Trump's First War? 'All Options Are On The Table' For North Korea
By Michael Snyder/Economic Collapse Blog March 22, 2017 Share this article:
This may be the closest that we have been to war with North Korea since the original Korean War ended in 1953.
The
North Koreans are feverishly working to develop intercontinental
ballistic missiles that could strike the U.S. mainland, and meanwhile
Donald Trump has not moved from his position that North Korea will
simply not be allowed to have ICBMs.
If North Korea does not blink, it means that we are literally counting down the days until we go to war.
Unfortunately, North Korean leaders appear to literally be insane and they have shown absolutely no signs of backing off.
In
2016, North Korea tested two nuclear bombs and test-fired 24 missiles,
and so far this year they have test-fired five ballistic missiles into
the Sea of Japan.
During a joint press
conference with the South Korean Foreign Minister on Friday, U.S.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson boldly declared that "all options are
on the table" when it comes to North Korea...
US
military action against North Korea is an "option on the table,"
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has stated, adding that Washington's
"strategic patience" with the isolated country has ended.
"Let
me be very clear. The policy of strategic patience has ended. We are
exploring a new range of diplomatic, security and economic measures. All
options are on the table," Tillerson told reporters during a joint news
conference with South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se on Friday.
In addition, Tillerson specifically declined to rule out a preemptive strike against the regime.
Needless to say, the ultra-paranoid leadership in
Pyongyang was totally freaked out by what Tillerson had to say. The
following comes from the Washington Post...
Soon
after Tillerson's remarks, in a sign of mounting tensions, the North
Korean Embassy held an extraordinary news conference in Beijing to blame
the potential for nuclear war on the United States while vowing that
its homegrown nuclear testing program will continue in self-defense.
North
Korea has amassed a sizable nuclear stockpile and appears at the brink
of being able to strike the U.S. mainland and American allies in Asia.
What
has brought this crisis to a breaking point is the fact that North
Korea has continued to work on developing an ICBM that could deliver a
nuclear payload to the United States.
Donald Trump has promised to stop North Korea from doing that before it ever happens...
Just before he took office in January, Trump tweeted: "It won't happen!" when Kim said North Korea was close to testing an ICBM.
I believe that Trump means what he says.
So
now Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are locked in a very
dangerous game of chicken. Both of them are known to be extremely
strong-willed, tempermental, and unwilling to back down when threatened.
But if neither of them is willing to back down now, it could potentially spark a major war...
Making
matters worse, this year we have Kim Jong Un on one side: A young,
relatively inexperienced and unpredictable leader prone to aggression
who could be facing internal turmoil (one explanation for killing his
brother).
On the other, we now
have President Trump. In such a high-stakes standoff, if we're not
careful, these two leaders could prove to be a volatile -- and deadly --
mix.
In short, what we have now
is a regional tinderbox ready to be lit by a small spark that could lead
to an exchange of fire and subsequently another war.
And
actually the truth is that the conflict has already started. It is
widely known that the U.S. has already been conducting cyberattacks
against North Korea's nuclear program, but if those cyberattacks end up
not being enough the Trump administration could order a preemptive
military strike.
In recent days, the U.S.
military has deployed a 100,000-ton Nimitz-class aircraft carrier to the
region. The USS Carl Vinson is carrying more than 40 F-18s, and it is
being escorted by a number of very powerful destroyers and cruisers.
And
it is also being reported that SEAL Team 6 is being deployed to South
Korea in order "to practice incapacitating North Korean leadership in
the case of conflict". The following comes from Zero Hedge...
On
March 1, the WSJ reported that the options contemplated by the White
House in response to recent North Korean acts, include "the possibility
of both military force and regime change to counter the country's
nuclear-weapons threat."
The
review came es amid recent events have strained regional stability
including last month's launch by North Korea of a ballistic missile into
the Sea of Japan, and the assassination of the estranged half brother
of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Malaysia.
And,
according to a report in Yonhap, said "regime change" may come far
sooner than expected: the South Korean website writes that U.S. special
operations forces, including the unit that killed Osama Bin Laden, will
take part in joint military drills in South Korea "to practice
incapacitating North Korean leadership in the case of conflict", a
military official said Monday.
The U.S.
Navy's Special Warfare Development Group, better known as the SEAL Team
6, will arrive in South Korea for joint military drills and take part in
an exercise simulating a precision North Korean incurion and "the
removal of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un", according to the Ministry
of National Defense Monday.
But regime change
in North Korea would not be easy, and unless the U.S. was willing to use
nuclear weapons in a first strike the North Koreans would almost
certainly be able to strike back very hard.
North
Korea has the fourth largest army in the entire world, and it is being
reported that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has personally ordered his
entire military to go into "combat mode" in anticipation of a conflict
with the United States...
It's been at least
24 hours since any further sabers were rattled between China, US, South
Korea, and North Korea (oh and Japan), but it according to DailyNK.com,
Kim Jong Un has ordered the entire North Korean army into "combat mode"
to tighten security and consolidate sentiment in response to military
drills conducted by South Korea and the US, which began in early March.
A
source in South Pyongan Province told Daily NK that following the order
from Kim Jong Un, every last soldier- even if away on business, on
leave, off-base for training, or even those with a recent death in the
family-were ordered back to their units.
The authorities have ordered the military police in each region to summon all soldiers back to their bases.
North Korea has overwhelming military superiority over
South Korea, and unless the U.S. was willing to use nukes, any U.S.
strike would almost certainly provoke a North Korean invasion of South
Korea. The following description of what that might look like comes from
the Daily Mail...
North Korea, most rogue
of rogue nations, has struck. The nuclear explosion, similar in size to
that which levelled Hiroshima, signalled the start of a blitzkrieg-style
ground invasion intended to swiftly overwhelm its richer, more advanced
neighbour.
A second atomic
warhead, inbound on a crude Rodong rocket, has been successfully
intercepted by America's THAAD (Terminal High-Altitude Area Defence)
anti-ballistic missile system.
But
Seoul's torment is only beginning as hundreds of North Korean heavy
guns rain down shells on the capital, many containing Sarin nerve gas.
The
city, bunched up against the North-South border, is hopelessly
vulnerable to a mass sneak attack of the kind now taking place, as
hundreds of thousands of North Korean troops, and thousands of tanks,
pour out of innumerable underground bunkers built within miles of the
Demilitarized Zone between the two countries.
Unless
the U.S. is willing to nuke North Korea into oblivion (and this would
almost certainly not happen), the scenario detailed above is very likely
to actually happen someday.
And once North
Korea invades, the United States will be forced to come to South Korea's
aid and the Second Korean War will have begun.
We are moving into a time when war will become much more common, and at some point World War III will erupt.
If
we do go to war with North Korea, Trump will get the blame, but the
truth is that Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton also deserve
much of the blame for allowing things to get to this point.
It
is absolutely unthinkable that we would allow the North Koreans to
develop ICBMs that could deliver nuclear payloads to U.S. cities.
But it is almost as unthinkable for us to go to war with North Korea.
Both
possibilities are absolutely horrific, and so let us hope that cooler
heads will prevail and that Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un will be able to work things out.
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