like paranoia. Neocon munchkin Dana Perino just explained on Fox why it's so important to take out NK. She said that when Syria had a nuclear plant, it was built by North Korea, and Israel had to take it out. So, because Israel. It's all related.

Ender
04-10-2017, 03:58 PM
No schizophrenia involved. More like paranoia. Neocon munchkin Dana Perino just explained on Fox why it's so important to take out NK. She said that when Syria had a nuclear plant, it was built by North Korea, and Israel had to take it out. So, because Israel. It's all related.

Never mind that Israel never signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty and it is estimated that they have around 400 nuclear war heads.

Dark_Horse_Rider
04-10-2017, 05:03 PM
No schizophrenia involved. More like paranoia. Neocon munchkin Dana Perino just explained on Fox why it's so important to take out NK. She said that when Syria had a nuclear plant, it was built by North Korea, and Israel had to take it out. So, because Israel. It's all related.

and didn't NK get their nuclear plant from. . . wait, which US official helped that happen again ?

Zippyjuan
04-10-2017, 05:46 PM
and didn't NK get their nuclear plant from. . . wait, which US official helped that happen again ?

The Russians helped them build it. And actually from the US as well. https://www.ft.com/content/17d64600-74c8-11e2-b323-00144feabdc0


Timeline: North Korea’s nuclear history

1950s: North Korea begins nuclear research, focused on energy generation, with assistance from the Soviet Union.

1959: Plans begin for nuclear activities near Yongbyon, which was to become the centre point of the country’s nuclear project.

1969: Pyongyang starts work on nuclear weapons development, according to Chinese intelligence sources cited by Jonathan Pollack of the Brookings Institution.

1974: North Korea joins the International Atomic Energy Agency, leading to international monitoring of its nuclear work.

1975: South Korea joins the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT), but President Park Chung-hee says it would consider building nuclear weapons if not provided with an adequate security guarantee by the US.

1985: North Korea joins the NPT. Moscow had made this a condition of its offer to provide four light water nuclear reactors for energy generation.

1986: Reactor at Yongbyon goes online. Powered by uranium, it has the potential to produce weapons-grade plutonium.

1991: US President George H.W. Bush orders the removal of US nuclear weapons from South Korea, which had been installed in the late 1950s.

1993: North Korea withdraws from the NPT after an international dispute following its refusal to disclose its nuclear history to the IAEA.

July 1994: Kim Il-sung, North Korea’s leader, dies and is succeeded by his son, Kim Jong-il.

October 1994: US and North Korea sign the Agreed Framework in Geneva. The US agrees to organise an international group that would finance and construct two light water nuclear energy reactors. In return, Pyongyang agrees to renew links with the IAEA and to comply with its safeguard obligations.

1998: US accuses Pyongyang of developing a secret nuclear site, but does not find evidence for the claim.

Autumn 2002: The Agreed Framework breaks down. The US had cut off heavy fuel shipments, promised under the 1994 agreement, after its intelligence services concluded that North Korea had procured material for a large uranium-enrichment programme. North Korea resumes nuclear development in response.

January 2003: North Korea again withdraws from the NPT.

August 2003: Six Party Talks open in Beijing, involving China, North Korea, the US, South Korea, Russia and Japan. The US requests complete and verifiable dismantlement of the North Korean nuclear programme, but Pyongyang resists.

February 2005: Pyongyang suspends its participation in the Six Party Talks, and announces it has manufactured nuclear weapons.

September 2005: North Korea agrees to return to the Six Party Talks, resulting in a joint statement consenting to the ultimate goal of denuclearising the Korean peninsula.

October 2006: First nuclear test carried out by North Korea. Foreign analysts estimate its yield at 1kT, compared with the 20kT yield of the bomb dropped by the US on Nagasaki in 1945. The UN Security Council imposes sanctions including a prohibition on the use of ballistic missile technology.

May 2009: North Korea carries out its second nuclear device test, with an estimated yield of 4.6kT. The UN Security Council expands its sanctions.

March 2010: The South Korean ship Cheonan sinks following an explosion, with the loss of 46 lives. An international investigation later concludes that a North Korean torpedo was responsible.

November 2010: North Korean forces bombard the South Korean island of Yeongpyeong, killing four people and injuring 19. South Korea shells North Korean gun positions in response.

December 2011: Kim Jong-il, North Korea’s leader, dies and is succeeded by his son, Kim Jong-eun.

April 2012: North Korea carries out a satellite launch, swiftly admitting that the attempt was unsuccessful. The UN Security Council condemns this as a use of ballistic missile technology in breach of the 2006 sanctions.

December 2012: Pyongyang conducts its first successful satellite launch.

January 2013: The UN Security Council further expands its sanctions against Pyongyang following the satellite launch. North Korea condemns the measures and announces it plans to conduct a third nuclear test.

Dark_Horse_Rider
04-11-2017, 06:58 AM
The Russians helped them build it. And actually from the US as well. https://www.ft.com/content/17d64600-74c8-11e2-b323-00144feabdc0

Pretty sure Donald Rumsfeld had a hand in that as well. . .